Why I’m Doing #NaNoWriMo

NaNo-2015-Participant-Badge-Large-Square

Soon, my favorite holiday will be here. Soon, November 1 (and another favorite holiday) will arrive. I have a lot of other things I must, should, and have to do in November: drinking mojitos and talking research ideas here, Thanksgiving, crafting gifts for clients, selecting gifts for family, writing book chapters, editing a co-edited book, writing articles with graduate students, grading papers, and wrapping up my graduate director duties.

I am doing all of those things, along with hammering out words for NaNoWriMo.

For the uninitiated, NaNoWriMo is National Novel Writing Month. It’s an utterly insane premise that you (yes, you mere mortal) can carve out time to crank out 50,000 words. (Yes, this method has critics. Yes, this month has skeptics. Yes, this month has avid fans. I’m not writing about those issues. My mottos about all this hubbub are “treat yo’ self” and “do you, boo boo.”) I’ve been a bad NaNo participant for years. Last year, I finished. This year, I’m going to try again.

Why the hell would someone with the above list of things to do agree to NaNoWriMo? Good question. It’s one question I ask myself every day in November. Heck, I ask it every time I sit down to drop some words into a story I am writing.

Lindsay Oden, a blogger with ProfHacker (one of my favorite blogs), wrote about his exploration into writing fiction and what that did for his research work: “expressing internal conflict in an unrestricted manner, exercising creative muscles for non-fiction work, and channeling creative energy.” As he noted:

…as Eva Lantsoght has argued, research is actually a creative endeavor that must transgress current boundaries, you should build those creative instincts early. Where better to violate standards of current knowledge than by tearing them apart in a fictional universe? Where better to explore the limits of your thinking than in a consequence-free imaginary place? There’s something truly liberating about creating, shaping, deleting, and rebuilding anything any way you want.

Writing has alway been a creative channel, one that I abandoned in graduate school when I started writing my dissertation. I thought I was done with that “fluff writing,” but the librarian who took my piles of Writers Digest magazines and books on writing shook her head in disbelief. “You’ll come back to it.” She was right. I did. Not doing creative writing dammed up the other research and other writing I had to do. Writing is an escape for the non-fiction I live and breathe every day. I write because it is what I have always wanted to do. When I was 3, 13, and 23, all I wanted to be was a writer. I didn’t specify academic writer or non-fiction writer or whatever. Just a writer. That’s who I am to my core. I write (furiously, badly, awkwardly) every month but especially in November because it’s what I do.

I also want to get this damn story out of my head and onto the page. And I would like to submit it to an editor. There, I’ve put my goals out there. I’m writing Nov. 1 through 30. Join me by signing up here. Cheer me on. Ask how I’m doing (on Twitter or via email). Don’t bother me with phone calls because you know, 50,000 words in 30 days can make a person a tad cranky. Do whatever floats your boat. I know I will be.

Now, excuse me. I have some plotting and planning to do before November 1.

Internship Opportunity: Marketing Communications Intern — Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Atlanta

Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Atlanta is looking for a marketing communications intern to join our movement! We are looking for upper-level college students or recent grads. We require the intern to work 20-25 hours per week. Applicants can forward their resume and two writing samples to aleon@bgcma.orgThis is a paid internship. Interns receive a $625 stipend broken into three installments over the course of the internship (November through January). The intern is based in our administrative offices in midtown at 1275 Peachtree St., NE, Suite 500, Atlanta 30309.

PR/Marketing Internship, Brainchild Associates, Atlanta

PR/MARKETING INTERN

SUMMARY OF POSITION:

Brainchild Associates, a boutique PR firm located in Atlanta, GA, is seeking interns to become a part of our vibrant Beauty Marketing division, working on clients focused in the hair, beauty and fashion industries. For more than a decade, Brainchild Associates has provided top-notch, tailored public relations campaign services to clients specialized in the beauty, health, lifestyle, editorial, nonprofit and entertainment arenas. Internships with Brainchild Associates provide real-world PR experience including Media Relations, Email Marketing, Social/Digital Marketing, Event Planning and Execution and Branding. We are seeking sharp, enthusiastic interns with a desire to master the real-world PR experience while providing substantive value to our PR team and beauty industry and nonprofit clients! This internship is ideal for college seniors and recent college graduates.

