Nancy Easterlin, Ph.D.
Education
Ph.D., Temple University, 1991
M.A., University of Denver, 1983
B.A., University of Pennsylvania, 1978
About
As an interdisciplinary scholar who has become a prominent advocate of cognitive and evolutionary approaches to literature over the past twenty-five years, Nancy Easterlin has addressed many of the key concerns raised by scholarship between the humanities and sciences. These include the foundation of knowledge, the genesis of meaning, and the determination of aesthetic value. In her recent book, (Johns Hopkins, Spring 2012), Easterlin demonstrates the utility of broad-based evolutionary and cognitive knowledge for a range of literary specializations, including new historicism, ecocriticism, cognitive criticism, and evolutionary criticism. Easterlin received a for the 2008 calendar year in support of this book project. Her current ecocritical work explores the concept of place in literature as well as the value of the humanities in higher education.
Easterlin teaches, directs theses, and produces scholarship in British romanticism, prose fiction, literary criticism and theory, ecocriticism, and women's studies. Her courses in romanticism pair canonical male and female poets sharing thematic, aesthetic, political, and historical concerns. Her courses in fiction typically focus on the work of postcolonial, Commonwealth, and women writers; Tales Told and Retold, a special topics course, pairs nineteenth and twentieth century canonical works with recent retellings (e.g., Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea). Easterlin designed and teaches Sex, Power, and the Short Story, an interdisciplinary course that combines feminist theory, evolutionary research on sex differences, and short fiction. Literary Theory, a graduate-level course, provides a broad overview of developments since 1900, including recent developments in evolutionary and cognitive approaches.
Selected Publications
Selected articles available for download at .
Books
- A Biocultural Approach to Literary Theory and Interpretation ( Johns Hopkins, spring 2012)
- Wordsworth and the Question of 鈥淩omantic Religion鈥 (Bucknell, 1996)
- After Poststructuralism: Interdisciplinarity and Literary Theory, ed. with Barbara Riebling (Northwestern, 1993)
Special issues of journals
- Guest editor, "Knowledge, Understanding, Well-Being: Cognitive Literary Studies," spec. issue of Poetics Today, forthcoming 2018
- Guest editor, "Cognition in the Classroom," spec. issue of Interdisciplinary Literary Studies, 16.1, 2014
- Special editor, twenty-fifth anniversary issue of Philosophy and Literature on cognitive and evolutionary approaches, 25.2, 2001
Selected articles
- "Ecocriticism, Place Studies, and Colm T贸ib铆n's 'The Long Winter': A Biocultural Perspective"; The Handbook of Ecocriticism and Cultural Ecology; ed. Hubert Zapf, Walter de Gruyter, Spring 2016, pp. 226-48
- "Novelty in Cognition and Literature"; Oxford University Press Handbook on Cognitive Cultural Studies, ed. Lisa Zunshine,, Spring 2015, pp. 613-32
- "Novelty, Canonicity, and Competing Simulations in Childe Harold's Pilgrimage"; Cognition, Literature, and History, ed. Mark Bruhn and Don Wehrs. Routledge, Winter 2014, pp. 59-7
- "The Functions of Literature and the Evolution of Extended Mind"; invited essay for "Use," special issue of New Literary History 44.4, Fall 2013, pp. 661-82
- "From Reproductive Resource to Autonomous Individuality? Charlotte Bront毛's Jane Eyre"; Evolution's Empress: Darwinian Perspectives on the Nature of Women, OUP, 2013
- "Aesthetics and Ideology in Felicia Hemans's The Forest Sanctuary: A Biocultural Perspective"; Style 46.3 Fall 2012, pp. 461-78, spec. issue ed. Brett Cooke and Clint Machann
- 鈥淐ognitive Ecocriticism: Human Wayfinding, Sociality, and Literary Interpretation鈥; Introduction to Cognitive Cultural Studies, ed. Lisa Zunshine, Johns Hopkins, 2010
- 鈥溾橶ho Was It If It Wasn鈥檛 Me?鈥 The Problem of Orientation in Alice Munro鈥檚 鈥楾respasses鈥: A Cognitive Ecological Analysis鈥; Studies in the Literary Imagination 42.2., 2009
- 鈥淗ow to Write the Great Darwinian Novel: Cognitive Predispositions, Cultural Complexity, and Aesthetic Evaluation鈥; Journal of Evolutionary and Cultural Psychology 3.1, 2005
- 鈥溾橪oving Ourselves Best of All鈥: Ecocriticism and the Adapted Mind鈥; Mosaic 37.3, 2004
- 鈥淗ans Christian Anderson鈥檚 Fish out of Water鈥; Philosophy and Literature 25.2, 2001
- 鈥淰oyages in the Verbal Universe: The Role of Speculation in Darwinian Literary Criticism鈥; Interdisciplinary Literary Studies 2.2, 2001
- 鈥淧sychoanalysis and 鈥楾he Discipline of Love鈥欌; Philosophy and Literature 24.2, 2000
- 鈥淢aking Knowledge: Bioepistemology and the Foundations of Literary Theory鈥; Mosaic 32.1, 1999; reprinted in Theory鈥檚 Empire, ed. Daphne Patai and Will Corral, Columbia 2005
- 鈥淒o Cognitive Predispositions Predict or Determine Literary Value Judgments? Narrativity, Plot, and Aesthetics鈥; in Biopoetics, ed. Brett Cooke and Fred Turner, Paragon House, 1999