My forthcoming book, Patriarchy’s Creative Resilience (Routledge, 2024) explores the disturbing sustainability of white male supremacy. I trace an imaginative failure and an imaginative success. My focus on British speculative fiction published between 1870-1900 demonstrates how even this elastic and wildly inventive literary form remains incapable of promoting non-patriarchal masculinity, and I attribute this inability to the creative resiliency of white male supremacy. I delineate the inventive use of diverse resources—a patriarchal toolbox—that we frequently view as custom or uncomplicated history and a versatility that we often dismiss as sheer power.
I am also the author of Disciplining Love: Austen and the Modern Man (The Ohio State University Press, 2007) and editor of Jane Austen and Masculinity (Bucknell University Press, 2017) and Jane Austen and Critical Theory (Routledge, 2021). I have just completed co-editing the first scholarly edition of William Delisle Hay’s Doom of the Great City (1880) for the Salvaging the Anthropocene Series at West Virginia University Press and am in the process of co-editing a new scholarly edition or Richard Jefferies’s post-apocalyptic narrative, After London; Or, Wild England (1885) for Clemson University Press. I have edited and introduced special editions of Rhizomes: Cultural Studies in Emerging Knowledge on Deleuze and Photography (2012) and Deleuze and Austen (2017). I have published scholarly articles on literary and critical figures such as Austen, Lawrence, Woolf, Foucault, Deleuze, and Dickens, and I have published series of articles on the representations of the Romani in nineteenth-century British literature and culture and visuality in late Victorian New Woman novels.
One of my new current projects is an interdisciplinary study of the efficacy of documentary storytelling as a mechanism for improving maternal health outcomes in Sierra Leone. This multi-year project, the Mothers of Sierra Leone, brings together faculty and students from diverse disciplines to leverage the powers of filmic storytelling to improve health outcomes for mothers and children in Sierra Leone. We deliberately amplify the voices of women in Sierra Leone and employ qualitative and quantitative methods to evaluate our films. Working with our partners in Sierra Leone, we share our films across various clinical and community sites.
Areas of Specialization
Nineteenth-Century British Literature, Critical Theory, Masculinity Studies, Visual Culture, Photography, Film
Select Recent Publications
Books
After London; or Wild England, by Richard Jefferies (1885), co-editor and introduced with Sarita Jayanta Mizin (Clemson University Press, in production, 2024)
Patriarchy’s Creative Resilience: Late-Victorian Speculative Fiction and the Sustainability of White Male Supremacy (Routledge, 2024)
The Doom of the Great City; Being the Narrative of a Survivor, Written A.D. 1942 (1880), by William Delisle Hay, co-editor and introduced with Sarita Jayanty Mizin. (West Virginia University Press, in production, 2024)
Jane Austen and Critical Theory, editor. (Routledge, 2021)
- “Introduction: Jane Austen and Critical Theory.” Introduction to Jane Austen and Critical Theory
Jane Austen and Masculinity, editor. (Bucknell University Press, 2017)
- “Introduction: Austen and Masculinity.” Introduction to Jane Austen and Masculinity
Disciplining Love: Austen and the Modern Man (The Ohio State University Press, 2007)
Journal Collections
Rhizomes: Cultural Studies in Emerging Knowledge. Special Issue on Austen and Deleuze. Edited and Introduced. 2017.
- “The Austen Concept, or Becoming Jane—Again and Again.” 33 (Fall 2017).
Rhizomes: Cultural Studies in Emerging Knowledge. Special Issue on Deleuze and Photography. Edited and Introduced. 2012.
- “Unburdening Life, or the Deleuzian Potential of Photography.” Introduction to Special Issue of Rhizomes on Deleuze and Photography. 23 (Spring 2012).
Recent Juried Book Chapters
“Lost in the Comedy: Austen’s Paternalistic Men and the Problem of Accountability.” Jane Austen and Comedy. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press, 2019. 146-64.
“Victorian Visions: Literary Imaginings of Social (In)Justice in the Later Nineteenth Century.” Teaching Victorian Literature in the Twenty-First Century. New York: Palgrave, 2017. 300-15.
“The Artifice of Talbot’s Photograph: From Nature’s Impression to the Sensations of Elan Vital.” Reality Trauma and the Inner Logic of Photography. Ed. Aim Duelle Luski. Tel Aviv: Resling Publishing, 2012: 35-48.
“The Domesticated Conflict and Impending Social Change of Pride and Prejudice.” Critical Insights: Pride and Prejudice. Ed. Laurence W. Mazzeno. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press (2011). 54-69.
Recent Juried Articles
“Richard Jefferies’s After London and the Limits of Liberal Colonialism: Reinscribing Hegemonic Masculinity.” English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920 62.2 (January 2019): 244-64.
“Seeing Reality, Making Masculinity Visible, and Envisioning Women’s Future: the Proto-Cinematic Vision of Mary Erle.” College Literature 44.3 (2017): 379-403.
“To Think Anew: Arnold, the Literary, and Social Justice” Nineteenth-Century Prose 43.1-2 (2016): 11-28.
“Domestic Photography and the Minor: Hawarden and the Aesthetics of Morris.” Nineteenth-Century Contexts. 35 (2013) [2014]: 143-66.
“Exposing Visual Discipline: Amy Levy’s Romance of a Shop, the Decay of Paternalistic Masculinity, and the Powers of Female Sight.” Victorians Institute Journal 40 (2012) [2013]: 111-43.
Recent Public Writings
“On ‘Mothers of Sierra Leone’: Improving Maternal Health. Through Storytelling.” Los Angeles Review of Books. May 10, 2023. Co-authored with Fathima Wakeel, Jordyn Pykon, and Nahjiah Miller. < https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/on-mothers-of-sierra-leone-improving-maternal-health-through-storytelling/>.
“On Trump, Masks and Masculinity: What the President’s Bare Face Really Reveals.” Salon. May 23, 2020. <https://www.salon.com/2020/05/23/on-trump-masks-and-masculinity-what-the-presidents-bare-face-really-reveals/>.
“The Patriarchy is Getting Mean . . . . And There is a Whiff of Desperation.” Ozy November 14, 2019. <https://www.ozy.com/news-and-politics/the-patriarchy-is-getting-mean-and-theres-a-whiff-of-desperation/241371/>.
“Netflix’s Stranger Things Offers Different Views of Masculinity.” The Morning Call. July 3, 2019. <https://www.mcall.com/opinion/mc-opi-masculinity-stranger-things-20190703-fyjg6njlcvazfpsi4pselkc4zm-story.html>.
“Boys and Men in the Age of Trump: How the President is Affecting our Understanding of Masculinity.” Salon. June 8, 2019. <https://www.salon.com/2019/06/08/boys-and-men-in-the-age-of-trump-how-the-president-is-affecting-our-understanding-of-masculinity/>.