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职称:Professor of Comparative Literature
所属学校:Princeton University
所属院系:Comparative Literature
所属专业:Comparative Literature
联系方式: 609-258-4028
theory and history of narrative and the novel, the Gothic mode in literature and culture, gender and genre, eighteenth-century British and European literature Prof. Alliston works mainly at the intersections of the fields of eighteenth-century studies, gender studies, and the history and theory of the novel. An ongoing study explores the relationship between European gender conventions and the origins of the modern novel, arguing that the early novel, far from affirming Enlightenment individualism connects new philosophical skepticism about interiority and sense experience with archaic social anxieties around female fidelity. She is also currently working on a biography of James Fenimore Cooper, co-authored with Pamela J. Schirmeister of Yale University. Support for her research has included fellowships awarded by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the National Humanities Center, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the American Antiquarian Society, as well as, most recently, an Old Dominion Professorship in the Princeton University Council of the Humanities.
theory and history of narrative and the novel, the Gothic mode in literature and culture, gender and genre, eighteenth-century British and European literature Prof. Alliston works mainly at the intersections of the fields of eighteenth-century studies, gender studies, and the history and theory of the novel. An ongoing study explores the relationship between European gender conventions and the origins of the modern novel, arguing that the early novel, far from affirming Enlightenment individualism connects new philosophical skepticism about interiority and sense experience with archaic social anxieties around female fidelity. She is also currently working on a biography of James Fenimore Cooper, co-authored with Pamela J. Schirmeister of Yale University. Support for her research has included fellowships awarded by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the National Humanities Center, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the American Antiquarian Society, as well as, most recently, an Old Dominion Professorship in the Princeton University Council of the Humanities.