Exterior of Greenfield Building

Amy Hermanson

Amy Hermanson Amy Hermanson English Associate Professor Email: amy.hermanson@egyptawe.com Phone: 414.443.8860

Amy Hermanson

 

Education

  • Ph.D., Texas Christian University
  • B.A., Marquette University
  • A.A., Bethany Lutheran College

Background

My academic interests are primarily centered on early modern British Literature, rhetorical theory, and the history of rhetoric. These areas intersect in my research on the works of John Foxe, John Milton, Mary Sidney, Philip Sidney, and early modern Bible preliminaries. Recently, I have been focused on the rhetorical cannon of memory as a basis for cultivating a deeper understanding of early modern religious culture in England.      

Additional areas of scholarly interest

  • History of Reading
  • Early Modern Drama
  • History of Religion and Rhetoric

Teaching 

  • ENG 101: Writing and Rhetoric
  • ENG 211: American Literature 2
  • ENG 220: British Literature 1
  • ENG 294: Genre Studies: Poetry
  • ENG 313: Twentieth-Century American Literature
  • ENG 321: Shakespeare 1
  • ENG 322: Shakespeare 2
  • ENG 323: Major British Authors, Seventeenth Century
  • ENG 324: Restoration and Eighteenth-Century British Literature
  • ENG 391: Rhetorical Criticism (Special Topics)

Scholarly Works 

Publications

Rev. of Reading Memory in Early Modern Literature by Andrew Hiscock. Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies, 13.3 (2013): 172-176. Print.

“Religion’s Rhetoric: Saint Augustine’s Union of Christian Wisdom and Sophistic Eloquence.” Conclusion. The Rhetoric of St. Augustine of Hippo: De Doctrina Christiana and the Search for a Distinctly Christian Rhetoric. Ed. Richard Leo Enos et al. Rhetoric and Religion series (ed. Martin J. Medhurst). Waco: Baylor UP, 2008.  

Editing

Co-Editor (with Richard Leo Enos et al.). The Rhetoric of St. Augustine of Hippo: De Doctrina Christiana and the Search for a Distinctly Christian Rhetoric. Rhetoric and Religion series (ed. Martin J. Medhurst). Waco: Baylor UP, 2008.

Associate Editor. Advances in the History of Rhetoric: The First Six Years [1997-2002]. Ed. Richard Leo Enos, David E. Beard, Sarah L. Yoder, and Amy K. Hermanson. West Lafayette: Parlor P, 2007.

Editorial Assistant. Composition Studies, Spring 2007-Fall 2008

Select Conference Presentations

“Illustration, Reading, and Acts of Faith in John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs.” Midwest Conference on Christianity and Culture. Arbor Springs, MI, February 18-20, 2016.

“Discerning the Bounds of ‘true believers’: Reading and Inscribing Action in Foxe’s Actes & Monuments.” Rhetoric Society of America Conference. San Antonio, TX, May 22-24, 2014.

“‘and let the guard of thy free sprite attend me. Soe I to them a guiding hand wilbe’: Mary Sidney Herbert, Countess of Pembroke’s Mimetic Role as Psalmist.” South Central Modern Language Association. Fort Worth, October 2010.

“Representing Ideal Readers and Crafting Real Readers in Sixteenth-Century English Bible Preliminaries.” Group for Early Modern Cultural Studies. Dallas, October 2009.

“Communities of Believers, Communities of Readers: Revising Notions of Early Modern Literacy in England.” Rhetoric Society of America Conference. Seattle, May 2008.

Wisconsin Lutheran College Service 

  • Co-Curricular Committee Member
  • Writing Tutor Advisor 
  • Breakfast Book Club (Student Club), Faculty Advisor

Professional Memberships

  • Rhetoric Society of America