Holder Lecture

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English and Writing Department
Stephanie Loos, Administrative Assistant
Old Main, Room 102
Lincoln, NE 68504
(402) 465-2343
sloos [at] nebrwesleyan.edu (sloos[at]nebrwesleyan[dot]edu)

Holder Lecture

Each Spring semester, the Kenneth R. Holder Memorial Lecture brings a scholar in language theory, writing, or education to meet with classes and to deliver a lecture open to the public.

The Holder Lecture was established in 1991 by the Department of English to honor the life of Dr. Kenneth R. Holder, Professor of English and Provost at ¶¶ŇőĘÓƵ. Dr. Holder joined the faculty in 1972, and served as Provost from 1987 to 1991. His specialties in the English Department were linguistics—which he introduced as a course to the department—history of English, writing, and English Education. As Provost, he focused on strengthening instructional practices through technology and writing among the faculty.

Spring 2025 Holder Lecture

Headshot of Danielle Nielsen, Ph.D.

Danielle Nielsen, Ph.D., Professor of English from Murray State University, will speak about “Accessibility in Teaching and Learning” when she delivers the annual Holder Lecture on Thursday, April 24.

Nielsen a scholar of rhetoric, the British Empire, and late-Victorian literature, is interested in how we navigate the world around us through texts, from classroom texts to cookbooks and travel narratives and Keanu Reeves’ memes. Her scholarly work has been published in College Teaching, Gender & History, Rhetoric Review, Business and Professional Communication Quarterly, and other scholarly venues. She received her undergraduate degree from Nebraska Wesleyan ('04) and her MA ('06) and Ph.D. ('11) from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, OH.

The Holder Lecture will begin at 4 p.m. in the Acklie Hall of Science in Room 207 and is free and open to the public.

Past Holder Lecturers

YearLecturersTopic
2024Barry M. Kroll, Ph.D.
professor emeritus from Lehigh University
“Learning to Argue Differently”
2022-23Twyla Hansen
independent writer and speaker
“Nibbling at the Edge of Something Vast”
2021-22Douglas Hesse
professor of writing in the Department of English at the University of Denver
“The Creative Coordinates of Contemporary Nonfiction: Matters for Readers and Writers”
2020-21Daniel Willingham
professor of psychology at the University of Virginia
"Digital Technology and the Future of Education"
2018-19K. David Harrison
associate provost, professor of linguistics, Swarthmore College
"Endangered Languages"
2017-18Ben Crystal
Actor, author and producer
"Spehk thuh speech uh press yuh Shakespeare’s Original Pronunciation"
2016-17Tessa Jolls
President and CEO of the Center for Media Literacy
“Powershift: Redefining our Media Relationships and Culture”
2015-16Dr. Stephen Buhler
University of Nebraska – Lincoln
“Eloquence in Action: Rhetorics of Response in Shakespeare”
2014-15Joan Hughes
University of Texas – Austin
“iPads and Their Impact on Literacy”
2013-14Carole Levine and Patricia Sullivan
University of Nebraska and State University of New York, New Paltz
"Powerful Women in the Renaissance and Today: The Rhetoric of Queen Elizabeth I and Hillary Clinton"
2012-13Malea Powell
Michigan State University
“Rhetorical Powwows: Making American Indian Rhetorics”
2011-12LuMing Mao
Miami University
“Beyond Bias, Binary, and Border
Enacting a Discursive Third in Comparative Rhetoric”
2010-11Maha Baddar
Pima Community College, Tucson, AZ
“From Athens (Via Alexander) to Baghdad: Medieval Arabic Rhetoric as Dialogic”
2009-10Jennifer Cognard-Black
St. Mary’s College of Maryland
“Eat My Words: Teaching Writing through the Literatures of Food”
2008-09Sid Dobrin
University of Florida
"Ecoseeing: Rhetoric, Writing, Images, and Nature”
2007-08Jeffrey Hammond
St. Mary’s College of Maryland
“Hugging the Shore: Reflections on Creative Nonfiction”
2006-07John McWhorter
Manhattan Institute Senior Fellow in Public Policy Contributing Editor to City Journal
“Language is a Lava Lamp”
2005-06Daryl Baldwin
Miami University
“The Myaamia Project: Language and Culture Reclamation”
2004-05Robert Jensen
University of Texas – Austin
“The Myth of Neutrality: Journalists, Academics and Power”
2003-04Susan Swan
Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi
“Civic Engagement and Rhetorical Praxis: Strategies for Making Social Justice Work”
2002-03Jan Swearingen
Texas A&M University
“Rhetorical Traditions and the Contemporary Academy: the Past Meets the Present, Once Again”
2001-02Peter Vandenberg
DePaul University
“Intentions in Tension: Advanced Composition As Literate Practice”
2000-01William Thelin
University of Cincinnati
“Issues of Class and Composition Theory”
1999-00Mary Rose O’Reilley
Saint Thomas University
“Taking the Moi Out of Memoir”
1998-99Richard Leo Enos
Texas Christian University
“Recovering the Lost Art of Researching the History of Rhetoric”
1997-98Jim Corder
Texas Christian University
"How Many Rhetorics Can Dance on the Head of a Pin?”
1996-97Andrea Lunsford
The Ohio State University
“Women and the Rhetorical Tradition”
1995-96Jeanne Gunner
Chapman University
“The Story of Basic Writing”
1994-95Cynthia Selfe
Michigan Technological University
“The Practice, Instruction, Politics, and Study of Literacy in Computer Supported Environments”
1993-94Christina Murphy
Texas Christian University; now Marshall University
 
1992-93Fern Kupfer
Iowa State University, with husband Joe Geha
 
1991-92Joy Ritchie
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
 
1990-91Les Whipp
University of Nebraska-Lincoln - Inaugural Lecture