Drawn from the author’s experience teaching Samuel Richardson’s novel Pamela during the #Metoo movement, this essay argues that bringing current discourses of consent and gender-based violence into conversation with the novel deepens students’ engagement with and interest in the eighteenth century. While students identify specters of Pamela and Mr. B’s relationship in their own worlds, the novel is also a helpful tool in revealing the many ways in which consent can be coerced
In this paper, the authors consider the #MeToo movement as an act of public pedagogy. They read #MeT...
In his preface to Clarissa, Richardson warns parents against the "abuse of their natural authority" ...
An introduction to issues of sexual consent, covering key strands of feminist thought, how sexual co...
Drawn from the author’s experience teaching Samuel Richardson’s novel Pamela during the #Metoo movem...
Students’ familiarity with the #MeToo movement, with its emphasis on multiple narratives of differen...
This essay offers several pedagogical strategies for teaching medieval romance in the time of #MeToo...
Classroom teaching informed by the #MeToo movement is widespread and diverse. This paper evolves fro...
This article presents the course ‘Seduction and Destruction: 1772¬–1808’, which I taught at Bristol ...
How we talk about misogyny and sexual violence in literary texts matters—to our students, to our col...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1997In this dissertation, I challenge the prevailing twen...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the first paragraph of the paper. One might say that Samuel Richard...
This dissertation studies that which divides rape from sex: the unstable line formed by the concept ...
This issue explores best practices for confronting issues of sexual violence in medieval literary te...
Challenging the predominance of rape culture within academia, this dissertation focuses on the inter...
“Gendering Violence: Rethinking Coercion and Consent in Early Modern English Literature” puts variou...
In this paper, the authors consider the #MeToo movement as an act of public pedagogy. They read #MeT...
In his preface to Clarissa, Richardson warns parents against the "abuse of their natural authority" ...
An introduction to issues of sexual consent, covering key strands of feminist thought, how sexual co...
Drawn from the author’s experience teaching Samuel Richardson’s novel Pamela during the #Metoo movem...
Students’ familiarity with the #MeToo movement, with its emphasis on multiple narratives of differen...
This essay offers several pedagogical strategies for teaching medieval romance in the time of #MeToo...
Classroom teaching informed by the #MeToo movement is widespread and diverse. This paper evolves fro...
This article presents the course ‘Seduction and Destruction: 1772¬–1808’, which I taught at Bristol ...
How we talk about misogyny and sexual violence in literary texts matters—to our students, to our col...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1997In this dissertation, I challenge the prevailing twen...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the first paragraph of the paper. One might say that Samuel Richard...
This dissertation studies that which divides rape from sex: the unstable line formed by the concept ...
This issue explores best practices for confronting issues of sexual violence in medieval literary te...
Challenging the predominance of rape culture within academia, this dissertation focuses on the inter...
“Gendering Violence: Rethinking Coercion and Consent in Early Modern English Literature” puts variou...
In this paper, the authors consider the #MeToo movement as an act of public pedagogy. They read #MeT...
In his preface to Clarissa, Richardson warns parents against the "abuse of their natural authority" ...
An introduction to issues of sexual consent, covering key strands of feminist thought, how sexual co...