D. Kay Woods

Honors Department 106 Bell Court

University of Kentucky Nicholasville, KY 40356

355E Patterson Office Tower (859) 321-1851 (h)

Lexington, KY 40506-0027 (859) 257-8452 (o)

Education

Ph.D./ABD History, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY

Qualifying Exams Passed (August 2001)

Dissertation director: David Olster

Dissertation title: “Comfortable Asceticism”: A Study of

Gendered Spirituality, Intellectual Intercourse and the Institutionalization of Female Authority in the Fourth Century.

Dissertation committee: David Olster, Daniel

Gargola, Gretchen Starr-LeBeau, Alice Christ.

Rank I Education with areas of concentration in history and English,

Georgetown College (May 1991)

M. A. Education, History and English, Reading Specialist, University

Kentucky (May 1978)

B. A. Interdisciplinary (History, Speech and Drama), Asbury College,

Wilmore, KY (1971)

Languages

Spanish 4 years (spoken and reading competency) Latin, French, German, Greek (reading competency)

Publications

“The Lure of the East: A New Place and Space for Fourth-Century Female

Patrons.” Twenty-Ninth Annual Byzantine Studies Conference Abstracts of

Papers. Lewistown, ME: Bates College Press, 2003, 73-74.

“Autonomy, Patronage, Intellectualism: Essential Components for the Spiritual Dynasties of Fourth-century Christian Women.” Twenty-Seventh Annual Byzantine Studies Conference Abstracts of Papers. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2001, 57-58.

Selected Presentations

“From Home, to Church, to Monastic Community: ‘Extreme Home Makeover’ in

the Fourth Century.” Patristic, Medieval and Renaissance Conference, Villanova

University, Villanova, PA Oct. 2006.

“Epistolography, Familial Vocabulary, and Rhetoric: The Signs of Comfortable

Asceticism.” Patristic, Medieval, and Renaissance Conference, Villanova

University, Villanova, PA. Oct. 2005.

“The Lure of the East: A New Place and Space for Fourth-Century Female Patrons.” Oct. 2003 BSC, see publications.

“Autonomy, Patronage, Intellectualism: Essential Components for the Spiritual Dynasties of Fourth-century Christian Women.” Nov. 2001 BSC, see publications.

“Marie de France: Social Commentator.” Thirty sixth International Medieval Studies Conference, Kalamazoo, MI, May 2001.

“Relatives, Parenting, and Success: The Impact of Genealogy on Christine de Pizan.” Interdisciplinary Conference in Medieval Studies, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, Oct. 1999.

Prize

Toumisis Graduate Student Award for 2003 paper, “The Lure of the East…” Award was presented at Byzantine Studies Conference, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, D.C. 2004.

Fields Prepared to Teach

Late Antique and Early Medieval Europe – social, cultural, political or religious

Perspectives

Early Christian Women, First-Fourth Centuries

Early Christianity –History of, Saints and Martyrs, Letters and Treatises

Renaissance Europe – Carolingian Era, Twelfth-century Intellectual Thought,

Fourteenth-century social, cultural, political, and religious issues

Classical Greece and Rome – studies in antiquity-the humanities

History of Europe Through Mid-17th Century

History of Europe Early Modern to Present

History of Europe: The Early Modern Years

The Renaissance and Reformation

Women of Antiquity and the Middle Ages – individual profiles, social,

economic and political issues

Great Books of Western Civilization

Western Civilization through Drama

Early Modern Civilization

The Modern World

Church History

The Crusades

European History via Historical Fiction

Teaching

Instructor, Honors University of Kentucky Fall 2002-present

HON 301 Pro-seminar: Early Christian Women 1st-4th Centuries Spring 2011

A 3-credit hour seminar focusing on comparisons of

Judeo-Christian women from social, historical, and

economic perspectives.

HON 301 Pro-seminar: Comparative Religions Fall, 2009

A 3-credit hour seminar inter-active and research oriented. Students are

responsible for preparation and follow-up for our religious outings.

HON 301 Pro-seminar: History, Gender, and Christian Women Spring, 2006

A 3-credit hour seminar that is research oriented and reflected in stages through journaling, panel discussions, and a final paper/project. Grades are based on oral presentations and a publishable paper.

