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Center for Editing and Publishing

Loyola's Center for Editing and Publishing provides a space and support for students and faculty engaged in editing and publishing. By giving students insight into the protocols and practices of scholarly and commercial publishing, and access to a range of presses and periodical venues, the center provides Loyola students with a wide range of professional experiences in editing and publishing.

The center is coordinated by the English faculty, who work with presses such as Bloomsbury Publishing, Columbia University Press, Edinburgh University Press, Johns Hopkins University Press, Louisiana State University Press, McFarland, University of Minnesota Press, Penguin, Rutgers University Press, and Temple University Press, as well as numerous academic journals and popular magazines.

The center partners with faculty across the university to

  • Offer hands-on learning opportunities for students through collaborative research and internships
  • Partner with students who can support faculty publications with copyediting, indexing, and other manuscript preparation services
  • Promote interdisciplinary exchange across Loyola's diverse campus through relevant programming and outreach, including in-house workshops for Loyola faculty and staff on effective academic and professional writing
  • Occasionally publish broadsides, pamphlets, chapbooks, and books
  • Occasionally help defray the expenses incurred with book publication, including indexing, copyediting, permissions fees, and other costs

New Orleans Review

Airplane Reading

is a magazine devoted to nonfiction about air travel. Since 2011, the magazine has published hundreds of stories and attracted a wide, international audience of readers and writers. It is co-edited by Dr. Christopher Schaberg and Dr. Mark Yakich, and often employs student interns.

New Orleans Review

an international journal of literature and culture, was founded at Loyola in 1968. The journal is edited by Dr. Lindsay Sproul, alongside students who have the opportunity to work on the magazine through ENGL-A406 “Editing & Literary Publishing/NOR Internship.” The journal publishes two digital issues each year—one issue devoted to a special topic.

Object Lessons

is a series of concise, affordable, beautifully designed books based around singular objects and the lessons they hold. The series was co-founded and is co-edited by Dr. Christopher Schaberg, and is published by Bloomsbury Academic. Students have the chance to work on the series as part of a regular course offering, or by independent study.

The Certificate in Editing & Publishing

For more information, contact the Center's Director, Dr. Christopher Schaberg at schaberg@mapporium.com.

Events

Dec. 14, 2021: English faculty member, Dr. Christopher Schaberg, discusses the process, insights, and guidance for publishing your first book.

Nov. 16, 2021: Alumna Anahi Molina ('19) talks about her journey from Loyola English graduate, to freelance editor & indexer, and nonfiction writer to current MFA student at Northern Arizona University. 

April 13, 2021: Alumna Kaitlin Ketchum talks about her work editing and publishing bestsellers at Ten Speed Press followed by a Q&A. 

March 2, 2021: Christian L. Bolden discusses writing, editing, and publishing his first book, Out of the Red: My Life of Gangs, Prison, and Redemption

November 12, 2020: Dinah Lenney, author of Coffee (Object Lessons Series), discusses her new book and other publishing experiences. 

October 6, 2020: Alums Kerry Cullen ('11) and Erin Little ('15) discuss editing and publishing in NYC.

Faculty Affiliates
  • Sarah Allison

    Sarah Allison received her PhD from Stanford University in 2012.  She specializes in Romantic and Victorian literature, with a particular focus on debates about the purpose of art--what writers in the period thought literature should teach, and how.  Her book project, Reductive Reading, reveals a counterintuitive truth about criticism: that one of the most powerful ways to generate subtle reading is to be reductive; that is, to design projects with the questions up front, with a clear statement of how we propose to find the answers. This book is a manifesto for and a model of how digital analysis can provide daringly simple approaches to complex literary problems.

