
This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”

This fall's English Senior Seminar (ENGL 487W) presentations were held Thursday, December 6, 2018, in the Mountain View Room of the Port-Sky Café. Professor Kyle King taught the course with the critical focus of “genres” as they evolve and mutate through time and across media. Students undertook sustained case studies in three important and popular contemporary genres: true crime, ecofiction, and zombie fiction. The following senior English majors presented their projects:
- Brian Selfridge, “From Bra and Panties Matches to ‘The Baddest B**** on the Planet’: The Evolution of Women’s Wrestling from the Attitude Era to the Women’s Revolution”
- Elijah Boyd-Plamondon, “‘Books for the Million’: Performing Masculinity in the 19th Century American Dime Novel”
- Austin Feathers, “Through the Eyes of a Child and in the Minds of Adults: Conceptions of Villainy in Children’s Literature and True Crime”
- Joe Miller, “The Court of Character: Delayed Gratification and Strategic Revelation in True-Crime Podcasts”