{"title":"来自编辑器","authors":"Michael P. Chaney","doi":"10.1080/15538605.2020.1830632","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This issue of Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature has been caught up in a wave of transitions, as if the new millennium had indeed demanded change. Most important perhaps for the joumal is our move to yet another new \"old house,\" and along with this move, the shifting of our collection of women's literature and feminist criticism to McFarlin Library. (Visitors to McFarlin thus now have easy access not only to the tremendous manuscript and book collections for women writers in \"Special Collections\" but also to Tulsa Studies' inviting archive of books, with the Virago publications at its core.) In addition to these momentous changes, I have become Chair of the Department of English here at the University of Tulsa, while carrying on with editorship of Tulsa Studies, and I do so at a time when-as many of our readers may already know-we will be searching for a new editor of the James Joyce Quarterly to replace Robert Spoo. We miss Bob, his diligence and energy, and his companionship in the \"Red House(s)\" where the joumals have physically dwelled. The new house where we reside is an elegant structure, set apart slightly from the main campus on a grassy corner. This change was necessitated by the university's development, as it follows through on its \"master plan.\" While this move-like the previous one-was onerous for those of us who tumed their backs on the memories associated with the spaces in which we worked, and especially for those who packed and unpacked the boxes, the new house tums out to be a more spacious and more pleasant place in which to work. Previously the house was used as a seminary. We welcome visitors who may happen through Tulsa or McFarlin Library. (I wish to thank, in particular, Linda Frazier, Olivia Martin, Kara Ryan-Johnson, Michael Berglund, and Pauline Newton for their help with this move.) We are not yet entirely moved into the house even now, and the move has slowed down our operations, as our current authors, reviewers, and readers already know. We hope that most of you will not notice much in the way of glitches. If you do, however, please let us know, so that we can attend to them as soon as possible. The shifting of Tulsa Studies' small library from our house to McFarlin has caused the greatest of the gaps, of course, in our sense of space in the new house. This was not an easy decision to make. Yet we have long felt that far more students should and would find their ways to this collection if it could be discovered among the rooms of the main library. With library space at a premium, we were surprised and delighted when we leamed we would be able to establish this women's literature collection in McFarlin.","PeriodicalId":46113,"journal":{"name":"Journal of LGBTQ Issues in Counseling","volume":"14 1","pages":"289 - 289"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2020-11-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1080/15538605.2020.1830632","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"From the Editor\",\"authors\":\"Michael P. Chaney\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/15538605.2020.1830632\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This issue of Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature has been caught up in a wave of transitions, as if the new millennium had indeed demanded change. Most important perhaps for the joumal is our move to yet another new \\\"old house,\\\" and along with this move, the shifting of our collection of women's literature and feminist criticism to McFarlin Library. (Visitors to McFarlin thus now have easy access not only to the tremendous manuscript and book collections for women writers in \\\"Special Collections\\\" but also to Tulsa Studies' inviting archive of books, with the Virago publications at its core.) In addition to these momentous changes, I have become Chair of the Department of English here at the University of Tulsa, while carrying on with editorship of Tulsa Studies, and I do so at a time when-as many of our readers may already know-we will be searching for a new editor of the James Joyce Quarterly to replace Robert Spoo. We miss Bob, his diligence and energy, and his companionship in the \\\"Red House(s)\\\" where the joumals have physically dwelled. The new house where we reside is an elegant structure, set apart slightly from the main campus on a grassy corner. This change was necessitated by the university's development, as it follows through on its \\\"master plan.