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Publications in VIVO
 

Garrity, Jane

Associate Professor

Positions

Research Areas research areas

Research

research overview

  • My book, Fashioning Bloomsbury will be the first to examine how the Bloomsbury Group (considered the most prominent English artistic and intellectual cohort of the past two hundred years) echoed but also resisted the legacy of British imperialism through their engagement with material objects—namely fabric, clothing, texts, photographs, and artwork. In particular, I argue, through the clothing they wore, thought about, and produced, they expressed the period’s distinctive convergence of revolutionary artistic practices and the pervasiveness of imperialism as a lingering ideology. At the heart of this book is the pressing question that propels my research: How has Bloomsbury’s legacy of making and thinking about objects influenced or intersected with the wider contemporary context in which the language of imperial exceptionalism has fueled pro-Brexit rhetoric?

keywords

  • twentieth-century British literature, modernism and empire, gender and sexuality studies, cultural studies, neo-materialism

Publications

selected publications

Teaching

courses taught

  • ENGL 3267 - Women Writers
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2021
    Introduces literature by British and American women. Same as WGST 3267.
  • ENGL 3930 - Internship
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2020 / Summer 2020
    Provides academically supervised opportunity for upper-division students to work in public or private organizations on projects related to students' career goals and to relate classroom theory to practice. May be repeated up to 6 total credit hours. Department enforced prerequisite: 3.0 GPA and faculty supervision.
  • ENGL 4039 - Critical Thinking in English Studies
    Primary Instructor - Summer 2020 / Summer 2021 / Summer 2023 / Spring 2024
    Concerned with developments in the study of literature that have significantly influenced our conception of the theoretical bases for study and expanded our understanding of appropriate subject matter. May be repeated up to 9 total credit hours.
  • ENGL 4820 - Honors Seminar
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2019
    Prepares prospective honors students to write honors theses. Focuses on sharpening the skills needed to write a successful thesis, including research techniques and the ability to evaluate and respond to secondary materials. Required for Honors in English Literature.
  • ENGL 5059 - British Literature and Culture After 1800
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2019
    Introduces graduate level study of Romantic, Victorian, Modern and Postmodern writing. Emphasizes a wide range of genres, forms, historical background and secondary criticism. Cultivates research skills necessary for advanced graduate study. Topics will vary. May be repeated up to 6 total credit hours.
  • ENGL 5549 - Studies in Special Topics 2
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2020 / Spring 2024
    Studies special topics that focus on a theme, genre, or theoretical issue not limited to a specific period or national tradition. Topics vary each semester. May be repeated up to 9 total credit hours.
  • WGST 3267 - Women Writers
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2021
    This course explores how women write about a range of issues, some explicitly gendered, such as desire, sexuality, marriage, and family, and others perhaps less so, such as politics, justice, race, and class. We'll consider how women think about their craft, how they approach questions of art and beauty, and whether we should consider writing by women a separate category. Students will examine a range of literature by women, aiming to be inclusive and intersectional. Same as ENGL 3267.

Background

International Activities