涩里番

Ralph
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641-269-3109

Ralph Savarese

Professor
Offices, Departments, or Centers: English , Science, Medicine, and Society ,

Professor Savarese has been on the faculty at 涩里番 for 24 years. He has also taught at Deerfield Academy, Keene State College, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poland, the University of Florida, Duke University, and the Newberry Library in Chicago. In 2012-2013, he was a fellow at Duke University鈥檚 Institute for Brain Sciences. In 2019-2020, he taught, with Elizabeth Prevost in 涩里番鈥檚 history department, a seminar at the Newberry called 鈥淥ne for the Books: On the Pleasures and Politics of Reading.鈥 He is the author of seven books and the co-editor of four collections. A poet, nonfiction writer, scholar, and activist, he teaches American literature, creative writing, disability studies, and neurohumanities at the college. Outside of 涩里番, he offers workshops in the arts to people with significant disabilities. His son, DJ, was Oberlin College鈥檚 first nonspeaking student with autism鈥攈e graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 2017. A documentary about his inclusion journey appeared on PBS and won a prestigious Peabody Award. Savarese lives in Iowa City, a UNESCO City of Literature, and loves it.

Books

Reasonable People: A Memoir of Autism and Adoption (Other Press, 2007)

See It Feelingly: Classic Novels, Autistic Readers, and the Schooling of a No-Good English Professor Duke University Press, 2018)

Republican Fathers (Nine Mile Books, 2020)

When This Is Over: Pandemic Poems (Ice Cube Press, 2020)

Someone Falls Overboard: Talking through Poems (with Stephen Kuusisto, Nine Mile Books, 2021)

Herman Melville and Neurodiversity, or Why Hunt Difference with Harpoons? (with Pilar Martinez Benedi, Bloomsbury Academic 2024).

Never Make Them Cry: Classrooms & Coffins (Ice Cube Press 2024)

Digital Chapbooks

Did We Make It? (with Tilly Woodward, Hole in the Head Review, 2021)

Luging with Sheila (Mudlark, 2025)

Co-edited Collections

Papa PhD: Essays on Fatherhood by Men in the Academy (Rutgers University Press, 2010)

The Lyric Body (Seneca Review, 2010)

Autism and the Concept of Neurodiversity (Disability Studies Quarterly 2010)

NeuroFutures (forthcoming from the Modern Language Association)

Savarese is the recipient of a number of awards: the Irene Glascock National Undergraduate Poetry Competition (the judges were Seamus Heaney and 涩里番 alumna Amy Clampitt); the Hennig Cohen Prize from the Herman Melville Society for an 鈥渙utstanding contribution to Melville scholarship鈥; an Independent Publisher鈥檚 Gold Medal for Reasonable People in the category of health/medicine/nutrition; a Mellon Foundation 鈥淗umanities Writ Large鈥 fellowship; two 鈥渘otable essay鈥 distinctions in the Best American Essays series; two Pushcart Prize nominations; and a National Endowment for the Humanities summer stipend. He can be seen in three documentaries about autism: Loving Lampposts, Living AutisticFinding Amanda (CNN); and Deej.

Savarese鈥檚 scholarship, creative work, and opinion pieces have appeared in more than 100 journals, books, and newspapers: Adoption and Culture; Aethlon: A Journal of Sports and LiteratureAhab Unbound: Melville and the Materialist Turn; American Book ReviewAmerican DisastersAmerican LiteratureAmerican Poetry Review; the Atlanta Journal Constitution; the Austin American Statesman; Autism in a Decentered World; the Baltimore SunBellingham ReviewBeloit Poetry JournalBeltway Poetry QuarterlyBlue Unicorn; Brevity; Bridge EightCaveat Lector; the Cincinnati PostCream City Review; the Dallas Morning News; the Des Moines RegisterDisability Studies QuarterlyDiscretionary Love; Edge City ReviewEkphrastic ReviewEr(r)go; Ethics of NeurodiversityFamily Trouble: Memoirists on the Hazards and Rewards of Revealing FamilyFoundations of Disability StudiesFont: A Literary Journal for Language Teachers; Fourth GenreFrontiers of Integrative Neuroscience; the Gainesville SunGalway Review; Graham House Review; the 涩里番 Herald Register; the HavenHole in the Head Review; the Houston Chronicle; the Huffington PostInflexionsInside Higher Ed; the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA); Jam It; the Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability StudiesKeywords in Disability Studies; the L.A. TimesLeviathan: A Journal of Melville Studies; the Louisville CourierLove鈥檚 Executive OrderMain Street RagModern Poetry in TranslationMollyhouse; Months to Years; Mudlark; NarrativeNeuroclastic; New England Review; a New Companion to Herman Melville; New Verse NewsNine Mile MagazineOne Art; the Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Literary Studies; the Oxford Handbook of Walt Whitman; The Palm Beach Effect: Reflections on Michael HofmannPloughsharesPoem-A-Day (Academy of American Poets); Poetry InternationalPoetry & PolitryThe PokerPolitics & CulturePorcupine Literary; Prose StudiesPsaltery & LyreRattleRed Wheelbarrow; Research and Practice for Persons with Severe DisabilitiesRethinking Empathy through LiteratureRogue AgentRorotoko; Salon.comSecret Sharers: Melville, Conrad, and Narratives of the RealSegueSeneca ReviewSewanee Review; SoftblowSouthern Humanities ReviewSouthern Poetry ReviewSouthwest ReviewSport Literate; Stone Canoe; SubStance; the Tallahassee DemocratTeach. Write; Thin AirThinking in the WorldA Reader2RiverVerse Virtual; and Wordgathering.

