Marilyn Atlas

Atlas also teaches in Women, Gender, & Sexuality Studies and the Jewish Studies Certificate.
Education
Ph.D. March 1979, Michigan State University
A.M. December 1973, University of Illinois (Urbana, Champaign)
A.B. High Honors in Liberal Arts and Sciences with Distinction in English Education, June 1973, University of Illinois
B.S. High Honors in Liberal arts and Sciences with Distinction in Psychology, August 1972, University of Illinois
Scholarly Focus
- American Literature
Publications
Articles
âPatricia Hampl, Minnestora and The Floristâs Daughter: Memoir as History.â Ed. Ronald Primeau. Critical Insights: Midwestern Literature. Ipswich, Mass: Salem Press, 2014. 61-75.
âPatricia Hampl, Minnestora and The Floristâs Daughter: Memoir as History.â Ed. Ronald Primeau. Critical Insights: Midwestern Literature. Ipswich, Mass: Salem Press, 2014. Forthcoming.
âReal, Romantic, Modern and Natural: Midwestern Hybridity and Franklin Boothâs Illustrations in Theodore Dreiserâs A Hoosier Holiday.â Ed. Ronald Primeau. Critical Insights: American Road Literature. Ipswich, Mass: Salem Press, 2013. 32-46.
âExiles All: Becoming the Individual in the Lighthouse Looking out, and Margaret Andersonâs My Thirty Yearsâ War.â Inter/Sections: Isagani R. Cruz and Friends (Festschrift in Honor of Isagani R. Cruz), Ed. David Jonathon Y. Bayot. Manila, Philippines. De La Salle University/Anvil Publishing, 2010. 159-174, (published in hardbound and paperback).
âOne Bostonianâs Romantic, Realistic, and Modern View of the Midwest: Margaret Fullerâs Summer on the Lakes, in 1843.â Ed. Jane Waterman. Midwestern Miscellany Special Issue âThe Midwest as Seen by Non - Midwestern Writers.â XXXVIII Spring/Fall 2010: 24-36.
âFrom Novel to Plays: Zona Gale and the Marriage Plot in Three Versions of Miss Lulu Bett,â Midwestern Miscellany XXX 2002: 35-45. Reprinted in Drama Criticism.
New York: Gale, 2008.
âFrom Novel to Plays: Zona Gale and the Marriage Plot in Three Versions of Miss Lulu Bett,â Midwestern Miscellany XXX 2002: 35-45 (appeared December 2003).
âF´Ç°ůąđˇÉ´Ç°ůťĺ,â In the Days of Serfdom and Other Stories, Leo Tolstoy, 1911. Translated by Louise and Aylmer Maude, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002. vii-ix.
âSherwood Anderson and the Women of Winesburg.â In Critical Essays on Sherwood Anderson, edited by David D. Anderson. New York: G.K. Hall and Company. 1981, 250-265. Reprinted in Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism Volume 123. New York: Gale, 2002. 9-17.
âThe Issue of Literacy in America: Slave Narratives and Toni Morrisonâs The Bluest Eye,â MidAmerica XXVII 2000. 106-119 (appeared in 2002).
âEllen Van Volkenburg, Women Building Chicago: A Biographical Dictionary 1790-1990. Ed. Rima Lunin Schulz and Adele Hast. Bloomington, Indiana: University Press, 2001, 909-911.
âMargaret Anderson,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 37-40.
âAlice Gerstenberg,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 218-220.
âHarriet Monroe,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 364-366.
âToni Morrison,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 370-375.
âEunice Tietjens,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 495-497.
âBetween the Mission and the Factory: Eunice Tietjensâ Profiles from China,â Midwestern Miscellany 27 (Fall, 1999): 17-26.
âEllen Van Volkenburg,â Women Building Chicago: A Biographical Dictionary 1790-1990. Ed. Rima Lunin Schulz and Adele Hast. Bloomington, Indiana: University Press, 2001, 909-911.