HON 333 Journal/Journey Project Fall-Spring 2005-2009

Mentored a student through journals and guided his project to create a Chinese/American Revolution connection. A most rewarding experience.

This student won the journal/travel scholarship and is completing a project

for publication.

My current student is compiling a multi-cultural cookbook based on her work with the Lexington Literacy Project and ESL program. The cookbook not only features delicious recipes, but also provides geographical/agricultural information and tips on how to transition from cooking in one’s native country to utilizing Kentucky Proud products.

HON 241 Gendered Violence: A Social Sciences Approach Fall 2008

HON 205 The Modern World -This Present Drama Spring 2007, 2008

HON 201 The Early Modern World-Staging History Fall 2007

HON 105 The Medieval/Renaissance World: Spring 2003- 2009, 2011

All the World’s a Stage

.

HON 101 The Ancient World: Dramatic Entertainment Fall 2002-11

Part-time Instructor, History University of Kentucky June 2002-2007

HIS 104 History of Europe Through Mid-17th Century 2002-2007

HIS 105 History of Europe Mid 17th Century 2005-2007

HIS 270 Early Middle Ages (approximately 300-1000 C.E.) Spring 2003

Teaching Assistant University of Kentucky Fall 2000-Spring 2002

HIS 104 History of Europe Through Mid-17th Century Fall 2000, 2001

HIS 108 History of the US Through 1865 Spring 2001

HIS 107 Western Culture: Science and Technology II Spring 2002

Part-time Instructor English Dept. University of Kentucky Fall 1999-Spring 2001

ENG 101 Writing Composition Fall 1999

ENG 201 Business Writing Spring 2000

Professional Activities

Undergraduate Studies Honors Curriculum Committee 2008-2010.

Restructuring courses and creating syllabi to reflect content literacy in

the Honors Program in alignment with the new Undergraduate Studies

guidelines.

Gains Fellow Committee Member 2006-2007. Directing a student thesis regarding

Christadelphians in America.

Recruiting Committee—Honors Dept. 2005-2006. Designed programs for

recruiting underprivileged students and minorities to the Honors Program at the University of Kentucky.

Reader—Honors pre-screening committee. Evaluated applications and essays.

Made recommendation for first cut Honors students. 2003—present.

Freelance Proofreader—Edited:

Title pending (Memoirs of Vietnam) by Robert Adams, 2009-2010

The Goat and the Butcher by Dr. Robert Olsen, 2005. Also edited two

Article for Dr. Olsen. 2005 and a conference paper in 2006.

A Perspective on Corporate America: Politics, Pitfalls, Downfalls by S.

Otis Pratt, 1994-1995.

University of Kentucky Press 1994-1998 as copyeditor. Edited:

Horses and Heroes: Tales of the Bluegrass by Philip Ardery, 1996; Atlas

of Kentucky, Richard Ulack, ed., 1998. Accepted several referrals for individual works of poetry and memoirs.

Professional Teacher, Secondary Level, in Fayette County Schools—Aug 1974-

May 1999. Taught World Civilization, APEH, Humanities, and Debate I. Developed lesson plans, teaching units, and the entire curriculum

for the Humanities class. Coached debate and speech teams.

Professional Associations

American Historical Association

Byzantine Studies Conference

Association of Ancient Historians

The Medieval Academy of America

References

Dr. David Olster Meg Marquis

University of Kentucky, History Dept. Academic Coordinator

1775 Patterson Office Tower Honors Program University of Ky

Lexington, KY 40506-0027 1153 Patterson Office Tower

Lexington, KY 40506-0027

Dr. Gretchen Starr-LeBeau Dr. Frank Ettenshon

University of Kentucky, History Dept. Director, Honors Program

1703 Patterson Office Tower University of Kentucky

Lexington, KY 40506-0027 1151 Patterson Office Tower Lexington, KY 40506-0027

Dr. Bruce Holle

University of Kentucky, History/Honors Depts.

1707 Patterson Office Tower

Lexington, KY 40506-0027