Full-Time
Faculty
Evelyn Jaffe Schreiber
1977, Ph.D., University of Colorado,
20th Century British-American Literature.|
1972, M.A., Colorado State University, 20th Century British-American Literature
My scholarship includes articles on literature,
Faulkner, Morrison, Pinter, stream-of consciousness, psychoanalytic
theory, cultural studies, writing programs, business communications,
collaborative writing, and multicultural issues. My publications
appear in Mississippi Quarterly, The Faulkner
Journal, Literature and Psychology, The
Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, Style, Issues
in Writing, The Journal of Business Communication, IEEE
Transactions on Professional Communication, and Computers
and the Humanities. My research applies Lacanian principles
of identity/subjectivity/agency, trauma theory, and cultural
studies to literary texts and composition studies. My current
manuscript, Bodies of Trauma: Race, Home, and Healing
in Toni Morrison's Novels, is an interdisciplinary study
of trauma in Morrison's novels.
Book:
Subversive Voices: Eroticizing the Other
in William Faulkner and Toni Morrison examines subjectivity
and race via the theory of Jacques Lacan and Cultural Studies.
This book received the Toni Morrison Society Book Prize
for best book on Morrison, 2000-2003; it also was nominated
for the MLA prize for best first book, 2003.
Other Publications:
"Lacan and the Anxiety of Class in Faulkner's
Snopes Trilogy." Chapter in the BlackwellCompanions to
Literature and Culture: A Companion to Faulkner, ed.
Richard Moreland. December, 2006.
"'The Sum of Your Ancestry': Cultural Context
and Intruder in the Dust," in A Gathering of
Evidence: Essays on William Faulkner'sIntruder in the Dust,
ed. Michel Gresset and Patrick Samway, S.J. Philadelphia:
Saint Joseph's University Press, 2004: 247-258.
"'Memory Believes Before Knowing Remembers':
The Insistence of the Past and Lacan's Desire in Light
in August." The Faulkner Journal XVIII.1 (2003):
55-68.
"Imagined Edens and Lacan's Lost Object: The
Wilderness and Subjectivity in Faulkner's Go Down, Moses." Mississippi
Quarterly (Summer, 1997).
"Reader, Text, and Subjectivity: Toni Morrison's Beloved as
Lacan's Gaze QuaObject." Style 30.3 (1997):
445-61.