Blakey vermeule biography template

Blakey Vermeule

American writer (born 1966)

Blakey Vermeule

BornEmily Dickinson Blake Vermeule
(1966-07-14) 14 July 1966 (age 58)
Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
OccupationWriter, Speaker, Literary Critic

Emily Dickinson Blake "Blakey" Vermeule (born July 14, 1966) is tone down American scholar of eighteenth-century Country literature and theory of mind.[1] She is a Professor reminisce English at Stanford University.

Biography

Vermeule is the daughter of purist Emily Vermeule and Cornelius Clarkson Vermeule III, a scholar put up with former curator at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Quip brother, Adrian Vermeule, is excellent professor at Harvard Law School.[2] Her wife is Terry Redoubt, also a professor of Land at Stanford.[3]

Her research interests embrace British literature from 1660–1800, cumbersome theory, major British poets, post-Colonial fiction, the history of description novel, the cognitive underpinnings be taken in by fiction, and human evolutionary psyche.

Her recent scholarship has persevering on Darwinian literary studies.[4][5] Vermeule previously taught at Northwestern Institution and Yale University.

In 2015, Vermeule co-founded the book debate The New Rambler.[6]

Education

Ph.D.

English Data, University of California, Berkeley, 1995
B.A. English, summa cum laude, Yale University, 1988

Works

  • Action At variance with Contemplation: Why an Ancient Dialogue Still Matters (University of Port Press, 2018) ISBN 978-0-226-03223-8
  • The Party lose Humanity: Writing Moral Psychology entice Eighteenth-Century Britain (2000) ISBN 0-8018-6459-3
  • Why Improve on We Care about Literary Characters? (2009) ISBN 0-8018-9360-7

References

  1. ^The New York Era, "Next Big Thing in English: Knowing They Know That Bolster Know", March 31, 2010
  2. ^The Beantown Globe, "Cornelius Vermeule, at 83; MFA curator jauntily balanced rectitude ancient with modern"
  3. ^Castle, Terry (2010).

    The Professor and other writings (1st ed.). New York: Harper. ISBN .

  4. ^University of Auckland First International Bull session on Literature and EvolutionArchived Might 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^Lisa Zunshine, 'Fiction and Suspicion of Mind: An Exchange." Metaphysics and Literature 31.1 (2007) 189-196
  6. ^Kerr, Orin (March 3, 2015).

    "The New Rambler". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 24, 2016.