    Her research combines close reading at the level of the sentence with digital searches that trace patterns across large bodies of work.  She has co-authored three pamphlets on quantitative studies of literary style with the Stanford Literary Lab, two of which were subsequently reprinted in n+1.  Her article, “George Eliot’s Discerning Syntax” has been published in ELH, and an essay on fact and fiction in Elizabeth Gaskell’s biography of Brontë is forthcoming in Genre in 2017, which is part of a second project tentatively titled True Fiction, a book on fictionality in biographies of the figures Charlotte Brontë, Charles Dickens, and Hermione Lee.  She has also published in the Studies in the Novel-affiliated site Teaching Tools: Digital Humanities and the Novel, the essay collection Airplane Reading (Zero Books, 2016), and the book review section of the New Orleans Reviewhttp://sarahdallison.com. As part of her developing scholarly interest in the circulation of Swedish texts in translation, she has recently affiliated with the Section on the Sociology of Literature at Uppsala University, Sweden. 

    Classes Taught

    Areas of Expertise

    • Victorian Literature
    • Romanticism
    • Poetry
    • Literary Theory
    • Digital Humanities Methods

  • Hillary Eklund

    Hillary Eklund specializes in English Renaissance literature in a transatlantic context and colonial American literature in English and Spanish. She is also interested in critical approaches to food, ecology, and the history of the book. Prof. Eklund is the author of Literature and Moral Economy in the Early Modern Atlantic: Elegant Sufficiencies (Routledge, 2015), editor of Ground-Work: English Renaissance Literature and Soil Science (Penn State University Press, 2017), and co-editor, with Wendy Beth Hyman, of Shakespeare and the Pedagogies of Justice: Why Teaching Renaissance Literature Matters Now (under review, Edinburgh University Press). Her current project, The Unfast Imagination: Reading Early Modern Wetlands, describes how wetlands, often perceived as nature’s “mistakes,” both compel and elude human designs, demonstrating a series of “unfast” countermoves to the fast violence of colonial incursion and technological imposition, and to the slow violence of ecological manipulation and resource expropriation. In addition to these books, she has essays published or forthcoming in journals such as Shakespeare Studies and SEL and in essay collections on a variety of topics. In the English department, Prof. Eklund teaches courses on Shakespeare, Renaissance literature, literature and environment, early American literature, and writing. She is also involved in Latin American and Caribbean Studies and the Program in the Environment.

    Classes Taught

    • Writing About Literature
    • Reading Historically I
    • Shakespeare
    • New Worlds, Imagined Worlds: From Columbus to Avatar

    Areas of Expertise

    • English Renaissance Literature in a Transatlantic Context
    • Colonial American Literature in English and Spanish
    • Food Studies
    • Ecology
    • History of the Book

  • Michael Giusti

    Michael Giusti is the Chairman of the Journalism Department and the adviser for Loyola’s Student Media.  Prof. Giusti oversees "The Maroon," the university’s award-winning student newspaper,  "The Wolf," the student-run magazine, "The Maroon Minute," the morning video newscast, and The Maroon Online, the student-run news website.  Prof. Giusti is also a freelance reporter and contributes articles for several publications based in the United States and abroad covering topics ranging from financial services to the security industry. He has previously worked as an associate editor for "New Orleans CityBusiness" and as a reporter for the "Daytona Beach News-Journal."

     

  • Joel MacClellan

    After completing his B.A. in philosophy with a minor in bioethics from the University of Akron, Dr. Joel McClellan was then a United States Peace Corps Volunteer in Panama. There, he worked in environmental education and sustainable development through 2005. Afterwards, he pursued and completed a Ph.D. in Philosophy, specializing in ethics at the University of Tennessee.  His dissertation “Minding Nature: A Defense of a Sentiocentric Approach to Environmental Ethics”, defends a sentience-based notion of moral considerability and argues that it provides compelling grounds for environmental conservation, and was supervised by John Nolt. Joel then spent one year apiece at Washington State University and Binghamton University, SUNY, with Visiting Assistant Professorships teaching courses in ethics, social and political philosophy, philosophy of biology, and logic.  In the summer of 2013, Joel was a scholar-in-residence at Wesleyan University as the New York University Animal Studies Initiative’s 2013 Animal Ethics and Public Policy Fellow under the auspices of the Animals and Society Institute.  He is currently Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University New Orleans.  His publications include articles in Ethics & Environment, Between the Species, and the Journal of Animal Ethics, and he has presented his research in the United States, Canada, and the Netherlands to organizations such as the American Philosophical Association, International Society for Environmental Ethics, Minding Animals International, and the Association for Practical and Professional Ethics.

