Dr Rachel Malkin

 

Rachel Malkin teaches widely in literature from the C19th to the present, with a focus on C20th and C21st writing in English.

Her research specialisms lie in C20th/C21st North American writing. She is interested in traditions of the experiential and ordinary, literature/philosophy, the afterlives of American romanticism, modernism and postmodernism.

Her current research has several strands:

  • Her first book (forthcoming from Edinburgh University Press) considers the work of the American philosopher Stanley Cavell in context, alongside the writing of C20th literary contemporaries.
  • She is currently completing articles and chapters taking up themes including love, acknowledgement, and conversation in the work of C20th/C21st American writers.
  • A further element of her research explores the legacies of ordinary language philosophy (Wittgenstein, Austin). She is interested in how these thinkers are engaged with in contemporary writing, including uses of this tradition that place it in dialogue with history and politics, and with questions of racialisation and gender.
  • A second monograph project is planned under the provisional heading of ‘The Critical Everyday’. This work explores the ways that contemporary writers are repurposing modernist aesthetics – via the inheritance of key figures – and the notion of the everyday. 

 

Prelims Paper 1b, Paper 3, Paper 4

FHS Paper 6

Dissertation supervision

 

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Publications