 

Reviews of Reasonable People: A Memoir of Autism and Adoption

鈥淪avarese鈥檚 careful melding of memoir and passionate advocacy for the disabled informs and inspires.鈥

--Booklist

鈥淲hat everyone should be talking about: Why Ralph James Savarese and his wife would adopt a 6-year-old with autism is the subject of the new memoir REASONABLE PEOPLE. That it manages to avoid both polemic and cliche is reason enough to applaud.鈥

--GQ

鈥淎 real-life love story and an urgent manifesto for the rights of people with neurological disabilities.鈥

--Newsweek

Reasonable People: A Memoir of Autism & Adoption is poet Ralph James Savarese鈥檚 tale of adopting an abused, non-speaking boy, then using love and patience to help his son grow into his full self. A moving memoir, it calls for 鈥榣iving with conviction in a cynical time.鈥欌

--Body & Soul

鈥淪avarese writes with passion and humor, careful to include extensive excerpts from DJ鈥檚 typing, so readers get a sense of his remarkable growth.鈥

--Publishers Weekly

鈥淚t鈥檚 an intellectually (morally, ideologically) challenging read. But to say it鈥檚 鈥渨orth the challenge鈥 would imply that I had to slog through it. That鈥檚 not true鈥擨 could hardly put it down.鈥

--Adoptive Families

**

Reviews of See It Feelingly: Classic Novels, Autistic Readers, and the Schooling of a No-Good English Professor

"Impassioned and persuasive. . . . A fresh and absorbing examination of autism."

鈥&苍产蝉辫;Kirkus Reviews Published On: 2018-07-15

"This idealistic argument for the social value of literature and for the diversity of autism as a condition is a rewarding endeavor. . . ."

鈥&苍产蝉辫;Publishers Weekly Published On: 2018-07-23

"This is a powerful book 鈥 one that really must be experienced. It is a book that unlocks doors to the many rooms of autism and is likely to surprise the thinking of anyone who steps into them. It carries within it the possibilities of new perspectives on literary work, a greater understanding of autistic neurology, and the chance to meet some remarkable individuals. Read it."

-- Michael Northen 鈥&苍产蝉辫;Wordgathering Published On: 2018-09-12

"Savarese has produced a masterpiece, simultaneously dense and accessible. His voice moves freely鈥攁lternating among lyrical, narrative, and instructive鈥攏ever losing the flow, never dipping into pedantry, never soaring too far toward the abstract for the reader to follow. Not only is this collection of essays brimming with the most important information and ideas about autism, it is a collaboration of rare beauty."

-- Maxfield Sparrow 鈥&苍产蝉辫;Thinking Person's Guide to Autism Published On: 2018-11-28

"Savarese shows that literature鈥攚ith its imagery, inclusivity, and rich detail鈥攊s a natural tent pole for a truly neurodiverse community, one populated by autists and neurotypicals alike. . . . The radical possibility this book ultimately offers is that the gap that has for so long existed between nonverbal autists and neurotypicals can be bridged through literature. Literature is, as Whitman said of himself, large, and contains multitudes."

-- Ittai Orr 鈥&苍产蝉辫;Synapsis Published On: 2019-02-08

"Readers will find this book to be a work of art as Ralph Savarese not only exhibits an understanding of the beauty of teaching but also of the language of the autistic mind. Savarese鈥檚 literary creation demystifies the limits of the autistic mind by following five autistic adults through their interpretation of and response to classic literature. . . . Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduates and above; professionals and general readers."

-- D. Pellegrino 鈥&苍产蝉辫;Choice Published On: 2019-04-01

"The sense of critical self-reflection is crucial to this enterprise, and is evident throughout the book. Thankfully, this never veers into self-indulgence; as such, [Savarese's] ethnographic work in this area is an exemplar to all those who study 鈥榦thers,鈥 as outsiders with situated knowledge."

-- Alison Wilde 鈥&苍产蝉辫;Disability & Society Published On: 2019-04-19

"To imagine an autistic rhetoric or an autistic literature is to struggle, audaciously, against a legacy of neurotypical people failing to imagine autism as anything other than lack. That struggle is joined . . . by Ralph [James] Savarese, whose See It Feelingly gives us five extraordinary examples of autistic readers鈥 responses to literature. It鈥檚 like Norman Holland鈥檚 classic work of reader-response criticism, 5 Readers Reading . . .  except with autism."

-- Michael B茅rub茅 鈥&苍产蝉辫;Public Books Published On: 2019-09-23

"Powered by his enthusiasm for connecting with autistics and for representing the fullness of their humanity, See It Feelingly is that rare book in English studies that succeeds as creative nonfiction: a memoir of teaching non-traditional learners that makes a provocative claim for the primacy of the senses in reading literature."

-- Dawn Coleman 鈥&苍产蝉辫;Leviathan Published On: 2019-10-01

"Savarese incorporates storytelling, memoir, and poetry into See It Feelingly, which you will read feelingly, from the opening line."

-- Deborah Jenson 鈥&苍产蝉辫;American Literature Published On: 2020-03-01

 

In the News

See It Feelingly

All Things 涩里番 Podcast - Season 1 Episode 8

 

See It Feelingly

New Books in Literary Studies Podcast

 

Reasonable People

狈笔搁鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;The Diane Rehm Show

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