Close Close

English Students and Alumni Present at MAPACA

Three undergraduate English students and two alumni recently presented their thesis research at the interdisciplinary Mid-Atlantic Popular and American Culture Association (MAPACA) annual conference in Atlantic City, NJ. For several presenters, MAPACA was their first regional scholarly conference.

Breanna Guinta, English undergraduate student, presented on her departmental honors thesis on Nathaniel Parker’s Willis’s travel essays from France during the 1832 cholera pandemic. The essays were published out of the chronological order in which Willis composed them, but Guinta sequenced them by composition date. Doing so showed that Willis fraudulently visited a Parisian hospital and saw dozens of dying and dead patients, which traumatized him. His subsequent essays show signs of PTSD but also provided him with an early form of writing therapy.

Guinta remarked, “It was an amazing experience to present at a regional conference attended by students, professors, and scholars from other parts of the world.” She said she benefited from how her audience responded to her presentation, adding, “they were engaged and were able to connect the 1832 cholera pandemic to the recent COVID-19 pandemic,” a connection she intends to pursue in future research.

Meghan Reilly, English undergraduate student, presented on a portion of her Honors School thesis on Judith Ortiz Cofer’s book “Silent Dancing,” which describes Cofer’s adolescence in Puerto Rico and Paterson, NJ. Drawing on postcolonial cultural studies, Reilly’s linguistic analysis showed how Cofer uses typographical and rhetorical strategies to normalize Spanish terminology for English-only readers, which builds bridges between cultures and illustrates the author’s hybrid identity.

Reilly said, “This was a great experience to talk in front of listeners outside of the Monmouth community and work on building upon my experience and professional development. The conference also allowed me to speak further on a part of my thesis that I have not yet presented, and to think about its content critically.”

Ashley Zingillioglu, English undergraduate student, presented on her Honors School thesis, an interactive social story to teach interpersonal skills to students with autism. She explained her game’s development process from writing a dialogue script and developing a wireframe outline, to coding with the JavaScript library p5.js and the text-to-image AI service Midjourney, ending by demonstrating her partial prototype.

“Presenting at this interdisciplinary regional conference was a big step for me, as my only prior experience with presenting was in a classroom,” Zingillioglu said. “The conference gave me a first-hand exposure to presenting my ideas in a professional setting. It provided a supportive environment for me to show my project’s early steps to a curious audience of professors and graduate students, They were eager to help me see my vision come to fruition. I felt privileged, honored, even ecstatic!”

A recent alumna, Nicole Mautone ’24, was invited to present her award-winning Honors School thesis on the visual novel “Doki Doki Literature Club!” Her semiotic analysis showed how the early parts of the novel feature three sign systems—Visual, Auditory, and Written Language—that establish expectations of an anime-style dating simulation. These expectations are then subverted in a key moment that creates psychological horror. “I still have so much love for my topic so it is always exciting to be able to talk about it again,” Mautone reflected. “I was able to take my research and work that I did at Monmouth and share it with others. I am always excited to be able to share my work with new audiences.” She is currently pursuing a graduate degree at Montclair State University.

Bill Elwell ’19, adjunct professor in the Department of History and Anthropology, who also shared his research at the conference, added, “It was incredible experiencing what Monmouth students have to offer the academic world, and the breadth and scope of each student’s presentation is testament to the Monmouth community and its support.”