âMargaret Anderson,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 37-40.
âAlice Gerstenberg,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 218-220.
âHarriet Monroe,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 364-366.
âToni Morrison,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 370-375.
âEunice Tietjens,â Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001: 495-497.
âBetween the Mission and the Factory: Eunice Tietjensâ Profiles from China,â Midwestern Miscellany 27 (Fall, 1999): 17-26.
âCracked Psyches and Verbal Putty: Geography and Integrity in Toni Morrisonâs Jazz,â Midwestern Miscellany 24 (1996): 63-76.
âTone and Technology in Harriet Monroeâs âThe Turbine,ââ MidAmerica 22 (l995): 69-82.
âToni Morrisonâs Beloved and the Critics,â Midwestern Miscellany 18 (1990): 45-57. Reprinted in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Gale Library Criticism Series, Christopher Giroux, editor, 87 (1995): 291-295.
âA Review Essay of Mabel Dodge Luhan: New Woman, New Worlds, by Lois Palken Rudnick,â Resources for American Literary Studies 14 (1986): 209-212.
Five critical abstracts: Toni Cade Bambara, The Salt Eaters; Marge Piercy, Dance the Eagle to Sleep and Vida; Susan Fromberg Schaeffer, Falling and Time in its Flight. Adolescent Female Portraits in the American Novel, 1961-1981. Eds. Jane S. Bakerman and Mary Jean DeMarr. New York: Garland Press, l986: 21; 136; 136-7; 165-166; 166.
âInnovation in Chicago: Alice Gerstenbergâs Psychological Drama.â Midwestern Miscellany 10 (1982): 59-68.
âCreating Womenâs Myth: Emily Dickinsonâs Legacy to Susan Glaspell, Alisonâs House.â Focus 8.1 (1981): 55-61. Reprinted by the National Council of Teachers of English, l982.
âThe Figurine in the China Cabinet: Saul Bellow and the Nobel Prize.â MidAmerica 8 (1981): 36-49.
âHarriet Monroe, Margaret Anderson, and the Spirit of the Chicago Renaissance.â Midwestern Miscellany 9 (1981): 43-53.
âSherwood Anderson and the Women of Winesburg.â Critical Studies on Sherwood Anderson. ed., David D. Anderson. Boston: G.K. Hall, l981: 250-266.
âFrom Middle Border to City: Chicagoâs Literary Origins, A Review Essay of Prairie Voices by Kenny Williams.â The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Newsletter 10.3 (1980): 29-32.
âExploring Line and Circle Imagery: An Entrance into Moby-Dick.â Focus 7.2 (1981): 12-18. Reprinted by the National Council of Teachers of English, l982.
âElmer Gantry, the Novel and the Film.â Writing About Film and Fiction. Ed. Herbert Bergman. East Lansing: Film Research Center Publications, l980: 240-6.
âThe Darker Side of Toni Morrisonâs Song of Solomon.â The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Newsletter 10.2 (1980): 1-13.
âClear Water From a Porcelain Spigot: A Review Essay of Alive With You This Day by F. Richard Thomas.â The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Newsletter 10.1 (1980): 44-49.
âExperimentation in the Chicago Little Theatre: Cloyd Headâs Grotesques.â Midwestern Miscellany 8 (1980) 7-19.
âVoltairine de Cleyreâs Feminism: A Study of Her Theory and Characterization.â MidAmerica 7 (1980): 40-51.
âA Woman Both Shiny and Brown: Feminine Strength in Toni Morrisonâs Song of Solomon.â The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Newsletter 9.3 (1979): 8-12.
Poetry
âMore Than Molasses.â Readings from the Midwest Poetry Festival 2 (1984): 3.
âEvery Refuge Has its Price--I Pay in Silence (A Parable)â and âFaith.â In Other Than Scholarly Ways. East Lansing: Years Press, l980: 6-8.
âWe Crawl Toward God.â University College Quarterly. 25.4 (1980): 32.
