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Publications: |
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Fair Exotics:
Xenophobic Subjects in English Literature 1720-1850 (Philadephia,
PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002)
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“Mud, Mortar, and
Other Technologies of Empire.” The Eighteenth Century:
Theory and Interpretation 45:2 Summer 2004 (released
Fall 2005): 147-169
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“Girl Erupted” in
Re-Load: Rethinking Women and Cyberculture, Mary
Flanagan and Austin Booth, eds. (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
2002): 355-373
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“Sexy
SIMS, Racy SIMMS” in Race in Cyberspace, Beth E.
Kolko, Lisa Nakamura, and Gilbert B. Rodman, eds. (New York:
Routledge, 2000): 69-86.
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Courses/Seminars: |
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Technologies of
Empire
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Sex and the City
in the Eighteenth Century
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Literature and
Film: Apocalypse and Empire
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Revisiting the Gothic Novel
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Rajani Sudan is a specialist in
early modern British literature. Trained as a romanticist, her
initial interest in the origins of Romantic literature has drawn her back in time, from the nineteenth to
the eighteenth century and earlier, and turned her attention
outward from Britain to the global encounters of the first
British Empire. Her first book, Fair Exotics: Xenophobic
Subjects in English Literature (UPenn, 2002) traces the
simultaneous fascination with and fear of foreign people, a twin
sensibility that underpinned Romantic subjectivity. She teaches
courses on cultural representations of imperial identity in
eighteenth-century Britain, but is also interested in science
studies, cyberculture, and popular Hollywood film. Sudan is on
leave in the Fall of 2006 completing research for her next book,
Mud, Mortar, and Other Technologies of Empire, a study
that focuses on the non-European origins of that quintessential
European era, the Enlightenment. |
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