she, her, her, hers, herself
Humanities Division
Distinguished Professor
Faculty
Literature Department
Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas
Academic Senate
Humanities Building 1
640 Humanities 1
Humanities Academic Services
I am a scholar of race and slavery in the United States, the Americas, and beyond. From my usual base in the nineteenth century, I approach the study of national literatures and cultures from a “worlded” perspective developed by the cluster in World Literature and Cultural Studies at UCSC. My first book – focusing on Mark Twain’s lifelong interest in identity and imposture - explores his engagement with the changing systems of racial classification in the late nineteenth-century US. My second book considers the mode of “American race melodrama,” which I contextualize as part of the “culture of the occult,” a quasi-political meeting ground for both race radicals and conservatives. My current book, published by the University of Chicago Press in 2022, reaches into hemispheric and ocean studies with a project tracing the strange career of the term “American Mediterranean,” a combined scholarly metaphor and folk geographical concept, appearing and disappearing in multiple disciplines, genres, and languages, a point of departure for a comparative critical study of the Americas.
Race, Black Studies, transnational studies, multilingualism
Nineteenth-century American literature and culture; theories of culture, race, and sexuality; world literature and cultural studies; transnational and translational approaches to literature.