
Associate professor of English Ken Cooper in the Adirondacks (photo provided)
Two things to know about 黑料网 associate professor of English Ken Cooper: he鈥檚 a tree hugger from way back, and he knows the value of interdisciplinary learning.
Cooper brings an ecological viewpoint to his study of literature; over the years, he鈥檚 taught courses such as Environmental Justice and Eco Media. His broad definition of ecology encourages students to think of it as something 鈥渂eyond national parks and recycling.鈥
For example, Cooper鈥檚 course, developed in collaboration with Geneseo鈥檚 Special Collections librarians, is a digital humanities project where students examine local history and culture through a bioregional lens. 鈥淭here鈥檚 an unfortunate tradition of local history as being kind of cheesy,鈥 Cooper says. 鈥淧eople think that interesting things are only happening somewhere else. The course addresses that bias, and we discuss what kinds of regional history, writing, or culture we don鈥檛 know about.鈥
Open Valley often partners with community organizations鈥攕uch as the Genesee Valley Council on the Arts, the Geneseo Migrant Center, or the Perry Public Library鈥攖o explore and interpret underappreciated parts of their collections. Cooper says the students aren鈥檛 just consuming digital media鈥攖hey鈥檙e creating it as well, and in ways that also help organizations with large archives and little curatorial assistance.
鈥淭here鈥檚 always a basement, and there鈥檚 always a bunch of cardboard boxes,鈥 he says with a smile. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 good for the students if the collection hasn鈥檛 had much done with it.鈥 Cooper sees the advantages of students working with source material that鈥檚 yet to be teased out and wrung of its stories.
These collaborative undertakings or problem-solving projects create graduate-level experiences and develop valuable skills for the job market, says Cooper. He sees it as part of his job to help English majors assess traditional skills in a new way, broadening their career plans beyond education, law, or publishing.
鈥淓nglish majors spend a lot of time thinking about language and representation and narration, and all of those are useful and powerful skills to have after graduation,鈥 he says. Resumes should do more than list previous jobs, he believes鈥攖hey should reflect the critical thinking skills employers identify as important qualifications.
Cooper鈥檚 expansive, interdisciplinary view of studying contemporary literature has kept the field fresh for him鈥攁nd after 30 years at Geneseo, he still loves to teach.
鈥淪tudents are a huge X factor, bringing in information and language and mores and attitudes that keep me from becoming grumpy,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 get to always be learning myself. That鈥檚 a huge perk. It鈥檚 very fun to not be the person with all the answers.鈥