Miriam L. Wallace

Professor of English & Gender Studies

Division of Humanities

5800 Bay Shore Rd Sarasota, FL 34243

Chair's Office: ACE-118

Office Phone: 941-487-4335

Video about New College & Humanities

Chapter 12: The Everyday Celebrity of “Sir” Jeffrey Dunstan, Mayor of Garrat in Making Stars: Biography & Celebrity in Eighteenth-Century Britain. Eds. Nora Nachumi & Kristina Straub, U Delaware Press, 2022.

In bringing biography and celebrity together, the essays in Making Stars interrogate contemporary and current understandings of each. Although biography was not invented in the eighteenth century, the period saw the emergence of works that focus on individuals who are interesting as much, if not more, for their everyday, lived experience than for their status or actions. At the same time, the concept of celebrity emerged as the public fascination with the private lives of publicly visible individuals increased. Biography and celebrity are mutually constitutive, but in complex and varied ways that this volume unpacks.

The contributors reject the idea that biography is limited to print or is a single author’s account of another individual’s coherent life story. Instead, the contributors present us with a cacophony of voices, speaking from multiple positions in the public sphere through multiple media, shaping life stories in which contradictions trouble the linear arch that defines an individual’s personal development and history. Making Stars provides readers with a picture of eighteenth-century celebrity that is mediated across multiple sites with varied and sometimes contradictory effects, demonstrating that eighteenth-century celebrity culture in Britain was more pervasive, diverse and, in many ways, more egalitarian, than previously supposed.




PMLA

Special Topic: Emotions

Co-Coordinated with Katharine Jensen

Vol. 130, No. 4, October 2015.



Introduction: Facing Emotions

Katharine Ann Jensen & Miriam L. Wallace

Animals Are from Venus, Human Beings from Mars: Averroës’s Aristotle & the Rationality of Emotion in Guido Cavalcanti’s “Donna me prega”

Gregory B. Stone

Better Living through Dread: Medieval Ascetics, Modern Philosophers, and the Long History of Existential Anxiety

Paul Megna

Pity & Poetics in Chaucer’s “Legend of Good Women”

Anne Schuurman

The Pathos of Reading

Mary A. Favret

Contaested Emotions: Pity & Gratitude from the Stoics to Swift & Wordsworth

Adam Potkay

Nat Turner and the Work of Enthusiasm

John Mac Kilgore

Facing Wilde: or, Emotion’s Image

Rochelle Rives

Emotion in Motion: The “Nātyashāstra”, Darwin, and Affect Theory

Vinay Dharwadker

The Scandal of Insensibility; or the Bartleby Problem

Wendy Anne Lee

Kafka’s Laughter: On Joy and the Kafkaesque

Anca Parvulescu

Theories & Methodologies

The Literariness of Literature & the History of Emotion

Sarah McNamer

Eschewing Politeness: Norbert Elias and the Historiography of Early Modern Affect

Gail Kern Paster

“Alas, Poor Yorick!”: Elegiac Friendship in “Tristram Shandy”

George Haggerty

The Logic of Emotionality

Katrin Pahl

Posthuman Compassion

Elisabeth Arnould-Bloomfield

The Changing Profession

Increasing Engagement in French & Francophone Studies: Structured Journaling on the Emotoins in La Fayette’s “La Princesse de Clèves”

Logan J. Connors

Professor Emily Casaubon Studies the Emotions

Blakey Vermeule

Feminist Politics of Emotions and Critical Digital Pedagogies: A Call to Action

Megan Boler

Correspondents at Large

Historicizing Emotions in Berline

Ute Frevert

Love, Fear, and Climate Change: Emotions in Drama & Performance

Peta Tait

Learning from Blindness

Chris Mounsey

Here on the Margins: My Academic Home

Patricia A. Matthew

Forum

Walking the Semipublic Talk

Julia Douthwaite

Co-edited by Miriam L. Wallace & A. A. Markley

Re-Viewing Thomas Holcroft, 1745-1809.

British Literature in Context in the Long Eighteenth Century, Series Editor Jack Lynch

Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate, 2012.

The first essay collection devoted to Thomas Holcroft’s life and work, this volume is a reassessment of his contributions to a remarkable range of literary genres—drama, poetry, fiction, autobiography, political philosophy. The contributors situate Holcroft’s self-fashioning as a member of London’s literati, his central role among the London radical reformers and intelligentsia, and his theatrical innovations within ongoing explorations of the late eighteenth-century public sphere of letters and debate.

Revolutionary Subjects in the English "Jacobin" Novel, 1790-1805. Bucknell University Press, 2009.

Revolutionary Subjects in the English "Jacobin" Novel engages ongoing debates on subject formation and rights discourse through the so-called "English Jacobin" novels. Ostensibly celebrating the universal rights-bearing subject, these political novels inadvertently also questioned the limitations of such universal conceptions. Including works by both men and women, and those normatively identified as radical alongside others considered more conservative or even "anti-Jacobin," this work examines the shared efforts to represent developing political consciousness and to inculcate such consciousness in readers across a reformist continuum. These novels' efforts to expand the citizen-subject threatened to reveal the cost implicit in accessing subjectivity on universal terms.

EnlighteningRomanticism, Romancing Enlightenment: British Fiction 1750-1830.

Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2009. (Essay Collection).

Memoirs of Emma Courtney and Adeline Mowbray, or the Mother and the Daughter by Mary Hays and Amelia Alderson Opie.

Glen Allen, VA: College Publishing, 2004. (Augmented classroom edition).