Nicholas Coles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nicholas J. H. Coles is a British-American scholar in working-class literature and composition studies.

He writes and teaches about literacy, pedagogy, contemporary poetry, and teacher-research. His best-known book, Working Classics (1990), co-edited with Peter Oresick, was the first to highlight a seldom acknowledged working-class presence within contemporary American poetry.

He is also Field Director of the National Writing Project, based at the University of California at Berkeley. He directed until 2002 the Western Pennsylvania Writing Project, a site of the National Writing Project, working to improve students’ writing and academic performance in K-12 schools.

Coles is Associate Professor of English and Director of Composition at the University of Pittsburgh. Born in Leeds, England in 1947, he holds BA and MA degrees from Oxford University and MA and PhD degrees from the State University of New York at Buffalo. His 1981 PhD dissertation was The Making of a Monster: The Working Class in the Industrial Novels and Social Investigations of 1830-1855.

He has lived in the United States since the 1970s, primarily in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

[edit] Books

  • American Working-Class Literature: An Anthology , (co-editor with Janet Zandy), a textbook (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006).
  • For a Living: The Poetry of Work, (co-editor with Peter Oresick), a poetry anthology (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1995).
  • Working Classics: Poems on Industrial Life, (co-editor with Peter Oresick), a poetry anthology (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1990).

[edit] External links