Internship Term: July 2015 – December 2015

Required Hours: 15-20 hours weekly

ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS:

  • Collaborate on strategic PR campaigns that drive premium media impressions, partnership opportunities, word of mouth buzz and bottom- line sales opportunities
  • Identify and engage target media contacts, influencers, campaign partners and brand ambassadors
  • Produce content for press materials (i.e., multimedia press releases, byline articles, media alerts, press kits, tip sheets, etc.), web & blog sites, social media profiles & pages, collateral materials, email communications, etc.
    • Coordinate PR events including: press events, engagement events, product launches, multi-city tours, etc.

QUALIFICATIONS:

  • Must live in Atlanta, GA or surrounding cities in the Metropolitan area.
  • Minimum 1-2 years of experience in PR or marketing fields is ideal!
  • Ability to speak and write clearly and concisely in English
  • Ability to work well under pressure and meet project deadlines
  • Must be at least 18 years of age with (or pursuing) a BS/BA in English, Communication, Journalism, Business, Marketing, Entrepreneurship or a related field
  • Working knowledge of Microsoft Office, PhotoShop, Illustrator, Constant Contact and multiple Social Media platforms

KEY PERSONALITY TRAITS:

  • Exceptional communication skills
  • Exceptional multitasking
  • Passion for customer service and complete satisfaction
  • Ability to work both independently and remotely
  • Ability to take direction and complete assignments on deadline

** Interested applicants should send cover letters and resumes totmartin@brainchildassociates.com for consideration. **

Job Opportunity: Senior Account Executive, Arketi Group, Atlanta

Senior Account Executive

SUMMARY OF POSITION:

Full Time Position with the Arketi Group in the Brookhaven office (I-85 @North Druid Hills)
Will work in the B2B Practice with a wide range of clients in technology, mobile and the cloud. Some are well-known brands, others are up and coming tech challengers
Arketi Group offers occasional fun instead-of-work activities

ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS:

  • Need to quickly understand the business, market ecosystem and technology of high-tech companies
  • Looking for someone with a passion for media relations
  • Experience in content development for technology clients or markets is must!

QUALIFICATIONS:

  • Bachelor’s Degree in Public Relations, Journalism or Marketing or Computer Science
  • MBA will be an added bonus
  • 3-5 years of work experience working with technology clients
  • Interactive marketing experience
  • Experience with marketing automation or analytics
  • Strong writing skills and ability to work in a rapidly changing environment

Sound Like You?
If so, send your resume, 2 writing samples (short form and a long-form piece) and salary requirements to mneumeier (at) arketi(dot)com.

GSU Department of Communication is hiring a basic journalism writing instructor

The Department of Communication at Georgia State University anticipates hiring a full-time limited term instructor to teach basic journalism writing courses in spring 2016 (pending funding approval). This position may be renewed for one additional year, teaching four courses per semester. Benefits included. Master’s degree preferred but a bachelor’s degree with strong experience will be acceptable. Send resume/CV to Dr. Greg Smith at gsmith@gsu.edu.

Are Women Mentored to Death?

[Previously posted on the Langely Harper blog]

One of the books on our summer reading list was Carla Harris’ Strategize to Win. After months of reading workplace help and self-help books from Ariana Huffington, Sheryl Sandberg, and a myriad of other white female corporate leaders’ take on work-life fit, it was refreshing to read (or at least place on our reading list) a book by an African-American woman who climbed through the corporate America obstacle course to become a vice chairman/managing director at Morgan Stanley.

One of the things that Harris has discussed in her previous work and trumpeted in her speeches is the need for women to have three types of key people in her career corner: an advisor, a mentor, and a sponsor.

