Lori A Merish
Title
Associate Professor
Department
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
General profile
Phone
202-687-7518
Fax
202-687-5445
Location
422 New North
Office hours
M 1:30-3:30 and by appt.
Bio
Lori Merish is an Associate Professor of English. Her research and teaching interests are in 19th-C American Literature and Culture; Multi-Ethnic American Literatures; American and Anglophone Caribbean Women Writers; Literature and Politics; Feminist and Materialist Theories; and Working-class literature and culture.
She earned her Ph.D. and M.A. from the University of California, Berkeley, and B.S. from the College of William and Mary.
Publications she has written include: Sentimental Materialism: Gender, Commodity Culture, and 19th-C American Literature (Duke UP, 2000); selected articles on Stowe, Wharton, Kirkland, John Rollin Ridge, Phelps, class and sexuality, the feminization of poverty in antebellum literature.
She is currently completing a book on antebellum working-class women and popular fiction, entitled Laboring Women and the Languages of Class: Race, Sex, and Working Class Women's Writings, 1830-1860; the book is will be published by Duke University Press.
Merish also has won a variety of honors, grants and awards, including: a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Fellowship; a Mellon Fellowship, English Department, Stanford University; a Charlotte W. Newcombe Fellowship; a U. C. Berkeley Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities Fellowship; and the A. S. A.'s Constance Rourke Award for best article in American Quarterly (1993).
She earned her Ph.D. and M.A. from the University of California, Berkeley, and B.S. from the College of William and Mary.
Publications she has written include: Sentimental Materialism: Gender, Commodity Culture, and 19th-C American Literature (Duke UP, 2000); selected articles on Stowe, Wharton, Kirkland, John Rollin Ridge, Phelps, class and sexuality, the feminization of poverty in antebellum literature.
She is currently completing a book on antebellum working-class women and popular fiction, entitled Laboring Women and the Languages of Class: Race, Sex, and Working Class Women's Writings, 1830-1860; the book is will be published by Duke University Press.
Merish also has won a variety of honors, grants and awards, including: a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Fellowship; a Mellon Fellowship, English Department, Stanford University; a Charlotte W. Newcombe Fellowship; a U. C. Berkeley Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities Fellowship; and the A. S. A.'s Constance Rourke Award for best article in American Quarterly (1993).
Education
- Ph.D. and M.A. () University of California, Berkeley,
- B.S. () College of William and Mary,
Upcoming Events
- Nov 24, 12pm-1pm: CCT Library Research Help with David Gibbs
- Nov 24, 6pm: Tuesday Film Series: Being Jewish in France
- Dec 1, 12pm-1pm: CCT Library Research Help with David Gibbs

