Associate Professor, English

she/her/hers

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My research and teaching interests center on the intersection of literature and politics, with primary areas of focus in seventeenth-century English literature, and gender and sexuality studies more broadly. My first book, Familial Forms: Politics and Genealogy in Seventeenth-Century England, investigated how writers from across the political spectrum explored the promise and the threats of using family as a means to stabilize politics. Moving beyond the much-discussed patriarchal analogy, this study drew on feminist and queer theory to illuminate the temporal stakes of family politics, giving particular attention to the explicit and implicit debates over genealogy as a literary and governmental form. I am completing a book project, Wartimes: Seventeenth-Century English Women’s Writing, which deploys an inter-historical approach, reconsidering the writing of seventeenth-century women in relation to the English civil wars, as well as the ways that this writing has been appropriated during other moments of war, including our own moment of global conflict. I have also co-edited a collection of interdisciplinary and theoretical essays entitled Milton Now, which expands discussions of Milton beyond the dominant historicist paradigm while simultaneously engaging wider questions about the current state of literary studies. My work in sexuality studies includes the co-editing of a special issue of Criticism on the work of Eve Sedgwick. I have also published a suite of essays on Milton and queer studies, including the forthcoming, “Who is listening?: Alice Egerton, A Maske Presented at Ludlow Castle, and Queer Erotics,” and have begun work on a new monograph, provisionally titled Rude Reading: Queer Feminism and Seventeenth-Century English Literature. In addition to offering undergraduate and graduate classes in English, I teach both the undergraduate class WS 101 and the theories and methods graduate seminar in the Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program, as well as CC201 in the Core Curriculum.

I have always been interested in the role of the humanities beyond academia.  From 2017 to 2020, I created and ran the BU Public Humanities Fellowship program, which placed a select group of undergraduates in summer internships, creating a cohort of students who together explored how their humanities educations could lead them to rewarding careers that would contribute to both local and global communities.

Books

  • Familial Forms: Politics and Genealogy in Seventeenth-Century English Literature, (University of Delaware Press, 2011).
  • Milton Now: Alternative Approaches and Contexts, (Palgrave, 2014).  Collection of interdisciplinary and theoretical essays on the work of John Milton inspired by the twenty-fifth anniversary of the groundbreaking volume, Re-membering Milton: Essays on the Texts and Traditions.  Co-edited with Catharine Gray.
  • Wartimes: Seventeenth-Century Women’s Writing and its Afterlives (book project)  

Special Issue

  • Honoring Eve: Essays on the Work of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick. Criticism 52.2 (Spring 2010).  Co-edited with J. Keith Vincent.

