Donald E. Pease

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Donald E. Pease
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Cultural critic, educator
Known forTheory of American Exceptionalism
New Americanist scholarship
AwardsBode Prize (2002)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Missouri
University of Chicago
Doctoral advisorJames E. Miller, Jr.
Academic work
DisciplineAmerican studies, American literary studies
Websitehttps://english.dartmouth.edu/people/donald-e-pease

Donald E. Pease is the Ted and Helen Geisel Third Century Professor in the Humanities, chair of the Master of Arts in Liberal Studies Program, professor of English and comparative literature at Dartmouth College. He is an Americanist, literary and cultural critic, and academic. He has been a member of the boundary 2 editorial collective since 1977 or 1978.[1] He was the founding editor of the New Americanists series at Duke University Press[2] and editor of the Re-Encountering Colonialism Series and Re-Mapping the Transnational Turn: A Dartmouth Series in American Studies for the University Press of New England (UPNE). Pease directs the annual Futures of American Studies Institute at Dartmouth.[3]

Education and academic career

Pease earned a B.A. (1968) and M.A. (1969) at the

.

New Americanists

Pease was among the scholars identified by Frederick C. Crews as "The New Americanists" in his 1988 critique of "the now dominant faction" in American Studies published in The New York Review of Books under the title "Whose American Renaissance?"[4] Pease appropriated this name from Crews to push forward new methods of interpretation and critique within American literary studies and within American Studies. The work of the New Americanists, and Pease in particular, challenged existing paradigms of reading, in particular the liberal consensus that depended upon a separation between culture and the public sphere. Pease's response to Crews appeared in an essay published in 1990 in boundary 2 as "New Americanists: Revisionist Interventions into the Canon". In an interview with Racheal Fest appearing in boundary 2, Pease says of the legacy of the New Americanists: "I see the chief legacy of the New Americanists as the ongoing transformation of knowledge production in literature departments across the United States".[5] The Duke University Press described Pease's the Americanist Series as dedicated to "the return of socio-political questions, counternational discourses, and minority perspectives to American studies"[2]

Dr. Seuss

Pease is a noted scholar of

WIRED, calls Pease's book “an academic study of the content, meaning and motivations of Geisel's work".[8]

Fellowships and honors

Pease has held fellowships from the

State University of New York at Buffalo, and the University of Rome Tor Vergata. The Faculty of Languages at Uppsala University (Sweden) awarded Pease a doctorate honoris causa in 2011.[3] In 2012 the American Studies Association (ASA) awarded Pease the Carl Bode-Norman Holmes Pearson Prize for Outstanding Contributions to American Studies. Robyn Wiegman, professor of literature and of women's studies at Duke University, writes of Pease's contribution to the field of American studies: “As one of the most important scholars in American Studies today and a major architect of its extra institutional pedagogies, his contributions to the field are unsurpassed.”.[9][10]

Bibliography

Teacher

Writer

  • Visionary Compacts: American Renaissance Writings in Cultural Context (University of Wisconsin Press, 1987).
  • The New American Exceptionalism (University of Minnesota Press, 2009).
  • Theodor Seuss Geisel
    (Oxford University Press, 2010).

Editor

Selected chapters/sections of books

  • "J. Hillis Miller: The Other Victorian at Yale", in The Yale Critics: Deconstruction in America, ed. Arac et al. (University of Minnesota Press, 1983).
  • "Author", in Critical Terms for Literary Study, 2nd edition, eds. Lentricchia and McLaughlin (University of Chicago Press, 1995).

Selected articles

  • "Regulating Multi-Adhoccerists, Fish('s) Rules", Critical Inquiry 23.2 (1997):396–418.
  • "
    Moby Dick
    , and the Emergence of Transnational American Studies", Arizona Quarterly 56.3 (2000).
  • "Doing Justice to C. L. R. James's Mariners, Renegades, and Castaways", boundary 2 27.2 (2000):1–19.
  • "Hawthorne in the Custom-House: The Metapolitics, Postpolitics, and Politics of The Scarlet Letter". boundary 2 32.1 (2005).
  • "Dr. Seuss in Ted Geisel's Never-Never Land", PMLA 126.1 (2011):197–202.

External links

References

  1. ^ John Eperjesi, “American Studies: An Interview with Donald Pease”, The Minnesota Review 65–66 (2006): 121–132.
  2. ^ a b New Americanist Series at Duke University Press.
  3. ^ a b Dartmouth faculty website Archived 2013-01-26 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ 'Whose American Renaissance'
  5. ^ Racheal Fest, "Legacies of the Future: An Interview with Donald E. Pease", boundary 2 (2018), 45 (2): 221–242.
  6. ^ “Review of Theodor SEUSS Geisel by Donald E. Pease”
  7. ^ Donald E. Pease, “Dr. Seuss in Ted Geisel’s NeverNever Land” PMLA 126.1 (2011), 197
  8. ISSN 1059-1028
    . Retrieved 2023-08-11.
  9. ^ ASA Awards website
  10. ^ Dartmouth Press Release Archived November 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Re-"Learning How to Teach American Literature through Dartmouth's EdX Program". Dartmouth, June 26, 2015.