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Jessica Hurley

Jessica Hurley

Jessica Hurley is assistant professor of English and affiliate faculty in Native American and Indigenous Studies, Cultural Studies, and Women and Gender Studies at George Mason University, where she teaches classes and supervises research in science fiction, multi-ethnic American, Indigenous, and wor...

Eric Gary Anderson

Eric Gary Anderson

In 2014, Eric Gary Anderson won a University Teaching Excellence Award with special acknowledgment of his contributions to Mason Core. He has published more than thirty essays in edited volumes and journals, including "Big Indigeneity" (in PMLA), "Native American Horror, Fantasy, and Speculative Fict...

Alok Yadav

Alok Yadav

Alok Yadav teaches courses on Eighteenth-Century British Literature and Postcolonial and World Literature, such as ENGH 333 (British Novel of the Eighteenth Century), Engh 330 (The Augustan Age), ENGH 331 (The Age of Sensibility), ENGH 366 (The Idea of a World Literature) and special topics courses o...

Amal Amireh

Amal Amireh

Dr. Amireh received a BA in English literature from Birzeit University in the West Bank and an MA and a PhD in English and American literature from Boston University. Before joining George Mason University, Amireh taught at An-Najah National University and Birzeit University (both in West Bank/Palest...

Robert I Matz

Robert I Matz

Robert Matz (PhD, Johns Hopkins University, 1993; BA, Cornell University, 1986) is a professor of English and campus dean of George Mason University, Korea. His field is Renaissance Literature. He has published essays on Shakespeare and on Renaissance poetry and poetic theory, as well as two books, D...

Rashmi Sadana

Rashmi Sadana

Rashmi Sadana (PhD, University of California-Berkeley, 2003) is a cultural anthropologist whose field research focuses on changing forms of identity (class, caste, gender, religious, linguistic) in postcolonial, urban India. She is especially interested in how Indians express their modern and increas...

Tamara Harvey

Tamara Harvey

Tamara Harvey's research and teaching interests include early American and women's literature as well as literary theory. She is the author of Figuring Modesty in Feminist Discourse Across the Americas, 1633-1700 (Ashgate, 2008) as well as a number of articles exploring comparative approaches to colo...

Keith Clark

Keith Clark

Keith Clark is Professor of English and African and African American Studies. He earned a B.A. from the College of William and Mary (1985) and a Ph.D. in English from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1993). He is the author of Black Manhood in James Baldwin, Ernest J. Gaines and Augus...

Michael G Malouf

Michael G Malouf

Michael Malouf received his Ph.D. from Columbia University and teaches courses on Anglophone literature with a special interest in the Modernist period as well as contemporary novels and poetry from Ireland, Britain, and the Caribbean. His research and teaching are informed by the historical approach...

Eric Eisner

Eric Eisner

Eric Eisner's teaching and research interests include eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British literature and culture, especially Romanticism; lyric poetry; and the history of authorship and of reading. His first book, Nineteenth-Century Poetry and Literary Celebrity (2009), treats Byron, Keats, P....