 Articles and Book Chapters

  • “When your body is a battlefield: Lucy Hutchinson and the Militarized Womb,” The Seventeenth Century, 38:3, (2023), 475-483.
  • “Your Body is a Battlefield: Lucy Hutchinson and the War in the Womb,” in preparation for special issue of Seventeenth Century (forthcoming 2023).
  • “Touches Across Time: Queer Feminism and Early Modern ‘Women’s’ Writing,” commissioned for Oxford Handbook of Early Modern Women’s Writing, eds. Sara Ross and Elizabeth Scott-Bauman (Oxford University Press, forthcoming September 2022), 717-733.
  • “Erotic Origins: Genesis, the Passion, and Aemilia Lanyer’s Queer Temporality,” in Worldmaking Women: New Perspectives on the Centrality of Women in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Culture, eds. Pamela Hammons and Brandie Siegfried (Cambridge University Press, 2021), 19-37.
  • “Rude Milton: Gender, Sexuality, and the Missing Middle of Milton Studies,” in Queer Milton, edited by David Orvis (Palgrave, 2018), 1-41.
  • “Radical Relations: The Genealogical Imaginary and Queer Kinship in Milton’s Paradise Regained,” in One First Matter All:  New Essays on Milton, Materialism, and Embodiment, edited by Kevin Donovan and Thomas Festa (Duquesne Press, 2017), 81-107.
  • “‘I remain, an airy phantasm’: Lucy Hutchinson’s Civil War Ghost Writing,” ELH: English Literary History, 82:1 (Spring 2015), 87-113.
  • “Introduction,” co-written with Catharine Gray, in Milton Now: Alternative Approaches and Contexts, eds. Catharine Gray and Erin Murphy (Palgrave, 2014), 1-25. 
  • “War Times: Seventeenth-Century Women’s Writing and its Afterlives,” in Rethinking Historicism from Shakespeare to Milton, eds. Ann Coiro and Thomas Fulton (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 257-82.
  • Paradise Lost and the Politics of Begetting,” Milton Quarterly, (March 2011), 25-49.
  • “Sabrina and the Making of English History in Poly-Olbion and A Mask Presented at Ludlow Castle,” Studies in English Literature, 51, 1 (Winter 2011), 87-110.
  • “Introduction,” co-written with J. Keith Vincent in “Honoring Eve: Essays on the Work of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick,” Criticism 52.2 (Spring 2010), eds. Erin Murphy and J. Keith Vincent, 159-76.
  • “Infectious Knowledge: Teaching John Milton’s Of Education and Mary Astell’s A Serious Proposal to the Ladies,” in Teaching Early Modern Prose, eds. Margaret Ferguson and Susannah Monta (Modern Language Association, February 2010), 659-76.
  • “Milton’s ‘Birth Abortive’: Remaking Family at the End of Paradise Lost,” in Milton Studies 43, ed. Albert C. Labriola (Pittsburgh, 2004), 145-70.

Works in Progress

  • Rude Reading: Queer Feminism and Seventeenth-Century English Literature (book project)
  • “Who is listening?: Alice Egerton, A Maske Presented at Ludlow Castle, and Queer Erotics,” in process for volume on John Milton, eds. David Ainsworth and Tom Festa.
  • “Dreaming of other worlds: Milton and Cavendish,” essay commissioned for the Oxford Handbook of Restoration Literature, eds. Matthew Augustine and Steven Zwicker (Oxford University Press). In process.
  • “Bodies at War,” essay for Margaret Cavendish and John Milton: Rethinking Seventeenth-Century Literature and Culture, eds. Ann Baynes Coiro, Lara Dodds, and Lisa Walters. In process.
  • · “Cheering Across Time: Feminist Alliance, Identification and the Challenges of Difference in the West End Emilia,” essay commissioned for Challenging Paradigms: Early Modern Women Writers and Convention, eds. Katherine Gillespie, Meghan Matchinske, Mihoko Suzuki, and Joanne Wright. In process.
  • · “Introduction to Lucy Hutchinson’s Order and Disorder,” for the Women Writers Project for the Women Writers in Context Series. In process.

Digital Project

Exhibit on biblical marginalia in Lucy Hutchinson’s Order and Disorder for “Intertextual Networks,” a research project at Northeastern University focused on intertextuality in early modern women’s writing. The exhibit, developed in collaboration with Chelsea Clark, will be published on-line in “Women Writers in Context” as part of the Women Writers Project.

Select Honors and Awards

  • Jeffrey Henderson Senior Fellowship, Boston University Humanities Center, Fall 2021
  • Elected Member, Northeast Milton Seminar, June 2020
  • NEH Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Humanities, Boston University, 2017-2020
  • Metcalf Award for Excellence in Teaching, 2016. University-wide teaching prize.
  • Jeffrey Henderson Senior Research Fellowship, BU Center for the Humanities, (Spring 2015)
  • Boston University English Department Commencement Speaker, 2013
  • David Kalstone Memorial Award for Best First Book, 2007.  Rutgers University Department of English.
  • Folger Institute Grant-in-Aid, Spring 2006
  • Boston University Humanities Foundation Junior Fellowship, Fall 2005
  • Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture Graduate Fellowship, 1999-2000
  • New York City Urban Fellowship, 1993-1994