These three terms are bandied about in most business, academic, and social setting.  In the academic literature, mentoring is a broad concept that includes sponsorship. As Tindall noted in a previous blog , “sponsorship is a deeper, intense, and targeted cycle of grooming and promotion. The mentor (the senior level person) is valuable to someone’s career progress because he or she provides upward mobility, visibility, and support to their proteges as well as fights to get someone promoted.”

Harris clarified her stance on mentors and sponsors in a New York magazine article, titled It Takes More Than a Mentor to Win at Work:

“A mentor’s job is to give you advice that is tailored specifically to you and to your career aspirations. They do  not need to be within your organization, nor do they need to look like you. But they must understand your context. Some of my best mentors have been peers. Frankly, you can survive a very long time in your career without a mentor. But you will not ascend in any organization without a sponsor. A sponsor is the person who, behind closed doors, will argue passionately on your behalf as to why you should get the great promotion, why you should get the outstanding bonus, why you should get that next-stretch opportunity.”

Academic research has validated up this idea of sponsorship. In a 2011 Harvard Business Review podcast and in a 2011 HBR article, Hermina Ibarra found that many of the corporate mentoring programs did not produce their intended effects. Rather than seeing a substantial increase in women being promoted in the higher echelons of the corporate hierarchy, women stagnated and suffered from being “mentored to death.”

This subtle yet distinct difference matters both to women who are aiming to climb the ladder and to those in management who are crafting the programs and building the mentoring relationships with those women. For those women aiming to rise in their careers, here are some questions for you: who in your network can you pinpoint as a mentor, sponsor, or advisor (a person who can be a resource about day-to-day tactical issues or concerns in your current position).

What roles are missing in your current network, and who could fill them? What mentoring and sponsorship relationships have you seen among your peers? Identify the traits and characteristics in those and search for mentors and sponsors who can provide those things for you. For those in corporate America who are helping to support women, here are some questions for you: What have been your experiences with mentoring? Do you want to replicate those relationships with others? What is happening with your women, especially women of color, after their entry into the organization? Are they leaving? Identify the reasons why they are leaving and what supports they need to continue in the organization.

Job Opportunity: Assistant/Associate Professor, Technical Communication/Media Studies, Mercer University

Assistant/Associate Professor, Technical Communication/Media Studies

Responsibilities:
The Technical Communication Department (TCO) announces openings for tenure-track positions at the Associate or Assistant Professor level. Applicant’s areas of emphasis should include digital/social media and expertise in current industry standard tools. Candidates are expected to excel in teaching and contribute to outstanding degree programs. Mercer University is one of only a few schools offering technical communication degrees from a school of engineering.

The department offers bachelor’s and master’s degrees in technical communication, and provides service courses for the School of Engineering. Mercer University enjoys an excellent reputation, being consistently recognized in national surveys. Technical Communication faculty are active in STC, IEEE PCS, and other professional organizations.

All faculty are expected to maintain currency in the field and conduct scholarly activity. Because the primary mission of Mercer is teaching, scholarship is broadly defined.

TCO faculty typically teach three courses each semester. These include courses in the BS in Technical Communication and the MS in Technical Communication Management, as well as a two-course sequence in technical communication required for all students in the School of Engineering. Graduate teaching is done entirely online using WebEx and Blackboard.

The curricula are under constant review to keep up with current trends and research, and to improve the quality of learning. Laboratories-including usability and digital media labs-are well equipped with current technologies.

TCO faculty are expected to advise students and keep regular office hours. All faculty attend departmental meetings, participate in SACS and ABET assessment reviews, and serve on committees in the School of Engineering and the University.

Start Date: Spring Semester 2016

Qualifications:

A doctoral degree in technical communication and/or media studies from an accredited college/university is required. In addition, candidates must have industry experience as a technical communicator, demonstrate competence to teach undergraduates, demonstrate experience or capability of teaching graduate students via distance learning, and demonstrate ability to work in a team environment.