    Classes Taught

    • Making Moral Decisions
    • Environmental Ethics
    • Medical Ethics

    Areas of Expertise

    • Ethics
    • Social and Political Philosophy
    • Environmental Ethics
    • Medical Ethics
    • Philosophy of Biology

  • Christopher Schaberg

    Christopher Schaberg is Dorothy Harrell Brown Distinguished Professor of English, and an affiliated faculty member in Loyola's Environment Program. His scholarly interests include contemporary literature, creative nonfiction, cultural studies, critical theory, editing and publishing, and the environmental humanities. 

    Dr. Schaberg is the author of three books on airports and air travel: The Textual Life of Airports: Reading the Culture of Flight (2012), The End of Airports (2015), and Airportness: The Nature of Flight (2017). 

    He has also co-edited two essay collections, Deconstructing Brad Pitt (2014, with Robert Bennett) and Airplane Reading (2016, with Mark Yakich). 

    His latest book, called The Work of Literature In An Age of Post-Truth (2018), reflects on teaching, reading, and writing in the early twenty-first century. 

    Dr. Schaberg is founding co-editor (with Ian Bogost) of an essay and book series called Object Lessons which explores the hidden lives of ordinary things. This series offers hands-on opportunities for Loyola students who are interested in nonfiction writing as well as working in editing and publishing.

    Classes Taught

    • Writing About Texts
    • 20th-Century American Fiction
    • Reading Historically II
    • Apocalypticism in Contemporary Literature & Theory
    • Interpretive Approaches
    • Reading (w/) the Digital Human
    • "Thinking Space" (A First-Year Seminar)
    • Environmental Theory
    • Great Figures Seminar: David Foster Wallace
    • Contemporary Nonfiction 
    • Literature & Environment
    • "Interpreting Airports" (An Honors First-Year Seminar) 
    • Creative Nonfiction Workshop

    Areas of Expertise

    • Airports & air travel
    • Contemporary literature
    • Critical theory
    • Cultural studies
    • Environmental humanities
    • Creative nonfiction
    • Editing & publishing.

     

  • Lindsay Sproul

    Lindsay Sproul received her MFA in Fiction from Columbia University and her PhD from Florida State University. Her short fiction has been published in EpochThe Massachusetts ReviewWitnessHayden's Ferry ReviewGlimmer Train and elsewhere, and she has received fellowships from Columbia University and The MacDowell Artist Colony. Her first two novels, forthcoming from Putnam/Penguin Random House, are both queer coming-of-age narratives. 

    Classes Taught

    • Introduction to Creative Writing
    • WAL: Coming of Age in the South
    • Fiction Workshop

    Areas of Expertise

    • Fiction Writing
    • Young Adult Fiction
    • The Bildungsroman
    • Queer Literature and Theory
    • Gender Studies
    • Creative Nonfiction

  • Catherine Wessinger

    Dr. Catherine Wessinger is the Rev. H. James Yamauchi, S.J. Professor of the History of Religions at Loyola University New Orleans. She is co-director of the Loyola Himalaya Adventure: Summer Study in Dharamsala, India program. She is director of the Religion and Media Minor.  Her primary research and teaching areas are women in religions, new religious movements, religion and media, and Tibetan and Indian religions. Her articles in journals and chapters in edited books include history of religions and theoretical treatments of women and religion, millennialism, new religious movements, and religion and violence.

    Since 2000 Dr. Wessinger has served as co-general editor of Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions published by University of California Press. 

    Dr. Wessinger is editor of the Women in Religions series at New York University Press.

    She is co-director of the Women in the World’s Religions and Spirituality Project, which is part of the World Religions and Spirituality Project online encyclopedia and archive.

