Kevin Kopelson | |
---|---|
Years active | 1994–present |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Iowa |
Influences | Roland Barthes [ citation needed ] |
Academic work | |
Main interests | Gender studies literary criticism cultural studies 20th century in literature |
Kevin Kopelson is an American literary critic. He received a B.A. from Yale University, a J.D. from Columbia University, and a Ph.D. from Brown University. [1] Currently,[ when? ] he is Emeritus Professor of English at The University of Iowa.
He is a contributor to the London Review of Books. [2] He writes on topics ranging from fin-de-siècle literature to fashion photography.
Kopelson has published in the fields of sexuality studies, [3] critical theory, cultural studies, and 20th-century literature.
Solomon Feferman was an American philosopher and mathematician who worked in mathematical logic.
John Cameron McLaughlin was an American philologist who for many years served as Professor of English and Linguistics at the University of Iowa.
Robert Lynn Ivie is an American academic known for his works on American public rhetoric concerning war and terrorism.
Bob Hale, FRSE was a British philosopher, known for his contributions to the development of the neo-Fregean (neo-logicist) philosophy of mathematics in collaboration with Crispin Wright, and for his works in modality and philosophy of language.
David Scott Brown is a Horace E. Raffensperger professor of history at Elizabethtown College, Pennsylvania, United States. He is the author of several books, including biographies of Richard Hofstadter and F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Gregory S. Mahler is an American political scientist with a general interest in comparative politics, and more specific interests in legislatures and constitutionalism.
Gloria Lund Main is an American economic historian who is a professor emeritus of history at University of Colorado Boulder. She authored two books about the Thirteen Colonies.
Lawrence B. Glickman is an American history professor and author or editor of four books and several articles on consumerism. He has taught at Cornell University since 2014, where he is Stephen and Evalyn Milman Professor in American Studies. Previously he taught at the University of South Carolina. Glickman earned a Princeton University B.A. in history magna cum laude in 1985, a M.A. in 1989 and his Ph.D. in 1992 both from University of California, Berkeley. He has written three books, A Living Wage: American Workers and the Making of Consumer Society, Buying Power: A History of Consumer Activism in America, and Free Enterprise: An American History.
Christopher B. Krebs is an Associate Professor of Classics at Stanford University. Krebs' principal research interests are Greek and Roman Historiography, Latin Lexicography and the Classical tradition.
Grant Parker is a South African-born Associate Professor of Classics at Stanford University in the United States. Parker’s principal research interests are Imperial Latin Literature, the portrayal of Egypt and India in the Roman Empire and Classical Reception in South Africa.
Waldemar Heckel is a Canadian historian.
Bonnie Costello is an American literary scholar, currently the William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor of English at Boston University. Her books include works on the poets Marianne Moore, Elizabeth Bishop, and W. H. Auden, and the relation of visual art to poetry through landscape painting and still life.
Jon C. Teaford is professor emeritus in the History Department at Purdue University. He specializes in American urban history and early on in his career he specialized in legal history.
Jean Estelle Hirsh Rubin was an American mathematician known for her research on the axiom of choice. She worked for many years as a professor of mathematics at Purdue University. Rubin wrote five books: three on the axiom of choice, and two more on more general topics in set theory and mathematical logic.
Elizabeth Dore is a professor of Latin American Studies, specialising in class, race, gender and ethnicity, with a focus on modern history. She is professor emerita of Modern Languages and Linguistics at the University of Southampton, and has a PhD from Columbia University.
Penny Marie Von Eschen is an American historian and Professor of History and William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of American Studies at the University of Virginia. She is known for her works on American and African-American history, American diplomacy, the history of music, and their connections with decolonization.
Linda Dalrymple Henderson is a historian of art whose research involves the connections between modern art, science and technology, and the occult. She is the David Bruton, Jr. Centennial Professor in Art History at the University of Texas at Austin.
Donald Jasper Harris is a Jamaican-American economist and professor emeritus at Stanford University, known for applying post-Keynesian ideas to development economics. He is the ex-husband of Indian-American Biomedical Scientist Shyamala Gopalan, father of the 49th and Current Vice President of the United States, Kamala Harris and lawyer and political commentator Maya Harris.
Christa Jungnickel was a German-American historian of science.
Tara E. Nummedal is a professor of history and Italian studies at Brown University, known for her works on Anna Maria Zieglerin and the history of alchemy and natural science in early modern Europe.