Obituary, Linda Brooks
Linda Marie Brooks, an associate professor in the department of comparative literature, died June 7 at the Duke University Medical Center. At the time of her death, she was being evaluated for a lung transplant to treat idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a rare and incurable lung disease she had been fighting for the past
10 years. A lung transplant she received in 2009 at the University of California, Los Angeles, failed during a viral outbreak last August.
Brooks taught at UGA from 1988 to 1994 and again from 2002 to 2010. She offered highly popular courses on European Romanticism and Postmodernism.
Obituary, Linda Brooks
An Andrew Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Emory University before coming to UGA, she received her bachelor’s, master’s and Ph.D. degrees in English literature at UCLA in 1973, 1979 and 1985, respectively.
She edited the volume Alternative Identities: The Self in Literature, History, Theory, and authored the book The Menace of the Sublime to the Individual Self: Kant, Schiller, Coleridge and the Disintegration of Romantic Identity.
Recently her teaching and research increasingly focused on “testimonios”—a quasi-fictional literary genre that involves re-enacting and re-imagining traumatic events as narrative or dramatic performances.
More from this issue
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October 3, 2011
Role models
Four UGA faculty members—Steve Oliver, Jay Rojewski, Peter Smagorinsky and Sally Zepeda—have been named the College of Education’s inaugural Distinguished Research Mentors for the 2011-2012 academic year. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Search committee seeks dean for arts and sciences
Provost Jere Morehead has appointed a committee to begin a national search to fill the position of dean of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Branching out
Shelley Cannady wants help. For years now the assistant professor in College of Environment and Design has been growing grapes for the North Georgia wine market. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Online encyclopedia to celebrate first billion hits with symposium
DiscoverLife.org, an online interactive encyclopedia created by John Pickering, an associate professor in the Odum School of Ecology, will reach its first billion hits this fall. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Alumna receives MacArthur Foundation’s ‘genius award’
A.E. (Alicia) Stallings, who graduated from UGA in 1990, has been selected as a 2011 MacArthur Fellow by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Stallings is one of 22 receiving the fellowship this year. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Body of work: Prof consults as forensic anthropologist on cold cases with GBI
MariaTeresa Tersigni-Tarrant’s job is not for the faint of heart. As a forensic anthropologist, she helps solve cases with a decomposing body or skeletal remains and examines the manner—not the cause—of death. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Researchers will share $1.2 million in grants from NIH
The National Institutes of Health has awarded UGA two grants totaling $1.2 million for instrumentation to advance chemical analytical capabilities of biomedical researchers across campus. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Research team receives grant to develop software
A team of UGA researchers has been awarded a $500,000 small business grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to develop interactive educational software aimed at teaching high school students how the five senses work in the context of the brain and how neurons work. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Political columnist joins Grady faculty as visiting professor
Cynthia Tucker, Pulitzer-Prize winning columnist for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, has joined the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication as a visiting professor as part of a multi-year partnership between UGA and the newspaper. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Stream lined
A long-term study investigating how altering nutrient inputs to streams affects forest-dwelling organisms has yielded surprising results. Continue
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October 3, 2011
Student interns exhibit designs they created for Archway communities
On Aug. 25, UGA students, faculty members and administrators gathered in the Tanner Building to view an exhibit by student interns who spent the summer creating landscape designs for Archway Partnership communities. Continue











