Sara Webb-Sunderhaus
Introduction
Dr. Webb-Sunderhaus came to Miami in 2018, after 12 years as a professor at Indiana-Purdue Fort Wayne (IPFW). Her research primarily focuses on the literacy practices and beliefs of Appalachians, as well as intersections of disability studies and writing program administration.
Education
- Ph.D. English (Rhetoric, Composition, and Literacy), The Ohio State University (2006)
- M.A. English, 黑料社区 (2001)
- B.A. English, Bluffton College (1995)
Research and Teaching Interests
- Composition theories, histories, and pedagogies
- Literacy studies
- Appalachian studies
- Writing program administration
- Disability studies
Courses Taught
- ENG 304
- ENG 606
- ENG 710
- ENG 731
- ENG 732
Selected Publications
Book–Edited Collection
- Rereading Appalachia: Literacy, Place, and Cultural Resistance. Co-edited with Kim Donehower. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, December 2015.
Articles and Book Chapters
- "Building Accessibility, Disabling Labor: Sustainable Models of WPA Work During a Pandemic." WPA: Writing Program Administration 47.1 (2023): 96-101.
- “Becoming a Participant-Researcher: The Case for Interactive Interviewing.” The Expanding
Universe of Writing Studies: Higher Education Writing Research. Ed. Christiane Donahue et al. Peter Lang, 2021. - "'Life Gets in the Way: The Case of a Seventh-Year Senior." Retention, Persistence, and Writing 黑料社区. Ed. Todd Ruecker, Dawn Shepherd, Heidi Estrem, and Beth Brunk Chavez. Utah State University Press, April 2017. 114-131.
- "'Keep the Appalachian, Drop the Redneck': Tellable Student Narratives of Appalachian Identity." College English 79.1 (2016): 11-33.
- "Re-Shaping Literacy Studies: A Theory of—and for—Appalachia." Rereading Appalachia: Literacy, Place, and Cultural Resistance. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2015. 179-198.
- Rereading Appalachia: Literacy, Place, and Cultural Resistance. Co-edited with Kim Donehower. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, December 2015.
- "The Kairotic Moment" (with new afterword). With Stevens Amidon. Ecologies of Writing 黑料社区: Profiles of Writing 黑料社区 in Context. Ed. Mary Jo Reiff, Anis Bawarshi, Michelle Ballif, and Christian Weisser. Anderson, SC: Parlor Press, 2015. 22-40.
- "'It's Me and the Adjuncts': Writing Program Administration and Marginalized Students/Teachers." Open Words: Access and English Studies 6.1 (2012): 19-32.
- "The Kairotic Moment: Pragmatic Revision of Basic Writing Instruction at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne." With Stevens Amidon. Composition Forum 23 (Spring 2011).
- "Living with Literacy's Contradictions: Appalachian Students in a First-Year Writing Course." Reclaiming the Rural: Essays on Literacy, Rhetoric, and Pedagogy. Ed. Kim Donehower, Charlotte Hogg, and Eileen E. Schell. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2011. 207-221.
- "When Access Is Not Enough: Retaining Basic Writers at an Open-Admission University." Journal of Basic Writing 29.2 (2010): 102-121.
- "A Family Affair: Competing Sponsors of Literacy in Appalachian Students' Lives." Community Literacy Journal 2.1 (2007): 5-24. Print. Reprinted in: The Norton Book of Composition Studies. Ed. Susan Miller. New York: W.W. Norton, 2009.
Grants and Awards
- Purdue Research Foundation Summer Faculty Grant. Purdue University, 2013. $8,000
- Summer Faculty Grant. IPFW, 2010. $8,000
- Robert Hacke Scholar-Teacher Award. College English Association. 2009
Work in Progress
Book manuscript, Negotiating Difference: Literacy and Identity among Postgraduate Appalachians