Chris Hudgins has taught at Emory, Old Dominion,
and, since 1976, at UNLV. Hudgins previously served as Chairman of the
English Department from 1984-93 and was instrumental in establishing both
the PhD and the Creative Writing Programs. During that time, the Department
mounted one of the best lecture/reading series in the U.S., bringing to
Las Vegas five Nobel Laureates and other writers such as Robert Stone,
Robert Coover, Charles Johnson, John Barth, and Hayden Carruth, as well
as scholars such as Christopher Ricks, William Arrowsmith, Stanley Fish,
Stephen Greenblatt, Wayne Booth, and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. The recipient
of a number of important grants, including two NEH grants and an Eisenhower
Grant, Hudgins has also been active in grants organizations. He served
on the Nevada Humanities Committee from 1993-2000, chairing that state
division of the NEH for the last two years. Hudgins also served as a member
of the Commission for Cultural Affairs, State of Nevada (1997-99), one
of five commissioners distributing $18 million in State funding for historical
preservation. He received the Governor's Award for Service to the Humanities
in 2001, and the Donald Schmiedel Award for Service to the University and
Community in 2000. Returning to the Chair's office in 2005, Hudgins has
led the Department through its recent revision of the English undergraduate
major. Hudgins' writing and scholarship include his co-edited book, Gender
and Genre: Essays on David Mamet and 19 articles or chapters in collections
on Harold Pinter, David Mamet, Stanley Kubrick and others. He is nearing
completion of a book on Pinter's filmscripts and serves on several editorial
boards. He is also a board member of the Black Mountain Institute.