About

Regina Martin is an associate professor of English and Global Commerce and director of the Writing Program at Denison University. She teaches first-year writing, Commerce and Society, Literary Theory, 20th-Century Fiction, 19th-Century British Literature, and Caribbean Literature. She is also a member of a group of faculty at Denison who are developing a minor in Digital Humanities.

Education

B. A. in English, University of Oklahoma

M. A. in English, University of Oklahoma

Ph. D. in English, University of Florida

Blog Posts

    Publications

    “The Feminist Realism of Zadie Smith’s On Beauty,” Modern Fiction Studies, vol 65, no. 4, 2019, pp. 579-98.


     


    “Classical Economics,” The Routledge Companion to Economics and Literature, edited by Matthew Seybold and Michelle Chihara, Routledge, 2019.


     


    “Speculating Subjects: Keynes, Woolf, and Finance Capitalism.” Modern Language Studies vol. 47, no. 1, 2017.


     


    “State and Corporate Dystopianism in Nineteen Eighty-Four and Dave Eggers’s The Circle.” Critical Insights:Nineteen Eighty-Four, edited by Thomas Horan, Salem Press, 2016, pp. 55-69. 


     


    “London and Professional Society in H. G. Wells’s Tono-Bungay and Hanif Kureishi’s The Buddha of Suburbia.” Studies in the Humanities vol. 42, nos. 1-2, 2015, pp. 82-107. 


     


    “Absentee Capitalism and the Politics of Conrad’s Imperial Novels.” PMLA vol. 130, no. 3, 2015, pp. 584-598.


     


    “Finance Capitalism and the Creeping London of Howards End and Tono-Bungay,” Criticism vol. 55 no. 3, 2013, pp. 447-469. 


     


    “The Country and the City in Jean Rhys’s Voyage in the Dark.” Rhys Matters: New Critical Perspectives, edited by Mary Wilson and Kerry Johnson, Palgrave, 2013, pp. 133-149.


     


     “‘The Drama of Gender and Genre in Edith Wharton’s Realism,” Twentieth-Century Literature, vol. 58, no. 4, 2012, pp. 582-605.


     


    “Specters of Romance: The Female Quixote and Domestic Fiction,” The Eighteenth-Century Novel, vol. 8, 2011, pp. 147-66.

    Projects

    Book Manuscript: “Finance Capital and Modernism, 1870-1940”

    Regina Martin

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