Thomas J. Ferraro, Professor of English

Thomas J. Ferraro

Please note: Thomas has left the "Jewish Studies Program Certificate" group at Duke University; some info here might not be up to date.

Professor Ferraro is an aficionado of the great American stuff--Emily Dickinson, Edward Hopper, the Marx Brothers, and Nina Simone--who writes on literature, film, and the performing arts. Contrary by temperament, at least as a scholar-critic, he has just published his *big book*, Transgression & Redemption in American Fiction (Oxford UP, announced for February 2021): a revisionist account of the interplay among violative self-making, transgressive sexuality and redemptive sacrifice that recaptures both the aesthetic wonder and social danger of the classic mainline, from Hawthorne's A Scarlet Letter to masterworks by Chopin, James, Fitzgerald, Cather, and Hemingway. For a preview of the issues in play, see his recent essay, "Transgression and Redemption in the 1930s" in William Solomon, ed., The Cambridge Companion to American Literature of the 1930s (CUP, 2018), 145-161.  Ferraro is also the author of Feeling Italian: The Art of Ethnicity in America (NYU, 2005; winner of a 2006 American Book Award), Ethnic Passages: Literary Immigrants in 20th-Century America (U Chicago, 1993), the editor of Catholic Lives, Contemporary America (Duke, 1997), and a contributor to The Columbia History of the American Novel, Scribner's Encyclopedia of American Cultural and Intellectual History, The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature, Catholicism in the Movies, and The Catholic Studies Reader

Contact Info:
Office Location:  421 Chapel Dr., Dept of English, Durham, NC 27708-0015
Office Phone:  (919) 684-2741
Email Address: send me a message

Teaching (Spring 2024):

  • ENGLISH 101S.03, THE ART OF READING Synopsis
    Old Chem 119, TuTh 10:05 AM-11:20 AM
  • ENGLISH 371S.01, STUDIES IN AMER LIT, WWI-WWII Synopsis
    Allen 318, TuTh 01:25 PM-02:40 PM
Teaching (Fall 2024):

  • ENGLISH 373S.01, AMER LIT, COLD WAR/ AFTER Synopsis
    Perkins 060, TuTh 01:25 PM-02:40 PM
  • ENGLISH 590S-3.01, SP TOP SEMINAR III Synopsis
    Allen 318, TuTh 10:05 AM-11:20 AM
Office Hours:

Fall 2022 Semester:

Monday 2:45-4:00 pm & Thursday 4:00-5:00 pm (323 Allen)



Education:

Ph.D.Yale University1988
M. Phil.Yale University (with distinction)1983
M.A.Yale University1983
B.A.Amherst College1979
Specialties:

American Literature
Modern to Contemporary
Novels
Research Interests: American Literature and Culture, with special expertise in the novel and in the interplay of religion, ethnicity, and the media arts

Current projects: I've promised to illuminate the most outrageous--and darkest--of Mario Puzo's figural registers in _The Godfather_, which have haunted my teaching and gained progressive possession of my thinking since some wonderful conversations and papers, moons ago, with students, mainly female and mainly grad, including Lisa Mulman, Christina Tourino, and Julia Dryer, but which have escaped (except for an indulgent line or two) my publishing., And then to a book on the painter/illustrator/prose-poet Joseph Stella.

Professor Ferraro is an aficinado of the great American stuff--Emily Dickinson, Edward Hopper, the Marx Brothers, and Nina Simone--who writes on literature, film, and the performing arts. He is the author of Ethnic Passages: Literary Immigrants in 20th-Century America (U Chicago, 1993), the editor of Catholic Lives, Contemporary America (Duke, 1997), and a contributor to The Columbia History of the American Novel , Scribner's Encyclopedia of American Cultural and Intellectual History, and The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature .  "Lorenzo's Chrism," concerns the sacred import of (the battle against) a very rare but fatal disease--adrenoleukodystrophy--given its genetic etiology, mysterious biochemistry, and metabolic havoc; "Of 'Lascivious Mysticism' and other Hibernian Matters" looks at the Protestant temptation to fin-de-siecle Catholic decadence in Harold Frederic.  And a forthcoming essay, "Boys to Men," examines the street Catholicism of Irish-American charisma, including the untoward and unsuspected sexual chemistries, in the1938 Cagney gangster flick, Angels with Dirty Faces.
    Prof. Ferraro's new book, Feeling Italian: the Art of Ethnicity in America (NYU, 2005), explores the Italian aesthetic seduction of the United States--from the sensational trials of murderess Maria Barbella and the eerily prescient city paintings of Joseph Stella to latter-day icons including Sinatra, Madonna, and the Corleones--yielding not the familiar tale of racial assimilation, How the Guineas Got White, but a revelatory counter-drama of ongoing ethnic enculturation, How America Gets (To Feel) Italian.  Feeling Italian is a winner of a 2006 American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation, for making "an outstanding contribution to American literature."

Areas of Interest:

U.S. literature
film, the visual arts, popular music
religion and ethnicity

Keywords:

Motion picture film • Performing arts and literature

Curriculum Vitae
Current Ph.D. Students   (Former Students)

  • Sara Appel  
  • L. Colby Bogie  
  • Allison S Curseen  
  • Erica N Fretwell  
  • Adam A Haile  
  • William Hunt  
  • Keith R. Jones  
  • Kevin M Modestino  
  • L. Colby Bogie  
  • Clare Callahan  
  • Frances S. McDonald  
  • Lynne M. Feeley  
  • Kinohi Nishikawa  
Representative Publications   (More Publications)

  1. Feeling Italian: the Art of Ethnicity in America (May, 2005), New York UP (Winner, 2006 American Book Award. Choice, Recommended Book..)  [abs]
  2. Ferraro, TJ, Ethnic Passages: Literary Immigrants in Twentieth-Century America (1993), U of Chicago P (Chapter I, "Blood in the Marketplace," was originally invited for Werner Sollors, ed., The Invention of Ethnicity [Oxford UP, 1986], and has been reprinted in reference works on Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism. The introduction is to be similarly reprinted in August 2008..)
  3. Ferraro, TJ, Catholic Lives, Contemporary America, edited by Ferraro, T (1997), pp. 274 pages, Duke University Press  [abs]
  4. Ferraro, TJ, Boys to Men (Salvific Masculinity in /Angels with Dirty Faces/), in Catholics in the Movies, edited by McDannell, C (2008), pp. 59-82, Oxford University Press  [abs] [author's comments]
  5. Ferraro, TJ, At long last love; Or, literary history in the key of difference, American Literary History, vol. 15 no. 1 (December, 2003), pp. 78-86, Oxford University Press (OUP), ISSN 0896-7148 [doi]
  6. Ferraro, TJ, Lorenzo’s Chrism, SAQ, vol. 103 no. 1 (Winter, 2004), pp. 235-63
  7. Ferraro, TJ, Of ’Lascivious Mysticism’ and Other Hibernian Matters, U.S. Catholic Historian, vol. 23 no. 3 (Summer, 2005), pp. 1-17
  8. Ferraro, TJ, Whole Families Shopping at Night!, in New Essays on White Noise, edited by Lentricchia, F (1991), Cambridge UP (15-38.)  [author's comments]