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Professor- Office Hours:
- Tuesdays: 2:00 - 4:00pm
Education:
- PhD Cornell University 1991
- MA Cornell University 1988
- MA Purdue University 1986
- BA Loyola College, Madras University 1984
- Specialties:
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British Literature
18th Century Literature Postcolonial Literature Critical Theory
- Research Interests:
Srinivas Aravamudan
has taught at the University of Utah, and at the University of Washington.
He joined the Duke English Department in the Fall of 2000. He specializes
in eighteenth century British and French literature and in postcolonial
literature and theory. He is the author of essays in Diacritics, ELH,
Social Text, Novel and other venues. His study, Tropicopolitans:
Colonialism and Agency, 1688-1804 (1999, Duke University Press) won
the first book prize of the Modern Language Association in 2000. He has
also edited Slavery, Abolition and Emancipation: Writings of the British
Romantic Period: Volume VI Fiction (1999, Pickering and Chatto). His book, Guru English: South Asian Religion in Cosmopolitan Contexts will be published by Princeton University Press in 2004. He
is working on a book-length study of the eighteenth-century
French and British oriental tale. He is also editing for classroom use
William Earle's antislavery romance, entitled Obi: or, The History
of Three-Fingered Jack. Recent Publications (More Publications)
- "Hobbes and America." The Postcolonial Enlightenment (Spring,
Spring, 2009): 37-70.
- "Talking Jewels and Other Oriental Seductions." Studies in Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century Spring (Winter,
Winter, 2008).
- "The Adventure Chronotope and the Oriental Xenotrope: Galland, Sheridan, and Joyce Domesticate The Arabian Nights." The Arabian Nights After Three Hundred Years (Winter,
Winter, 2008).
- "Review of Ros Ballaster, Fabulous Orients: Fictions of the East in England, 1662-1785". Modern Language Quarterly 68:2 (Summer, Summer, 2008).
- "Commerce, Adventure, and Empire." Cambridge Companion to Daniel Defoe (Summer,
Winter, 2008).
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