First name,Last name,Preferred title,Overview,Position,Department,Individual
Susan,Egenolf,Associate Professor,"Susan Egenolf is Associate Professor and Associate Department Head in the Department of English at Texas A&M University. Her research and teaching interests are late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth-century British and Irish Literature and Culture, Women Writers, Environmental Studies, the Novel, Material Culture Studies, and the Visual Arts. She is author of The Art of Political Fiction in Hamilton, Edgeworth, and Owenson (Ashgate/Routledge, 2009), editor of the Wives and Mothers and Extended Families volumes of British Family Life, 1780-1914 (Pickering and Chatto/Routledge, 2013), and co-editor of the digital Maria Edgeworth Letters Project (Maria Edgeworth; 2019-- ). She guest curated the exhibition Gods in the Western Midlands: The Immortal Achievements of Wedgwood, Woodall & Webb at the Texas A&M University Forsyth Galleries in Spring 2018. Her monograph-in-progress is ""Josiah Wedgwood and the Shaping of British Art and Empire.""",Associate Professor||Associate Department Head,English||English,https://scholars.library.tamu.edu/vivo/display/n48838938
Margaret,Ezell,Distinguished Professor,"My interests are late seventeenth and early eighteenth-century literary culture; early modern women writers; history of authorship, reading and handwritten culture; early modern social media and multi-modal literacy",John and Sara Lindsey Chair||Distinguished Professor,English||College of Liberal Arts,https://scholars.library.tamu.edu/vivo/display/n51a1a457
Marian,Eide,Professor,"Marian Eide is Professor of English and Women's and Gender Studies at Texas A&M University. She is the author of Ethical Joyce (Cambridge 2002), After Combat: True War Stories from Iraq and Afghanistan (Potomac 2018--with Michael Gibler, col. ret. U.S. Army-Infantry), and the Terrible Beauty: The Violent Aesthetic and Twentieth-Century Literature (UVAPress, 2019), as well as more than a dozen articles on twentieth-century literature and culture. She has been a fellow at the Tanner Humanities Center at the University of Utah and at the Glasscock Center for Humanities Research. Her research concerns ethics, aesthetics, and violence.",Professor||Professor,Women & Gender Studies||English,https://scholars.library.tamu.edu/vivo/display/n7bd4a1a5
Amy,Earhart,Associate Professor,"Amy E. Earhart is Associate Professor of English and affiliated faculty of Africana Studies at Texas A&M University. A 2020 Texas A&M University Presidential Impact Fellow and a 2019 Texas A&M University Arts & Humanities Fellow, Earhart has participated in grants and fellowship received from the NEH, ACLS, and the Mellon Foundation. In 2020, Earhart received a NEH-Mellon Fellowship for Digital Publication for her book length digital project ""Digital Humanities and the Infrastructures of Race in African-American Literature."" She has also won numerous teaching awards, including the University Distinguished Achievement Award from The Association of Former Students and Texas A&M University.
Involved with digital humanities scholarship since 2003, Earhart's scholarship has focused on examining infrastructures of technology and their impact and replication of ""race,"" building infrastructure for digital humanities work, embedding digital humanities projects within the classroom, and tracing the history and futures of dh, with a particular interest in the way that dh and Black studies intersect. Her digital projects are constructed to expand access to Black humanities materials, as is the case with projects The Millican Massacre, 1868, DIBB: The Digital Black Bibliographic Project, and Alex Haley's Malcolm X: 'The Malcolm X I knew' and notecards from The Autobiography of Malcolm X (a collaborative project with undergraduate and graduate students published in Scholarly Editing).
Earhart has published scholarship on a variety of digital humanities topics, with work that includes a monograph Traces of Old, Uses of the New: The Emergence of Digital Literary Studies (U Michigan Press 2015), a co-edited collection The American Literature Scholar in the Digital Age (U Michigan Press 2010), and a number of articles and book chapters in volumes including the Debates in Digital Humanities series, DHQ, DSH: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Digital Studies/Le champ numerique, and Textual Cultures.
Her current book, ""A Compromised Infrastructure: Digital Humanities, African American Literary History and Technologies of Identity,"" is under advance contract with Stanford University Press. She is also developing a digital project, Infrastructures of Race, and editing the Civil War Writings for the Collected Works of Harriet Beecher Stowe, Oxford UP.",Affiliated Faculty||Associate Professor,English||Africana Studies,https://scholars.library.tamu.edu/vivo/display/n92930c0b