About Us
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Laura ConstantineAssistant Laura Constantine lives in Hartford City with her husband Ken, a TU math professor. When she's not working in the C.S. Lewis Center, Laura enjoys visiting her children, working on handcrafts, walking her cat Coburn, reading, camping, and canoeing. |
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David NeuhouserScholar in Residence David L. Neuhouser is Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at Taylor University. He has served as Mathematics Department Chair, Director of the Honors Program, and Director of the Center for the Study of C. S. Lewis & Friends. He is the recipient of awards for teaching and for writing and has been a speaker at conferences in the U.S. and in the U.K. In addition to many articles [examples at Resources] and reviews, he compiled the anthology, George MacDonald: Selections From His Greatest Works. He is the author of Open to Reason and A Novel Pulpit, Sermons from George MacDonald's Fiction, as well as chapters in three books. "George MacDonald and Social Issues," in A Noble Unrest: Contemporary Essays on the Work of George MacDonald. "George MacDonald and Universalism," in George MacDonald: Literary Heritage and Heirs. "The Role of Mathematics in the Spiritual Journey of George MacDonald," in Truths Breathed Through Silver: The Inklings' Moral and Mythopoeic Legacy. |
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Pam Jordan-LongDirector of Programs Dr. Pam Jordan-Long has served Taylor University in many roles: faculty member, Dean at the Fort Wayne campus, and C.S. Lewis & Friends Colloquium coordinator. She is currently a member of the Professional Writing Department on the Upland Taylor campus. Pam has been involved with the Lewis & Friends Center since its inception and has written and spoken about Lewis and MacDonald at many conferences. Her doctoral thesis includes MacDonald's work: Clergy in Crisis: Three Victorian Portrayals of Anglican Clergymen Forced to Redefine Their Faith. |




