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Taylor Hagood <thagood@fau.edu> Florida Atlantic University |
| Address: | Department of English, Florida Atlantic University, 777 Glades Rd P.O. Box 3091 Boca Raton, FL 33431 United States |
| Web Page: | http://www.fau.edu/english/facultypages/hagood.php |
| List Affiliations: | List Editor for H-Southern-Lit |
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Bio: EDUCATION Ph.D.—University of Mississippi, English, 2005 M.A.—Ohio University, English, 2000 B.A.—summa cum laude, Ohio University, English, 1998 SELECTED PUBLICATIONS Books Secrecy, Magic, and the One-Act Plays of Harlem Renaissance Women Writers. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2010 Faulkner’s Imperialism: Space, Place, and the Materiality of Myth. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2008 Articles “Disability Studies and American Literature.” Literature Compass (forthcoming 2010) “The Secret Machinery of Textuality, Or, What is Benjy Compson Really Thinking?” Faulkner: The Returns of the Text: Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha, 2008. Ed. Annette Trefzer and Ann Abadie. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi (forthcoming 2010) “Labor, Place, and Faulkner’s Rincon.” Mississippi Quarterly: The Journal of Southern Cultures 61 (2008): 359-77 “Taking ‘Money Right out of an American’s Pockets’: Faulkner’s South and the International Cotton Market.” European Journal of American Culture 26 (2007): 83-95 “Negotiating the Marble Bonds of Whiteness: Hybridity and Imperial Impulse in Faulkner.” Faulkner Journal 22.1-2 (2006/2007): 24-38 “Media, Ideology, and the Role of Literature in Pylon.” Faulkner Journal 21.1-2 (2005/2006): 107-19 “Dramatic Deception and Black Identity in The First One and Riding the Goat.” African American Review 39.1-2 (2005): 55-66 “Prodjickin’, or mekin’ a present to yo’ fam’ly: Rereading Empowerment in Thomas Nelson Page’s Frame Narratives.” Mississippi Quarterly: The Journal of Southern Cultures 57 (2004): 423-40 “Ah Ain’t Got Nobody: Southern Identity and Signifying on Dialect in Hurston and Faulkner.” Publications of the Mississippi Philological Association (2004): 45-53 “Elvis and Karate in Southern Poor White Performance.” Studies in Popular Culture 26.3 (2004): 1-13 “Hair, Feet, Body, and Connectedness in ‘Song of Myself.’” Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 21.1 (2003): 25-34 “Faulkner’s ‘Fabulous Immeasurable Camelots’: Absalom, Absalom! and Le Morte Darthur.” Southern Literary Journal 34.2 (2002): 45-63 SELECTED RECENT CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS “‘The Prince With That Hearth-broom’: Faulkner’s ‘Knight’s Gambit’ and the Movement of Southerners Across the Global Grid,” 54th Annual Conference of the British Association for American Studies, University of Nottingham, England, April 2009 “‘As if a Sea had Divided It’: Haiti, Migration, and the Horrors of Space in Page’s ‘No Haid Pawn,’” Society for the Study of Southern Literature, College of William and Mary, April 2008 “The Burden of the Southern Collective: Cultural Shorthand and New Southernist Perspectives,” NEXUS 2008 Interdisciplinary Conference: Collected and Collective Identities, University of Tennessee, March 2008 “Ghost in a Harlem Flat: Eulalie Spence’s Gothic Play,” South Central Modern Language Association, Memphis, Tennessee, November 2007 “‘They Aint Human Like Us’: Compromised Bodies and Spatiality in Pylon,” American Literature Association Convention, Boston, Massachusetts, May 2007 “‘The Influence of that Root’: Magic, Secrecy, and the Escape of Frederick Douglass (According to Georgia Douglas Johnson),” Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States Conference, Fresno, California, March 2007 “Rewriting Reconciliation Romance: May Miller’s Christophe’s Daughters,” Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States Conference, Boca Raton, Florida, April 2006 |
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