\\\" While this move-like the previous one-was onerous for those of us who tumed their backs on the memories associated with the spaces in which we worked, and especially for those who packed and unpacked the boxes, the new house tums out to be a more spacious and more pleasant place in which to work. Previously the house was used as a seminary. We welcome visitors who may happen through Tulsa or McFarlin Library. (I wish to thank, in particular, Linda Frazier, Olivia Martin, Kara Ryan-Johnson, Michael Berglund, and Pauline Newton for their help with this move.) We are not yet entirely moved into the house even now, and the move has slowed down our operations, as our current authors, reviewers, and readers already know. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这期《塔尔萨妇女文学研究》陷入了一场转型浪潮,仿佛新千年确实需要变革。对记者来说,最重要的可能是我们搬到了另一个新的“老房子”,与此同时,我们的女性文学和女权主义批评收藏也转移到了麦克法兰图书馆。(因此,麦克法林的游客现在不仅可以很容易地访问“特别收藏”中为女性作家提供的大量手稿和书籍收藏,还可以访问塔尔萨研究所以维拉戈出版物为核心的引人入胜的书籍档案。)除了这些重大变化外,我还成为了塔尔萨大学英语系主任,同时继续担任《塔尔萨研究》的编辑,而我这样做的时候,我们的许多读者可能已经知道,我们将寻找《詹姆斯·乔伊斯季刊》的新编辑来取代罗伯特·斯波。我们想念鲍勃,想念他的勤奋和活力,想念他在“红房子”里的陪伴,那里是骑士们的住所。我们居住的新房子是一座优雅的建筑,与主校区在一个长满青草的角落稍微分开。这一变化是该大学在贯彻其“总体规划”的过程中发展所必需的。虽然这一举措与前一次一样,对我们这些对与我们工作的空间相关的记忆感到沮丧的人来说是繁重的,尤其是对那些收拾箱子的人来说,新房子变成了一个更宽敞、更舒适的工作场所。以前这所房子被用作神学院。我们欢迎通过塔尔萨或麦克法林图书馆参观的游客。(我要特别感谢Linda Frazier、Olivia Martin、Kara Ryan Johnson、Michael Berglund和Pauline Newton对我们搬家的帮助。我们希望你们中的大多数人不会注意到太多的小故障。但是,如果您这样做了,请告诉我们,以便我们能够尽快处理他们。塔尔萨研究所的小图书馆从我们家搬到了麦克法林,这当然造成了我们对新房子空间感的最大差距。这不是一个容易做出的决定。然而,我们长期以来一直认为,如果能在主图书馆的房间里发现这些藏品,应该也会有更多的学生找到他们的方法。由于图书馆的空间非常宝贵,当我们得知能够在麦克法兰建立这个女性文学收藏时,我们既惊讶又高兴。
This issue of Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature has been caught up in a wave of transitions, as if the new millennium had indeed demanded change. Most important perhaps for the joumal is our move to yet another new "old house," and along with this move, the shifting of our collection of women's literature and feminist criticism to McFarlin Library. (Visitors to McFarlin thus now have easy access not only to the tremendous manuscript and book collections for women writers in "Special Collections" but also to Tulsa Studies' inviting archive of books, with the Virago publications at its core.) In addition to these momentous changes, I have become Chair of the Department of English here at the University of Tulsa, while carrying on with editorship of Tulsa Studies, and I do so at a time when-as many of our readers may already know-we will be searching for a new editor of the James Joyce Quarterly to replace Robert Spoo. We miss Bob, his diligence and energy, and his companionship in the "Red House(s)" where the joumals have physically dwelled. The new house where we reside is an elegant structure, set apart slightly from the main campus on a grassy corner. This change was necessitated by the university's development, as it follows through on its "master plan." While this move-like the previous one-was onerous for those of us who tumed their backs on the memories associated with the spaces in which we worked, and especially for those who packed and unpacked the boxes, the new house tums out to be a more spacious and more pleasant place in which to work. Previously the house was used as a seminary. We welcome visitors who may happen through Tulsa or McFarlin Library. (I wish to thank, in particular, Linda Frazier, Olivia Martin, Kara Ryan-Johnson, Michael Berglund, and Pauline Newton for their help with this move.) We are not yet entirely moved into the house even now, and the move has slowed down our operations, as our current authors, reviewers, and readers already know. We hope that most of you will not notice much in the way of glitches. If you do, however, please let us know, so that we can attend to them as soon as possible. The shifting of Tulsa Studies' small library from our house to McFarlin has caused the greatest of the gaps, of course, in our sense of space in the new house. This was not an easy decision to make. Yet we have long felt that far more students should and would find their ways to this collection if it could be discovered among the rooms of the main library. With library space at a premium, we were surprised and delighted when we leamed we would be able to establish this women's literature collection in McFarlin.