Cristin Ellis specializes in nineteenth-century American literature. Her first book, Antebellum Posthuman: Race and Materiality in the Mid-Nineteenth Century (Fordham 2018) highlights the destabilization of the category of “the human” by the rise of embodied accounts of identity in the antebellum era, examining more broadly how scientific discourse shaped racial and environmental imaginaries in these decades. Her second project studies regimens of attention prescribed in literature and visual culture in the long nineteenth century as projects for training the sensorium, tracing through these genres a counter-history to the intensification of bodily control exacted by the industrialization of labor, the society of spectacle, and the consolidation of what Foucault terms biopower.
Education:
- Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University (2012)
- B.A. Williams College (2001)
Teaching and Research Interests:
- 19th-century American literature
- Literature and Science
- Ecocriticism and Histories of Environmental Thought
- Contemporary Critical Theory
- Experimental Forms
Selected Publications:
- Antebellum Posthuman: Race and Materiality in the Mid-Nineteenth Century (Fordham University Press, 2018)
- “Racial Science” Thoreau in Context, ed. James Finley (Cambridge University Press, 2017)
- “Numb Networks: Race, Identity, and the Politics of Impersonal Sympathies,” Maxwell Lecture Series mini-symposium with Jane Bennett and Romand Coles, Political Research Quarterly (2016)
- “Object-Oriented Ontology’s Endless Ethics,” review of Alien Phenomenology by Ian Bogost, Postmodern Culture (2015)
- “Amoral Abolitionism: Frederick Douglass and the Environmental Case Against Slavery,” American Literature (2014)
- “Feeling What You See: Objectivity and Reflexivity in Thoreau’s Lively Science” The Concord Saunterer (2014)
Office:
Bondurant West #209A
ceellis2 at olemiss.edu