âYouth Knows A Worldâ and âThrough Summer.â University College Quarterly 25.2 (1980): 18-19.
âNight Clicks On.â Red Cedar Review. 7.2 (1978): 25.
âTortuous Journey to Poetry.â Speakout. Poetry Issue (1977): 1
âTo David My Own Personal Spring.â Seed and Stamen 1 (1977): 27.
Dissertation
A Psychobiographical Approach to Moby-Dick. Director: C. David Mead. This dissertation attempts to trace and illuminate the circle and line imagery of the novel by examining their relationship to the novelâs characterization as well as to the authorâs personality, friendships, and family construction.
Editorships
Editor, Conversations with Cynthia Ozick, Jackson: University of Mississippi Press (under contract for 2016).
Senior Editor, Dictionary of Midwestern Literature II, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2016.
Guest Editor, Special Issue on âWriting Chicago," Midwestern Miscellany XLIII Spring/Fall (2015).
Editorial Board Committee for MidAmerica and Midwestern Miscellany, 2004- present.
Senior Editor, Dictionary of Midwestern Literature I, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2001.
Guest Editor, Special Issue on Toni Morrison, Midwestern Miscellany 24 (1996).
Associate Editor, The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Newsletter, East Lansing, Michigan, 1978-1988.
Selected Awards and Honors
Editorial Board, Senior Editor, Dictionary of Midwestern Literature I, 1992--present
Fulbright, Manila, Philippines, May-August 1985
The MidAmerica Award for âdistinguished contributions to the study of Midwestern literature,â Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, East Lansing, Michigan, May 14, 2004
Member of the 51ÂŇÂ×-De La Salle University Affiliation Program, 51ÂŇÂ×, Fulbright, Manila, Philippines, May-August 1985
USIS Lecturer
Feminist Award
Award for Excellence in Teaching
Selected Grants
Arts and Sciences (51ÂŇÂ×) Humanities Research Grant ("Dictionary of Midwestern Literature editing and indexing") 2015-16.
Office of Research and Sponsored Programs (51ÂŇÂ×), Publication Support, Dictionary of Midwestern Literature II 2016.
Arts and Sciences (51ÂŇÂ×) Professional Development Award (ââAlone Togetherââ: A Closer Look at Intimacy, Authority and Relationships Between Humans and Technologyâ), Costa Rica IPCA, Summer 2011.
Arts and Sciences (51ÂŇÂ×) Professional Development Award ( âGeography and Identity: The Ireland of W.B. Yeats and James Joyceâ), Summer 2003.
Arts and Sciences (51ÂŇÂ×) Professional Development Award (âModernism in Parisâ), 2001.
Selected Regional, National and International Lectures
"The Craters of Our Childhood Are Etched on Our Faces: Geography Lessons in Toni Morrison's Eleventh Novel, G-d Help the Child," Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, May 2016.
"Glancing Geographically at the Reception of Toni Morrison's Latest Novel, G-d Help the Child: Does the Midwest Still Matter?" Modern Language Association, Austin, Texas January 2016. Part of the presidential theme, "Literature's Public Receptions."
"Toni Morrison's G-d Help the Child: Rememory as Science and Aesthetic,"Midwest Modern Language Association, Columbus, Ohio November 2015.
"The Bread of Time: Toward an Autobiography (1994), The Norton Anthology of Jewish American Literature (2001), and the Not So Simple Sometimes Progressive Art of the Jewish, Post-Post-Modern Poet, Philip Levine, Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, May 2015.
"Resisting Realism: The Role of Memory and Place in Saul Bellow's Winter Novella, The Actual, " Vancouver, Canada, January 2015. Part of the Margaret W. Fergusen presidential theme, "Negotiating Sites of Memory."
"Chicago and Race in Cyrus Colter's Short Story, 'Black for Dinner' (1965)," Midwest Modern Language Association, Detroit Michigan November 2014.