    Dr. Wessinger has published ten books. She is the author of Annie Besant and Progressive Millennialism (1988); and How the Millennium Comes Violently: From Jonestown to Heaven’s Gate (2000). She is editor of Women's Leadership in Marginal Religions: Explorations Outside the Mainstream (1993); Religious Institutions and Women's Leadership: New Roles Inside the Mainstream (1996); Millennialism, Persecution, and Violence: Historical Cases (2000); and Oxford Handbook of Millennialism (2011). Her oral history project with surviving Branch Davidians produced three autobiographies, which she edited: Memories of the Branch Davidians: Autobiography of David Koresh's Mother, by Bonnie Haldeman (2007); When They Were Mine: Memoirs of a Branch Davidian Wife and Mother, by Sheila Martin (2009); A Journey to Waco: Autobiography of a Branch Davidian, by Clive Doyle with Catherine Wessinger and Matthew D. Wittmer.  This oral history project has continued on her YouTube channel. Her most recent book is Theory of Women in Religions (2020)

    She is currently writing a book on the Branch Davidian-Federal Agents Conflict for the Cambridge Elements Series on Religion and Violence and writing a book on Women in New Religious Movements for the Cambridge Elements Series on New Religious Movements.

    Recent Publications

    • Theory of Women in Religions. New York: New York University Press, 2020.
    • “The FBI’s ‘Cult War’ against the Branch Davidians.” In The FBI and Religion: Faith and National Security Before and After 9/11, ed. Sylvester A. Johnson and Steven Weitzman, 203-43. Oakland: University of California Press, 2017.
    • “Millennialism.” In The Bloomsbury Companion to New Religious Movements, ed. George D. Chryssides and Benjamin E. Zeller, 133-48. London: Bloomsbury, 2014.
    • “Apocalypse and Violence.” In The Oxford Handbook of Apocalyptic Literature, ed. John J. Collins, 422-40. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014.
    • “The Second Generation Leaders of the Theosophical Society (Adyar).” In Brill Handbook of the Theosophical Current, ed. Olav Hammer and Mikael Rothstein, 33-50. Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion series. Leiden: Brill, 2013.

    Classes Taught

    • Religions of the World
    • Cults and Religions (Honors)
    • Contemporary Issues and Conflicts in World Religions (Honors)
    • Women in World Religions
    • Tibetan and Indian Religions
    • Women in Christianity
    • Women in Religions and Cultures
    • Hindu Paths to God
    • Buddhism
    • Religions of Asia
    • Religion and Media
    • Religion, Media and Culture
    • New Religions and Media
    • Religious Responses to Disaster
    • Millennium Seminar
    • Fundamentals of Conflict and Peace (team-taught)
    • New Orleans Religions: Before and After Katrina (First-Year Experience seminar)

  • Mark Yakich

    Mark Yakich is the Gregory F. Curtin, S.J. Distinguished Professor of English at Loyola University New Orleans, where he is Director of the Center for Editing and Publishing. He is the author of Unrelated Individuals Forming a Group Waiting to Cross (National Poetry Series, Penguin 2004), The Making of Collateral Beauty (Snowbound Chapbook Award, Tupelo 2006), Green Zone New Orleans (Press Street 2008), The Importance of Peeling Potatoes in Ukraine (Penguin 2008),  Checking In/Checking Out (NO Books), A Meaning for Wife (Ig Publishing 2011) and Poetry: A Survivor's Guide (Bloomsbury 2015). With Christopher Schaberg, he is also co-founder and co-editor of airplanereading.org, a new media project that aims to rejunvenate airplane reading. In spring 2012, Mark was a Fulbright Fellow in the Faculty of Letters at the University of Lisbon.

    Classes Taught

    • Reading Poetry
    • Introduction to Creative Writing
    • Modern Poetry
    • Writing Poetry
    • Poetry Workshop: Series, Sequence, Chapbook
    • Editing & Publishing
    • Special Topics: Unreliable Narrators and Authors
    • Honors: Words, Images, Politics

    Areas of Expertise

    • Poetry and Politics
    • Experimental Poetics
    • Art and Writing
    • Creative Writing Pedagogy