For more information about Mercer University, the School of Engineering, the TCO Department, or the degree programs, please visit http://www.mercer.edu,http://engineering.mercer.edu/, http://engineering.mercer.edu/academics/undergraduate/technical-communication/ , or http://engineering.mercer.edu/academics/graduate/technical-communication-management.cfm .

Applicants should apply at https://www.mercerjobs.com and attach the following materials:  cover letter, complete resume, and list of references with current phone numbers. Those invited to interview will submit official copies of all transcripts and samples of work. Review begins as soon as applications are received and continues until the positions are filled.

Direct inquiries to the search chair:
Dr. Helen M. Grady
Mercer University School of Engineering
1400 Coleman Avenue
Macon, GA 31207

Voice: 478.301.2211
E-mail: grady_h@mercer.edu<mailto:grady_h@mercer.edu>

Internship Opportunity: Edelman PR — Practice Area: Health, Atlanta

Responsibilities:

The Intern is responsible for assisting with implementing and monitoring projects within a specific set of accounts under the direction of the supervisor.  S/he works closely with and supports the needs of the account teams.  Responsibilities include, but are not limited to:

  • Basic understanding of principles of PR
  • Basic understanding of clients’ business
  • Participation in brainstorms when invited by the supervisor
  • Read and identify media clips from clipping services and on-line resources
  • Assist with monitoring client competition coverage
  • Pitch the media under the direction of the supervisor
  • Assist with preparation of press kits for distribution
  • Update media lists
  • Assist with compilation of media coverage reports
  • Familiarity with AP style
  • Draft pitch letters and/or email pitch memos to vendors with the approval of the supervisor
  • Conduct and compile research
  • Basic understanding of key client information, including general business strategy, industry issues, products and services, key customers and competitors in the marketplace
  • Basic understanding of research and media list building tools (Factiva, Edge, etc.)

The intern must be able to work effectively with a variety of account service staff within a specific set of accounts. S/he must have good organizational skills and the ability to adapt to new conditions, assignments and deadlines. S/he must have solid knowledge of MS Office Suite and superior verbal and written communication skills. The Intern is generally someone who has recently graduated with a Bachelor’s degree and is looking for entry-level experience in Public Relations. S/he must demonstrate the ability to become a strong writer. Familiarity with the Public Relations discipline through past coursework or other internships is desirable.

Basic Qualifications:

Intern candidates must have interest in the public relations field and possess good interpersonal and communication skills with the ability to work effectively with others.

  

About Edelman Edelman is a leading global communications marketing firm, with more than 5,500 employees in 65 cities worldwide.  Edelman partners with many of the world’s largest and emerging businesses and organizations, helping them evolve, promote and protect their brands and reputations. Edelman was named one of Advertising Age’s “Agency to Watch” in 2014; one of Forbes’ “14 Most Influential Agencies of 2014”; and The Holmes Report’s “2013 Global Agency of the Year.” Edelman was awarded the Grand Prix Cannes Lion for PR in 2014 and was among Glassdoor’s “Best Places to Work” for the third time in 2014. Edelman owns specialty firms Edelman Berland (research), BioScience Communications (medical communications), and United Entertainment Group (entertainment, sports, experiential), a joint venture with United Talent Agency. Visit http://www.edelman.com for more information.

Edelman is an equal opportunity employer of all protected classes, including veterans and individuals with disabilities.