ââShe Said She Wouldnât Go Back to Chicago if She Was Dragged by a Trainâ: Traffic Circles and the âSagamore Flyoverâ as Metaphors in Peter Ornerâs Last Car Over the Sagamore Bridge.â Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, East Lansing, May 2014.
âResisting Chicago in Peter Ornerâs Love and Shame and Love,ââ Modern Language Association, Chicago, Illinois, January 2014. Part of the Marianne Hirschâs presidential theme, âVulnerable Times.â
âSplit at the Root: Self-Consciousness, Art, and Artifice in Peter Ornerâs Esther Stories, Midwest Modern Language Association, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, November 2013.
âFlipping Around in Chicagoâs Jewish Memory: Talk and Home and Talk in Peter Ornerâs Experimental Novel, Love and Shame and Love,â Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Symposium, East Lansing, Michigan, May 2013.
âOhio and the International Toni Morrison: From The Bluest Eye to Home,â Modern Language Association, Boston, Massachusetts, January 2013.
âStamp Paid, Debt, and Redemption in Toni Morrisonâs Latest Novel, Home,â Midwest Modern Language Association, Cincinnati, Ohio, November 2012.
âReal Romantic, Modern and Natural: Theodore Dreiserâs A Hoosier Holiday and the Midwest,â Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, East Lansing, Michigan, May 2012.
âDavid D. Anderson, Remembered,â Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, East Lansing, Michigan, May 2012.
Dawn Powellâs Dance Night and âMidwest Small Town Poisonâ Modern Language Association, Seattle, Washington, January 2012.
âHa, ha, ha, Ouch: Dance Night, Trip Night, Black, Black, Dawn Powell, or âA Capacity to go Overboard is a requisite for a Full-Grown-Mind,ââ Midwest Modern Language Association, St. Louis, Missouri, November 2011.
âNot Obsolete Yet, But Living on the Edge: Humans in Isaac Asimovâs I, Robot,âInternational Popular Culture, American Culture Conference, San Jose, Cost Rica, July 2011.
ââOne Manâs Ceiling is Anothr Manâs Floorâ: Tracy Lettsâs Superior Donutsâ Shortened Visit to Broadway,â Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, East Lansing, Michigan, May 2011.
âPatricia Hampl, Minnesota and The Floristâs Daughter: Memoir as History, (Part of the panel, Narrating Lives & Midwestern Literary Self- Consciousness, presidential Theme, Modern Language Association, Los Angeles, California, January 2011.
âTerror, the Midwest, and the Lure of the Grotesque in Tracy Lettsâs August, Osage County, Midwest/Modern Language Association, Chicago, Illinois, November 2010.
âStaging the Midwest: Tracy Lettsâs August: Osage County and Geography, Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, East Lansing, Michigan, May 2010.
âRadical Styles and Thought in Esther Bronerâs A Weave of Women (invited lecture) Jewish Studies and Womenâs Studies Departments at Wittenberg University, Springfield, Ohio, April 2010.
ââIâm Fine. Just got the Plainsâ: Geography and Sex in Tracy Lettsâs August: Osage County, Modern Language Association, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, December 2009.
âA Novel Worth Remembering and a Place Impossible to Forget: Dawn Powellâs Dance Night, Lampton, Ohio, Midwest Fantasy, and Midwest Migration,â Midwest/Modern Language Association, St. Louis, Missouri, November 2009.
âPlace and Space in Patricia Hamplâs The Floristâs Daughter, Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Symposium, East Lansing, Michigan, May 2009.
âA Mercy or Mercy!â Toni Morrisonâs Recent Fable or Failure,â Panel discussion with Dr. Melody Zajdel, Montana State University, International Popular Culture Convention, Turku, Finland, June 2009.
âMargaret Andersonâs The Unknowable Gurdjieff: The Journey West and the Journey Inward,â Modern Language Association, San Francisco, California, December 2008.
âMiddle Class, in the Middle of America, in the Middle of the Century: Patricia Hamplâs The Floristâs Daughter, Midwest/Modern Language Association, Minneapolis, Minnesota, November 2008.
