Å·ÃÀAƬ

Deborah L.ÌýRossÌýPH.D.

College of Liberal Arts - Department of English and Applied Linguistics

PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH

 

EDUCATION:

Ph.D.,  English, Å·ÃÀAƬ of Rochester, 1980

BA, Literature, Kirkland College, 1975

 

COURSES FREQUENTLY TAUGHT:

WRI 1150  Literature and Argument

WRI 1200  Research, Argument, and Writing

WRI 1250  Intro to Research in the Humanities

ENG 2000   The Art of Literature

ENG 2500   World Literature

ENG 3100   Early British Literature

ENG 3102   British Literature after 1800

ENG 3250   Texts and Gender:  Women and Madness

ENG 3251   Sex, Power, and Narrative

ENG 4000   Textual Criticism

ENG 4901/2 Senior Thesis

ENG 4910  Senior Capstone Portfolio

PUBLICATIONS

 BOOK

The Excellence of Falsehood:  Romance, Realism, and Women’s Contribution to the Novel. Lexington: Å·ÃÀAƬ Press of Kentucky, 1991.

ESSAYS IN COLLECTIONS

“On the Trail of the Butterfly:  D. H. Hwang and Transformation,” in Beyond Adaptation, ed. Phyllis Frus and Christy Williams, McFarland and Co., 2010

“The Odyssey:  the Iliad’s Wife.”  Women in Literature:  Reading Through the Lens of Gender.  Ed.  Jerilyn Fisher and Ellen S. Silber.  Westport, CT:  Greenwood Press, 2003.  218-21.

“Pooh in America:  In which the Bear goes on a long explore and becomes altogether different.” Children’s Fantasy Fiction:  Debates for the Twenty-First Century.  Ed. Nickianne Moody and Clare Horrocks.  Liverpool:  The Association for Research in Popular Fictions and Liverpool John Moores Å·ÃÀAƬ, 2005.  349-61.

ARTICLES IN REFERENCE BOOKS

“David Henry Hwang,” The Literary Encyclopedia (), 2011.  Updated July 2015.

Essays on novels of Charlotte Lennox.  Dictionary of British Literary Characters, vol. 1.  Facts on File, 1992.

ARTICLES IN JOURNALS

"Miyazaki's Little Mermaid: A Goldfish Out of Water."  Journal of Film and Video, Fall 2014.

“Escape From Wonderland:  Disney and the Female Imagination.”  Marvels & Tales:  Journal of Fairy Tale Studies 18.1 (2004):  53-67.  Reprinted in McGraw-Hill Reader, 2014.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream:  ‘Very Tragical Mirth.’”  Q/W/E/R/T/Y:  Arts, Littératures & Civilisations du Monde Anglophone 12 (Oct. 2002):  21-23.

“Home by Tea-Time:  Fear of Imagination in Disney’s Alice in Wonderland.”  Classics in Film and Fiction. Film/Fiction 5 (2000):  207-227.

“Mirror, Mirror:  The Didactic Dilemma of the Female Quixote.”  Studies in English Literature 27.3 (Summer 1987):  455-74.

CREATIVE WORK

Forthcoming: "Welcome Back, Richard, to the Crown and Anchor."  Dammit, I Love You (An Anthology). Brand Street Press, Fall 2015.

"Tautology."  Open Minds Quarterly, Fall 2015.

"Frommer's Historical Guide to Upstate New York."  Lost Orchard anthology.  SUNY Press, 2014.

"You!" Don'tmindme.com, 2011.

“My New Boyfriend,” Defenestration, August 2010

“A Tale of Two Sisters,” published on the Pen Women

“Bad Company,” Stone’s Throw Magazine, March 2010

“The Haunted Piano,” CT Review, Spring 2008

“Trinity, or the Gospel According to Violet,” Inscribed:  A Magazine for Writers, Issue #4, 2008

“Rice Baby,” Hawai’i Pacific Review, 2008

RECENT CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS:

"Phillis's Foul Linen: Sexual Disgust at the Turn of the Eighteenth Century."  Interdisciplinary Conference on Disgust, Canterbury, U.K. May 29, 2015.

FAVORITE LITERARY QUOTATIONS:

“Maternal love or maternal hatred, though the latter fortunately is most rare, is all the same to the inexorable principle of natural selection.”  Charles Darwin

“Men have had every advantage of us in telling their own story. Education has been theirs in so much higher a degree; the pen has been in their hands.  I will not allow books to prove anything.”  Jane Austen

“My old mother always used to say, my lord, that facts are like cows. If you stare them in the face hard enough, they generally run away.”  Dorothy L. Sayers

 


Dr. Ross’s scholarship primarily concerns gender issues in both literary and pop culture narratives, especially Disney and Miyazaki. She has also published creative work in CT Review, Hawai‘i Pacific Review, and several on-line magazines.

Deborah L. Ross

Professor
PH.D.

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