Home
Home Scholarship Teaching Connections Web Work Fun Stuff

Books

My first book, Literary Minstrelsy, 1770-1830: Minstrels and Improvisers in British, Irish, and American Literature, is forthcoming from Palgrave Macmillan. This book first analyzes the emergence of minstrels, bards, and other oral poets as objects of sustained literary concern in 1750s Britain. It then traces those figures as Romantic-era writers used them to negotiate ideas of authorship, gender, and nation. The project emphasizes links between men and women writers, between canonical and non-canonical texts, and among works of different genres. The final chapter draws out the project's implications for the study of transatlantic blackface minstrelsy's emergence in the 1830s and 1840s.

My second book, whose working title is "Mercenaries in British and American Literature, 1790-1830: Writing, Fighting, and Marrying for Money," is under contract to appear in Edinburgh Studies in Transatlantic Literatures. This project analyzes ways in which writers in Britain and the United States explored new possibilities of professional authorship by portraying mercenary writers, fighters, and lovers. Writers of central interest include Charles Brockden Brown, Charlotte Smith, Jane Austen, Walter Scott, Lord Byron, and James Fenimore Cooper.

Articles, Conference Papers, and Scholarly Web Projects

Versions of two of the minstrelsy book's chapters have appeared in print:

Parts of both books and related projects have been the stuff of conference papers including these:

  • "Women Write of Mercenaries: Soldiering and Authorship in the Romantic-Era Women's Novel" (forthcoming), North American Society for the Study of Romanticism Supernumerary Conference, Bologna, March 2008

  • "'A Minstrel of the Western Continent': The Last of the Mohicans and American Minstrelsy before Blackface," Scottish Romanticism and World Literatures, Berkeley (CA), September 2006

  • "Last Minstrels, Last Mohicans: Romanticism and Transatlantic Minstrelsy before 1840," North American Society for the Study of Romanticism Annual Conference, Purdue University, September 2006

  • "Ormond's Fighters: Authorship, Soldiering and the Transantlantic Charles Brockden Brown," Symbiosis Biennial Conference, Thessaloniki, July 2005

  • "Good Though Rather for the Foreign Market: Mercenary Writing and Fighting in Scott's Quentin Durward," North American Society for the Study of Romanticism Annual Conference, Boulder (CO), September 2004

  • "Authors and Minstrels: Hogg's The Queen's Wake, Walter Scott, and the Romantic Canon," Eleventh James Hogg Society Conference, Selkirk (UK), July 2004

  • "False Asymptotes, Wandering Minstrels and the Vexed Nationalisms of Sydney Owenson's Wild Irish Girl," Women's Writing in Britain in 1660 to 1830, Winchester (UK), July 2003

  • "Beattie's Minstrel and Regency Poetry: Or, The Progress of Wordsworth's Genius," Eighteenth-Century Scottish Studies Society Annual Meeting, Charleston (SC), April 2003

  • "Mercenaries and the Enlightenment: Fighting and Writing from Adam Smith to James Hogg," Union and Cultural Identities in Eighteenth Century Scotland, University of Edinburgh, July 2002

  • "Women Writing the New Britain: William Wallace and Romantic-Era History," British Women Writers Conference, Madison (WI), April 2002

  • "Improvisation, Gender, and Nationalism," North American Society for the Study of Romanticism Annual Conference, Tempe (AZ), September 2000

  • "Another Last Minstrel: Macpherson, Scott, and Sydney Owenson's Lay of an Irish Harp," Modern Language Association Convention, Chicago, December 1999 (Keats-Shelley Association panel)

  • "A Prize Poem: Felicia Hemans' 'Wallace's Invocation to Bruce' and Women's Rewriting of Minstrelsy," Women Poets of the Romantic Period, Boulder (CO), February 1999

  • "The Common Crowd But See the Gloom: Reading the Growing Giaour," American Conference on Romanticism, Athens (GA), January 1998

I am also developing a scholarly as well as a pedagogical interest in the use of technology in college humanities instruction. Some of my thoughts in that field have appeared as "Threaded Discussion on the Internet and in the Classroom: Problems of Translation and an Approach to Emergence" in Journal of the Midwest Modern Languages Association 36:2 (Fall 2003), 23-39.

Also see a more recent project, The Transatlantic 1790s, a database-backed site including a detailed customizable chronology, customizable bibliography of criticism, and projects. The content is written by Grinnell students.