Wesleyan Home → Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies → Faculty
Faculty
Chair
Jennifer Tucker
Associate Professor of HistoryShow Bio and Photo
Associate Professor of History
222 Church Street 221
860-685-5389
Associate Professor, Science in Society
860-685-5389
Associate Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-5389
Chair, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
103
860-685-5389
Interim Director of Albritton
101A
860-685-4469
BA Stanford University
MPHIL Cambridge University
PHD Johns Hopkins University
Personal Homepage:
http://jtucker.web.wesleyan.edu
Office Hours: Fall 2013: ON LEAVE/SABBATICAL SPRING 2014
Research Interests: Jennifer Tucker's first book, Nature Exposed: Photography as Eyewitness in Victorian Science (Johns Hopkins University, 2005) explores the social and cultural relations of photography, science, and ideas of truth in Victorian London. Other research concerns include artistic exchanges in scientific colonialism; interactions between science and popular culture; science and gender studies; and photography in historical documentation and interpretation. She is currently at work on a book about life and art in the Victorian photographic studio and is writing a series of essays about photography and historical interpretation.
Scholarly Keywords: Social and cultural practices of science; Victorian Studies; visual culture; photographic history; history of women and gender.
Grants:
Faculty
Mary Ann Clawson
Professor of SociologyShow Bio and Photo
Professor of Sociology
Public Affairs Center 217
860-685-2945
Chair, Sociology
860-685-2945
Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-2945
BA Carleton College
MA SUNY at Stony Brook
PHD SUNY at Stony Brook
Office Hours:
Tuesday, 3:00-4:00 p.m.;
Wednesday, 4:05-5:30 p.m.,
or by appt.
Scholarly Keywords:
Social Movements;
Work, Leisure and Popular Culture;
The Family;
Sociology of Gender;
Christina Crosby
Professor of EnglishShow Bio and Photo
Professor of English
285 Court Street 110
860-685-3629
Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-3629
BA Swarthmore College
MAA Wesleyan University
PHD Brown University
Office Hours: Fall 2012 Wednesday 2:45-4:00PM Office: 285 Court St. #110 Thursday 3:00-4:00PM Office: Allbritton #220
Sarah Croucher
Assistant Professor of AnthropologyShow Bio and Photo
Assistant Professor of Anthropology
Anthropology 26
860-685-4489
Assistant Professor, Archaeology Program
860-685-4489
Assistant Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-4489
BA Manchester University
MA University of Manchester
PHD University of Manchester
Personal Homepage:
http://scroucher.faculty.wesleyan.edu/
Office Hours: Spring 2013: Monday 10am - noon (Centerr for the Humanities, Room 205) or by appointment.
Lori Gruen
Professor of PhilosophyShow Bio and Photo
Professor of Philosophy
Russell House 11
860-685-2008
Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-2008
Professor, Environmental Studies
860-685-2008
BA University of Colorado Boulder
PHD University of Colorado Boulder
Personal Homepage:
http://lgruen.web.wesleyan.edu/
Office Hours:
I will be in my Russell House office on alternate Tuesdays and am available by appointment. Please contact me by e-mail.
Research Interests:
My research lies at the intersection of ethical theory and ethical practice. I have written on a range of topics in practical ethics and am currently concentrating on the ethical implications of human interactions with non-human animals and the rest of nature.
Scholarly Keywords:
Ethics (normative and practical), Political Philosophy, Animal Ethics and Environmental Ethics, Philosophy of Law, Feminist Philosophy
Natasha Korda
Professor of EnglishShow Bio and Photo
Professor of English
285 Court Street 304
860-685-3639
Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-3639
BA Columbia University
PHD Johns Hopkins University
Personal Homepage:
http://nkorda.faculty.wesleyan.edu/
Office Hours: Spring 2013: Wednesday 2-4pm
Douglas Martin
Visiting Assistant Professor of EnglishShow BioVisiting Assistant Professor of English
285 Court Street 205
860-685-2448
Affiliated Faculty
BA University of Georgia Athens
MFA The New School
PHD CUNY The Graduate Center
Office Hours:
Fall 2012:Tuesday & Wednesday by appointment. Location: 285 Court St #205
Jill Morawski
Professor of PsychologyShow BioProfessor of Psychology
Judd Hall 317
860-685-2344
Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-2344
Professor, Science in Society
860-685-2344
Wilbur Fisk Osborne Professor
860-685-2344
BA Mount Holyoke College
MA Carleton University
MAA Wesleyan University
PHD Carleton University
Office Hours: Mondays 4:15-5:15 Thursdays 11:00-121:00
Research Interests: History of modern psychological sciences with focus on the scientific practices accompanying claims about the nature of subjectivity and the moral commitments of scientific psychology.
