Beyond ‘Brains’

Author and English professor Robin Becker is hitting the road this fall, returning to a route she took in the mid-1980s as a punk rock vagabond traveling the West Coast in a Volkswagen microbus.

That Reagan-era ride was significant enough in Becker’s life to revisit physically and philosophically, to find out more about exactly who that was busking on street corners, absorbing French existentialists a little too much and smirking at hair bands on the Sunset Strip.

“That was a time,” Becker said of pre-internet days, “that if you wanted to find things, you had to go into the world and seek them. You had to have failures and experiences to try to find cool things. And you could get lost. And we wanted to do that … we wanted to live.”

The upcoming trip will not only revisit a key time, but help construct a memoir tentative- ly titled “Road Kill.” The title is a reference to photographing smushed animals along the way as a complement to heavy conversations (see: French existentialists) she had with her traveling companion.

At the time, Becker was a few years out of her Hackensack, N.J. high school and eager to travel (she would go on later to backpack in Africa and Europe.) The memoir will be both a chronicle of the trip as well as reflections on it all through the present-day lens of an LGBTQ ally and writer who’s been teaching at the University since 2014.

A fan of both genre fiction and horror movies, Becker’s first published novel was “Brains: A Zombie Memoir.” In it, she offers a first-person account of a college English professor infected during a zombie outbreak but retaining his mind and will to survive.

“I kind of wrote it for fun,” she said. “Because most of my writing before that had been literary fiction. I just had a good time with it and just decided I was going to push the envelope with everything and then, you know, it was a funky book.”

Her angle as an instructor has been equally  eclectic and focused. In her writing courses, she prefers creative interaction over grading, having  students  respond  to a course with works of their own—not necessarily written.

“Part of my job is to help people be creative and look at the world as artists and writers and not re- ally as academics,” she said, not- ing that students have submitted original songs, photos, paintings and lyrical essays in lieu of tradi- tional term papers or reports.

A longtime musician and songwriter, Becker fronts the Mankato pop punk band Goal Area 51, which includes other University faculty: Tyler Vaughan on drums and criminology; Ed Ávila on bass and English and Jameel Haque on trumpet and history. Becker shares vocal duties with a younger singer named Echo, who is roughly the same age as Becker when she took to the road.

Since arriving at the Minnesota State Mankato in 2014, Becker’s restlessness and creativity have found a welcome home at the University, a place where she takes pride in helping  students on their own journeys.

“I’ll be here till I retire or die,” she laughed. “Whichever comes first.”

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