|
|
Priscilla Wald
Professor of English and Women's Studies
Office Location: 327B Allen Building Office Phone: (919) 684-6869 Email Address: pwald@duke.edu
- Office Hours:
- Spring 2011
By appointment
- Education:
- Ph.D., Columbia University
Special Candidate, Columbia Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, Columbia University
M.A., Columbia University
B.A., Phi Beta Kappa, summa cum laude, distinction in the English major, Yale University
- Specialties:
-
American Literature
Medicine and Literature Science and Literature Law and Literature Gender & Sexuality Studies African American Literature Modern to Contemporary Novels
-
Priscilla Wald teaches and works on U.S.
literature and culture, particularly literature of
the late-18th to mid-20th centuries. Her current work
focuses on the intersections among the law, literature, science and medicine. Her recent book-length study, Contagious: Cultures, Carriers, and the Outbreak Narrative, considers the intersection of medicine and myth in the idea of contagion and the evolution of the contemporary stories we tell about the global health problem of "emerging infections." She is currently at work on a book-length study entitled Human Being After Genocide. This work chronicles the challenge to conceptions of human being that emerged from scientific and technological innovation in the wake of the Second World War and from the social and political thought of that period that addressed the geopolitical transformations that followed the war and decolonization movements. The trajectory of the book moves from these challenges through the rise of science fiction and the theory of "biopolitics" to the mapping of the human genome and its consequences. In addition to the book, Wald is working on a series of essays that explore the impact of genomics on current thinking about categories of social, biological and political belonging and on the narrative of human history. She is especially interested in analyzing how information emerging from research in the genome sciences circulates through mainstream media and popular culture and how the language, narratives and images in those media register and promote a particular understanding of the science that is steeped in (often
misleading) cultural biases and assumptions. Wald is also working on several essays on American literature and culture for essay collections and co-editing an Oxford University Press volume on the history of the American novel, 1870-1940. In her
research, her teaching and her professional activities,
she is committed to promoting conversations among
scholars from science, medicine, law and cultural
studies in order to facilitate a richer understanding of
these issues. Wald is the author of Constituting
Americans: Cultural Anxiety and Narrative Form.
She is also editor of American Literature as well as on the Editorial Boards of ESQ and Literature and Medicine, co-editor of a book series on nineteenth-century American Literature at NYU Press, Chair of the Faculty Board of Duke University Press and on the Advisory Board of the Centre for Humanities and Medicine at the University of Hong Kong. She has recently completed a four-year term on the Executive Council of the Modern Language Association and is currently on the National Council of the American Studies Association. She has a secondary appointment in Women's Studies, is on the steering committee of ISIS (Information Sciences + Information Studies) and is a member of the Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy and an affiliate of the Trent Center for Bioethics and Medical Humanities and the Institute for Global Health.
- Representative Publications
(More Publications)
- P. Wald. Contagious: Cultures, Carriers, and the Outbreak Narrative. Duke University Press, 2008.
- Constituting Americans: Cultural Anxiety and Narrative Form. Duke UP, 1995. (second printing, 1998)
- P. Wald. "“Geonomics: the Spaces and Races of Citizenship in the Genome Age”." America--From Near and Far: Varieties of American Experience. Ed. Marc Lee Raphael and Cornelia Wilhelm. Department of Religion, William and Mary College,
2007.
- with J. Clayton, K.F.C. Holloway. Genomics in Literature, the Visual Arts, and Culture. Literature and Medicinespecial issue,
(Spring, 2007).
- "Blood and Stories: How Genomics is Changing Race, Medicine, and Human History." Patterns of Prejudice 40.4/5
(November, 2006)
|