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Meg Roland

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Former English professor at Marylhurst University for 16 years, then Concordia University. I taught writing, medieval literature, humanities, maps and literature, and history of the book. After five years as a Dean of arts and humanities at Linn-Benton Community College, I am now a writer and an instructor at Willamette University – Pacific Northwest College of Art.
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Recent Posts
- To Lift the Spirit: Churches and Flowers of Latera July 14, 2026
- In an Italian newspaper (Lazio Courier, June 25, 2026): “USA Writer Captivated by Small Village” July 2, 2026
- Latera and Art: Transforming a 12th century village into a contemporary open-air art museum June 26, 2026
- Latera: persone gentili (kind people) June 16, 2026
- Latera: bosco (woods) June 13, 2026
Tag Archives: a-pilgrimage-to-eternity
“Here in this world, he changed his life:” literary geography and an itinerary
Literary geography—an imaginative, creative, or literary responses to landscape and place. It is also an awareness of the ways in which “spaces” are produced, created, or culturally sanctioned. Writing about travel and geography, whether real or imagined, has a long … Continue reading
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Tagged a-pilgrimage-to-eternity, books, history, King Arthur, Le Morte Darthur, literary-geography, Meg Roland, roman-war-campaign, Rome, Thomas Malory, tim-egan, travel
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