To apply, go here: https://djeholdings.taleo.net/careersection/us/jobdetail.ftl?job=151427

Call for Chapter Proposals: Adventures in Shondaland: Identity Politics and the Power of Representation

CALL FOR CHAPTER PROPOSALS

Adventures in Shondaland: Identity Politics and the Power of Representation

Editors:          Rachel Alicia Griffin, Ph.D., Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Michaela D.E. Meyer, Ph.D., Christopher Newport University

Communication approaches to the study of television tend to be constrained by arbitrary divisions between text, audience, and production, and thus, we often limit our engagement with the interrelationship between textual representation (rhetorical approaches), audience interpretation (cultural studies approaches), and production strategies (industry perspectives). Building upon recent works that blur the distinctions between text, audience, and production (e.g., Holmes, 2004; Meyer, 2007; Watts & Orbe, 2002; H. Wood, 2005) to further theorize the communicative function of television, communication scholarship needs to integrate its approach to contemporary television studies.

This edited collection aims to bridge these divides by focusing on the television legacy of Shonda Rhimes. Rhimes is the creator and/or producer of Grey’s Anatomy (2005-), Private Practice (2007-2013), Scandal (2012-), How to Get Away with Murder (2014-), and, most recently, The Catch (2015-2016 season pilot debut). Her narratives capture large audiences in coveted primetime slots and continue to be highly economically successful. As the most powerful Black woman in the history of network television, Rhimes’ primetime network influence via ABC shapes the landscape of how we understand television representation, interpretation, and production in the 21st century. Simultaneously, as an influential public figure, her success, candor, humility, and intentionality significantly shapes discussions of identity/ies and diversity in current network television. Further indicative of Rhimes’ presence/audibility/visibility/influence in public discourse, @shondarimes boasts 961K followers, and her tweets often address identity politics and the power of representation. This influence is not limited to Rhimes herself, as the fans, actors, and writers working with/following Rhimes also contribute heavily to our public understanding of what is at stake in current television narrative and practices.

Our goal in this collection is to offer a complex reading of “Shondaland” by interrogating: representation, audience responses to Rhimes’ narratives/public discourse, and larger industry issues such as casting and the emergence of new media technologies.
We are currently seeking proposals to augment our collection that address the following topics:

Complex textual readings of any of Rhimes’ narratives (listed above).

Audience-centered approaches to Rhimes’ work such as focus groups, interviews, autoethnography, or analysis of fan discussion/response to particular narratives/storylines/characters.

Cultural critique of industry norms and practices that influence Rhimes’ work such as representation, casting, writing, and/or industry scandal (e.g., Washington/Knight scandal on Grey’s, the use of Rhimes as an “all encompassing” spokesperson for diversity on television, etc.).
We are especially interested in proposals that embrace audience-centered approaches, critique industry practices and political economy, and analyze identity politics that include a focus on ability, age, transgender and gender queer identity, nationality, religion, and racial and ethnic identities beyond the Black/White binary.

Proposals should operate theoretically and methodologically from critical approaches to the study of television. Via a 500-750 word abstract, each proposal should make clear: (1) the chapter’s purpose framed in relation to the call, (2) how the chapter is theoretically/conceptually and methodologically anchored, (3) the chapter’s primary text(s)/trajectory for analysis/argument, (4) the scholarly conversations the chapter is contributing to, and (5) the provocative questions raised and/or addressed by the chapter. Proposals should also include a bibliography of at least 15 working sources for the chapter proposed, as well as a brief biography for each author (150 words or less). Proposals are limited to a 1500 word maximum (not counting the bibliography and bios).

Overall, for our planning purposes, each abstract should include an explicit indication of the chapter’s focus on text and/or audience and/or production. Although we embrace the distinctions between text, audience, and production, we also see these as fluid and simply need to know which elements will be emphasized in the chapter.

Proposals are due by Friday September 18th 2015 and accepted proposals will be notified byFriday October 16th 2015. The anticipated deadline for full chapter drafts is February 1st 2016(This deadline may be extended depending on the publisher).

Inquiries about the call or this project can be directed to either of the editors: Rachel Alicia Griffin (rachelag@siu.edu<mailto:rachelag@siu.edu>) or Michaela D.E. Meyer (mmeyer@cnu.edu<mailto:mmeyer@cnu.edu> ). Please include “Shondaland” in the subject line of all correspondence with the editors.