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2025 SEELC Newsletter and Letter from the Chair

September 16, 2025

2025 SEELC Newsletter and Letter from the Chair

our department

Dear friends and colleagues! 

We invite you to read our 2025 SEELC Newsletter, featuring the Letter from the Chair Dr. Angela Brintlinger below. 

Thank you for all your support and participation this year! We look forward to continue working towards building a department filled with passion and expertise in our field.

 

2025 SEELC Newsletter

 

Letter from the SEELC Chair

Dr. Angela Brintlinger

2024-25 held a lot of excitement for the Department of Slavic and East European Languages and Cultures. In particular:

  • Two of our assistant professors were promoted with tenure. Please congratulate Dr. Alisa Ballard Lin and Dr. Philip Tuxbury-Gleissner, new associate professors who also published new books this year! Check out Theatrical Consciousness: The Actor’s Mind in Russian Modernism (Northwestern University Press, 2025) by Dr. Lin and Subscribing to Sovietdom: The Lives of the Socialist Literary Journal (University of Toronto Press, 2025), recipient of a Book Subvention from the Association of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. And Dr. Tuxbury-Gleissner’s edited volume Resilient Kitchens: American Immigrant Cooking in a Time of Crisis (Rutgers University Press, 2023) received a 2024 James Beard Media Award. Dr. Lin has started a term as our Director of Graduate Studies, and Dr. Tuxbury-Gleissner continues on as Director of Undergraduate Studies.
  • The ranks of our teaching professors are growing! Dr. Helen Myers was reappointed as assistant teaching professor and has also been teaching at Columbus International High School. (She invited staff and faculty to visit: read more here.) What’s more, just as the bell rang for the first day of class this autumn, Dr. Laura Siragusa was appointed assistant teaching professor with her home in Linguistics and 50% of her teaching in SEELC. Congratulations to both.
  • More new books will be coming in 2026: Dr. Ludmila Isurin spent her spring sabbatical writing her new book, forthcoming with Oxford next year, Memory of Defeat: Remembering the Past and Imagining the Future. Dr. Jenny Suchland spent her sabbatical last year working on Accountable to Freedom: Interpreting (Anti) Trafficking Today. That, plus new books from Dr. Yana Hashamova (Ecosocial Selfhood: Embodied Knowledge about Russia’s Social Minorities) and me (The Silver Age in our Home: A Russian Literary Memoir, by Sophia Bogatyreva, translated by me and Catherine O’Neil, forthcoming with CEU Press), Dr. Dima Arzyutov (Paper Bridges Between Franz Boas and Russian Anthropology, co-edited by Dima, Dr. Laura Siragusa, and others, forthcoming at U of Nebraska Press, and soon his own The Northern Book of Origins: Siberian Indigenous Narratives and Metropolitan Ethnogenesis Theories, also at Nebraska.
duck photo

We have a few PhD students looking to defend this year, and we graduated two more Russian for the Professions MA students, Eleanor Grazier and Adam Johnson. In 2024-25 we also graduated twelve Russian majors and 19 Russian minors, with 6 additional Slavic minors. Not a bad crop! Many more of our PhD students are taking their candidacy exams this year, and with only one incoming graduate student, the RFP student Mitchell Baughman who has just spent his summer at Indiana University’s intensive Russian program, we will be looking to rebuild soon.

This past year we lost a beloved member of our alumni council, Jim Connell, who died in December of 2024. Our other council members will visit campus for Balkan Week in October—reach out if you’re interested in joining the council! Our traditional late September Hongor Oulanoff Lecture in Russian Literature will happen on 9/26, with Prof. Eric Naiman from U of California, Berkeley treating us to a comparison between Dostoevsky and Tolstoy with his lecture "The Heart of the Whole: Two Experiments in Eccentric Criticism." We have already scheduled the autumn semester Kapustnik talent show for November 5, and we expect our usual crowd of 100-150 talented students and their friends to mark their successes in studying our many languages: Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian, Polish, Russian, Romanian, and Ukrainian.

More events are in the planning stages, though uncertainty around funding through the Department of Education Title VI grant to the National Resource Center for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies is complicating our ability to bring in guest speakers. Nonetheless,      please stay tuned to our webpage and the CSEEES webpage and reach out if you are near campus. We will be rolling out a fundraising campaign to create a Romanian Language Endowment in honor of the fiftieth year of Romanian at Ohio State. Keep your eyes peeled!

 

With best wishes, 

Angela Brintlinger