Full-Time
Faculty
Jennifer James
Ph.D., English, University of Maryland
M.A.,
English, Syracuse
Professor James specializes in African American literature
and culture, with a concentration in the 19th century. She
has a particular interest in theorizing the relationships
among literary praxis, representations of blackness and social
violence. She is currently researching African American discourses
of the black psyche in the 19th century as part of a larger
project on the way psychological disabilities are interpreted
in African American culture.
Book:
A Freedom Bought with Blood: African American War Literature,
the Civil War-World War II, the University of North Carolina
Press,
2007.
Other Publications:
“ ‘Civil’ War Wounds: William Wells Brown,
Violence, and the Domestic Narrative,” The African
American Review, 39.1.2: 39-54.
Co-editor, MELUS Special Issue: Race, Ethnicity, Disability
and Literature 31.3 (Fall 2006).
“‘On such legs as are left me’: Gwendolyn
Brooks, WWII and the Politics of Rehabilitation,” Feminist
Disability Studies, ed., Kim Hall, University of Illinois
Press; forthcoming
Forthcoming: Associate editor, War, Freedom and Patriotism:
An Anthology of African American Writings, Rutgers University
Press; forthcoming