âThe Midwest as Place and Symbol: Margaret Fullerâs Summer on the Lakes, in 1843,â Society for the Study of Midwestern literature, East Lansing, Michigan, May 2008.
âIntroducing Etgar Keret,â Wexner Center for the Arts, May 2008.
âEtgar Keret, Woody Allen and Lessons in Intertextuality or Whatâs Four Decades and Different Countries Among Friends?â Beth Tikvah Lecture Series, Columbus, Ohio, February 2007.
âFlipping Out With Etgar Keret: Israeli Funny Guy,âBeth Tikvah Lecture Series, Columbus, Ohio, February 2007.
âThe Lake Front and the City: Margaret Andersonâs My Thirty Yearsâ War and Chicago,â Modern Language Association, Chicago, Illinois, December 2007.
âToni Morrisonâs Eulogy for James Baldwin: Realism, Ambivalence, Fertility and Writing the Stories One Needs to Read,â Midwest Modern Language Association, Cleveland, Ohio, November 2007.
âEthnicity, Geography, and Humor in Adam Langerâs Crossing California and the Washington Story,â Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, East Lansing, Michigan, May 2007.
Selected Professional Experience
2016âpresent: Professor of English (tenured) at 51ÂŇÂ×
1984--2016: Associate Professor of English (tenured) at 51ÂŇÂ×
1985: Visiting Professor at De La Salle University in Manila Philippines
1980--1984: Director of Womenâs Studies at 51ÂŇÂ× (1980-2) and Assistant Professor of English at 51ÂŇÂ×
Selected Professional Service
Prize Coordinator for the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature: Poetry, Creative Writing, and Criticism, 2003 to the present
âMargaret Fuller: Pioneer, Transcendentalist, and Scholar,â Television Conversation with Lois Whaley. Women Today & Yesterday, Public Television, Time-Warner Cable Channel 23. Athens, Ohio Community Access, Week of July 23, 2010
Served as Outside Evaluator for Tenure and Promotion at Other Institutions.
âWired for Books,â International radio broadcasts on Leo Tolstoy, Raymond Carver, Toni Morrison and Zora Neale Hurston. Heard by thousands of people. Some programs translated into other languages. WOUB: 51ÂŇÂ×: David Kurz moderator and producer. Distribution 1996 to the present
Director of âMaking Our Lives A Study: A Conference on Feminist Criticism and Creativityâ (over 400 in attendance), 51ÂŇÂ×, Athens, Ohio, March l982
Courses Taught
Areas of Special Interest in Literature
- Early American
- American Renaissance
- American Modernism
- Twentieth Century Literature
- Midwestern Literature
- Women's Literature
- Jewish Literature
- Israeli Literature
- Literary History
- Literary Theory
- Canon Formation
Selected Classes Taught at 51ÂŇÂ×
(An asterisk identifies that Atlas was the individual who designed the class for inclusion in 51ÂŇÂ×'s English Department's curriculum and was the first to teach it at 51ÂŇÂ× under its own number.)
- ENG 570N/ 774A: American Modernisms
- ENG 570P/775B: American Literature from the Civil War to 1914
- ENG 460: The Midwest in Fiction
- ENG 460: Melville, The American Renaissance, and Popular Culture
- ENG 460: The Chicago Literary Renaissance
- ENG 465: Toni Morrison's Fiction and the Study of Place
- ENG 465: ModernismsâVirginia Woolf and James Joyce
- ENG 306J: Women and Writing (memoir)
- ENG 321, 322, 323: American literature - - Beginnings to 1865; 1865 to 1914; and 1914 to the present
- ENG 327: African American Fiction (James Baldwin and Toni Morrison)
- ENG 325: Women's Literature *
- ENG 324a: Jewish American Literature *
- ENG 334: Israeli Literature *
- ENG 399T/478T: Twentieth Century American and British Tutorial