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Sally Chandler

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John G. Douglass (Statistical Research, Inc. / University of Arizona), General Editor


Editorial Board

Stephen Acabado (University of California, Los Angeles)

Koh Keng We (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)

Christine Beaule (University of Hawai’i at Mānoa)

Laura Matthew (Marquette University)

Martin Gibbs (University of New England, Armidale, Australia)

Sara Gonzalez (University of Washington)

Steven W. Hackel (University of California, Riverside)

Stacie M. King (Indiana University)

Rafael de Bivar Marquese (University of São Paulo, Brazil)

Lee Panich (Santa Clara University)

Christopher R. DeCorse (University of Syracuse)

Innocent Pikirayi (University of Pretoria, South Africa)

Christopher Rodning (Tulane University)

Lynette Russell (Monash University, Australia)

Natalie Swanepoel (University of South Africa)

Juliet Wiersema (University of Texas, San Antonio)


The University Press of Colorado is accepting manuscripts for publication in our Global Colonialism series, a collection of nonfiction books that investigate the effects of colonialism globally on both colonizers and the colonized. Books in the series will be selected from across a variety of fields, including archaeology, anthropology, ethnohistory, and history.

Conquest and colonization have characterized the human experience from the time of the emergence of state-level societies. We invite global case studies, from the earliest known examples in antiquity to the current day, as well as more synthetic works that study the ties between areas connected by colonialism. Books in this series should study colonial processes at a local level, while also examining how these processes connect to larger spheres and themes.

All proposals for the this series should follow the press submission guidelines, and submission will be evaluated by the press acquisitions staff, the series editors and/or editorial board, as well as outside experts.

If you would like to make a donation to support future titles in the Global Colonialism series, please click here.

Sally Chandler

Sally Chandler taught writing at Kean University from 2003 to 2015. Throughout her career, she studied how sharing and reflecting on personal experience—in talk and in writing—open up what we know about ourselves, each other, and the way the world works. This interest has made her a devoted practitioner of collaborative, reflective methods—both in their teaching and in her research. Her first book, New Literacy Narratives from an Urban University: Analyzing Stories about Reading, Writing, and Changing Technologies, is a collection of essays, co-authored with five Kean University students. Student authors narrate, analyze, and interpret their (very different) stories about how they changed and grew in response to the increasing presence of digital communication technologies and the internet. While at Kean, she set up and administered the University's writing center, developed a Writing Studio for the Exceptional Educational Opportunities Summer Academy, a program for educationally and economically disadvantaged freshman, and, with Mark Sutton, helped to create and administer the University's Master of Arts program for teaching writing.

The Writing Studio Sampler

Stories about Change

University Press of Colorado University of Alaska Press Utah State University Press University of Wyoming Press