The Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics seeks a talented adjunct faculty member to teach WRI 793: The Archive during the Fall 2026 semester. WRI793 The Archive (3 Credits) This unique course introduces MFA students to the rich archival holdings of the Jack Kerouac School and engages them in the study of the School's distinctive literary, artistic, and pedagogical lineages. Through sustained engagement with archival materials—including recordings, videos, interviews, performances, manuscripts, correspondence, publications, and other primary source materials—students will explore the history and ongoing evolution of the School's communities, traditions, and cultural contributions. The instructor will guide students in critically and creatively engaging archival materials, helping them develop an understanding of lineage, influence, transmission, and innovation within the context of the Jack Kerouac School and contemporary experimental writing communities. This course is taught in a hybrid format that includes a weekly asynchronous online component serving both low-residency and residential MFA students, as well as a weekly 90-minute in-person seminar for residential students. The instructor will be responsible for developing and facilitating both components of the course. Course Description: WRI 793: The Archive is a seminar-style course that introduces students to the archival holdings and living histories of the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics. Through sustained engagement with archival materials, students investigate the literary, artistic, and pedagogical lineages that have shaped the School and continue to inform contemporary experimental writing practices. Drawing upon recordings, interviews, videos, performances, publications, correspondence, and other archival artifacts, students will examine how literary communities are formed, how traditions are transmitted, and how artistic practices evolve across generations. The course asks students to engage archival materials both critically and creatively, considering questions of history, memory, influence, preservation, and cultural inheritance. Students will develop research, analytical, and creative methodologies for working with archival materials while gaining a deeper understanding of the figures, movements, communities, and conversations that have contributed to the School's ongoing legacy. Particular attention is given to the relationship between archival inquiry and contemporary creative practice.
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Job Type
Part-time
Career Level
Mid Level