Scholarly Keywords: Social psychology, History of Psychology, Gender Studies
Ellen Nerenberg
Professor of Romance Languages & LiteraturesShow Bio and Photo
Professor of Romance Languages & Literatures
300 High Street 306
860-685-3087
Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-3087
Hollis Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures
AB Stanford University
PHD University of Chicago
AM
Office Hours:
By appointment
Research Interests:
Prison Terms (U of Toronto P, 2001, winner of the Howard R. Marraro Prize from the Modern Language Association) concerned the spaces of confinement in Italian narrative between the years 1930 and 1960. Murder Made in Italy: Homicide, Media, and Contemporary Italian Culture (U of Indiana P, 2012) concerns the cultural significance of three post-1989 murder cases. These cases include the serial murders attributed to the "Monster of Florence," the matricide and fratricide case for which Erika De Nardo and Omar F`varo were convicted, and the conviction of Annamaria Franzoni for the murder of her three-year old son Samuele. Body of State: The Moro Affair, A Nation Divided (Fairleigh-Dickinson U P, 2011), a collaboration with two other colleagues, offers a translation of Marco Baliani's acclaimed dramatic monologue about the kidnapping and assassination of former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro, setting it in the context of critical edition including an introduction, an interview with the artist, and an appendix of reviews of Baliani's 2009 North American tour
Scholarly Keywords:
Twentieth-century Italian Literature, Italian Cinema, Italian Cultural Studies
Academic Associations:
Modern Languages Association, American Association for Italian Studies, American Association of Teachers of Italian
Mary-Jane Rubenstein
Associate Professor of ReligionShow Bio and Photo
Associate Professor of Religion
Religious Studies Center 212
860-685-3594
Associate Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-3594
Chair, Religion Department
204
BA Williams College
MA Columbia University
MPHIL Columbia University
MPHIL Cambridge University
PHD Columbia University
Personal Homepage:
http://mrubenstein.faculty.wesleyan.edu/
Office Hours: Spring 2013: On sabbatical
Magda Teter
Jeremy Zwelling Professor of Jewish StudiesShow Bio and Photo
Jeremy Zwelling Professor of Jewish Studies
860-685-5356
Professor of History
222 Church Street 203
860-685-5356
Professor, Medieval Studies
860-685-5356
Professor, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
860-685-5356
MA Columbia University
MA Warsaw University
MPHIL Columbia University
PHD Columbia University
Personal Homepage:
http://mteter.web.wesleyan.edu
Office Hours: Fall 2013:
Research Interests: As a scholar of Jewish history, eastern European history, and of early modern religious and cultural history, I specialize in Jewish-Christian relations. My first book, Jews and Heretics in Catholic Poland: A Beleaguered Church in the Post Reformation Era, published by Cambridge University Press in 2006 (pbk, 2009), challenges the perception that the Catholic Church triumphed in Poland and demonstrates the superficiality of the re-Catholicization of the ruling elites, whose economic interests trumped their religious loyalties. My new book, Sinners on Trial: Jews and Sacrilege after the Reformation (Harvard University Press, 2011) tells a story of affirmation of Catholic dogmas after the Reformation, not necessarily though religious education and propaganda but through the application of criminal law, and the courts' treatment of "the sacred" and, thus, also of the "sacrilege." The book addresses one of the most notorious examples of "sacrilege" -- the accusation that Jews desecrated consecrated communion wafers. "Sinners on Trial" combines political, legal, and cultural historical approaches. Far more than the Church's efforts to educate the laity, the lay courts' classification of Catholic spaces as the only "sacred spaces" and their adjudication of crimes of "sacrilege," were crucial for the (re)Catholicisation of Poland, and the shaping of the country's religious identity. "Sinners on Trial" crucially casts a new light on the most infamous case of sacrilege, the accusations against Jews for stealing and desecrating the host, situating it within a broader context of the politics of crime -- most specifically that of sacrilege, illuminating its post-Reformation character.
Scholarly Keywords: Early modern history, Jewish history, Poland, religious history, gender, eastern Europe, historiography
Academic Associations: Association for Jewish Studies, American Historical Association, Sixteenth Century Studies, American Catholic Historical Association, Church History, AAUP
Lab URL:
http://www.earlymodern.org
Publications:
http://mteter.web.wesleyan.edu/mteter_publications.htm

