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The choice of resurgence reflects the English department’s joy of seeing UH Mānoa return to in-person events and regain its “pre-pandemic vitality,” according to UH Mānoa Department of English chair and professor John David Zuern.

A return to normalcy post pandemic and the resilience displayed by our Maui community following the devastating wildfires helped inspire the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Department of English to select resurgence as its 2023 Word of the Year for Hawaiʻi.

“Our choice of ‘resurgence’ reflects our joy at seeing our UH Mānoa campus regain its pre-pandemic vitality, with lots of exciting events and activities. In that sense, we’re doubling down on our choice of ‘in-person’ last year,” said John David Zuern, UH Mānoa Department of English chair and professor. “The wildfires on Maui were also on our minds, and we wanted to uphold the Maui community’s resilience and its determination to come back strong, which should be inspiring for all of us as we face a future that will be shaped by the effects of climate change.”

Zuern said that the department also considered the word “polarization,” given the deep fault lines running through American public culture. On that note, Zuern said that “resurgence” is not always a good thing.

“For many years now, in the U.S. and around the world, we’ve witnessed the resurgence of authoritarianism, anti-democratic nationalism, and state-supported racism, sexism, and homo- and transphobia,” Zuern said. “In some places, we’re also seeing pushback against those malign trends, with an upsurge in activism and involvement in the political process, and that’s heartening. As educators in the humanities, we aim to help our students develop skills in analysis, interpretation, and communication that will allow them to engage critically with all the ‘surges,’ destructive and constructive alike, that are transforming our world.”

Merriam-Webster announced its 2023 Word of the Year as authentic on November 27.

More about the Department of English

UH Mānoa’s English department offers a comprehensive curriculum in English studies at the undergraduate and graduate levels. Students are able to pursue study in creative writing, composition and rhetoric, literary studies and cultural studies. Composition and rhetoric classes include place-based writing and Indigenous and digital rhetoric. Students can take creative writing classes in poetry, fiction and creative non-fiction. Literature and cultural studies courses offered range from Hawaiian and local literature to Shakespeare, American literature and Asian American film. For more about the UH Mānoa Department of English and its programs of study, visit its website.

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