NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Joseph T. Hallinan, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for and author of a book examining the growth of the prison system in America, will instruct a writing course at during the spring semester.
Hallinan will teach the one-credit, two-hour Investigative Writing in America course every other Friday to about a dozen junior and seniors in the. He will continue his duties with while teaching.
The unique partnership between a working journalist at the top of his field and ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ was developed primarily by , William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of English, with additional input by College of Arts and Science Dean English Department chair and , vice chancellor for public affairs.
Tichi interviewed Hallinan for her book Exposés and Excess: Muckraking in America, 1900-2000, published by the in 2004, and stayed in touch with him throughout the process of forming the class. Hallinan will be the first journalist to teach at in a new scenario where a high-ranking media professional conducts a course for one semester each year, Tichi said.
“We’re thinking of this as a residential appointment, but that doesn’t mean the person packs a suitcase and lives on the ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ campus for X number of weeks. That’s just not feasible for a working journalist,” Tichi said. “But the idea is that person is regularly here. It’s not a correspondence or e-mail course.”
Hallinan will commute to Nashville from his home in Chicago while teaching, and Tichi is allowing him to use her office at ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ.
Hallinan, a 1984 magna cum laude graduate of , won the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting in 1991 while working for for a series of stories he co-wrote about the medical malpractice system in Indiana.
He also was a nationally syndicated correspondent for , covering the Department of Justice and criminal justice issues from his Washington, D.C., bureau before moving on to in 1999 as an investigative reporter.
He began writing for in 2000, covering companies such as . and large media concerns like .
The presented Hallinan with a Distinguished Alumni Award in 1992, and he spent a year as a in 1997-98.
His book, Going Up the River: Travels in a Prison Nation, was published in 2001 by . It was named a notable book and a best book of the year.
Going Up the River: Travels in a Prison Nation deals with the growing prison-industrial complex, looking for answers in a “prison nation” that has grown tenfold in 30 years while crime rates have remained relatively flat.
“We expect Hallinan, in a sense, to map out for our students what the world of professional journalism is all about from his vantage point,” Tichi said. “He’s going to have them reading and writing, going out and doing projects and producing work for him.”
During research on her book, Tichi became interested in the different techniques journalists and authors take in crafting their best-selling and critically acclaimed books. She quickly realized that ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ’s students, while not journalism majors, could benefit from this array of writing knowledge.
“I thought a reason for these books to be on the best-seller list is they’re all really good books,” Tichi said. “These are good writers. How did they learn to be good writers?”
Tichi said Hallinan – a fan of bluegrass music – has expressed an interest in the country music industry and could possibly do research for future articles while in Nashville.
For more information about ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ and the College of Arts and Science, visit
Media contact: Todd Vessel, (615) 322-NEWS
>todd.vessel@vanderbilt.edu