Jessie Reeder
Associate Professor
Background
Professor Reeder's research focuses on 19th-century British literature and narratives of power and catastrophe.
Her first book, The Forms of Informal Empire: Britain, Latin America, and Nineteenth-Century Literature (Johns Hopkins 2020), explores the way Britain's informal influence in post-independence Latin America disturbed and challenged dominant narratives of imperial power on both sides of the Atlantic. It won the Sonya Rudikoff Prize for the best first book in Victorian studies from the Northeast Victorian Studies Association.
Reeder is also a founding member of Anglophone Chile (anglophonechile.org), a collaborative project with the Biblioteca Nacional de Chile and several other scholars to digitize the 19th-century anglophone periodical press of Chile.
Both within and beyond these two projects, Professor Reeder is interested in narrative, form, temporality, gender, politics and apocalypse, subjects that inform her research and teaching. Her work has appeared in Victorian Literature and Culture, Studies in English Literature, Studies in Romanticism, Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies and more.
Featured publications:
- 鈥淐ivil War and Uncivil Nationalism: The Britannia and Montevideo Reporter鈥 in The Edinburgh History of the Transnational British Press in Non-Anglophone Countries, 1800-1914. Edinburgh University Press, 2024.
- 鈥淪trange Neighbours: Victorians in South America.鈥 Global Nineteenth-Century Studies 2.1 (May 2023): 27-42.
- 鈥淣ations and States鈥 in The Routledge Companion to Politics and Literature in English. Routledge, 2023.
- 鈥淭oward a Multilingual Victorian Transatlanticism.鈥 Victorian Literature and Culture 49.1 (Spring 2021): 171-195.
- The Forms of Informal Empire: Britain, Latin America, and Nineteenth-Century Literature. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2020.
Education
- PhD, MA, University of Wisconsin-Madison
- BA, University of Delaware
Research Interests
- Romantic and Victorian literature
- Empire
- Narrative
- Form
- Latin America
- Apocalypse
Teaching Interests
- The nineteenth-century British novel
- Forms of British imperialism
- Literature of the weird, the monstrous, and the apocalyptic
Awards
- Honorable mention, Harter Family Mentoring Prize (Harpur College, 2023)
- Winner of the Sonya Rudikoff prize for the best first book in Victorian studies (NVSA 2022)
- Honored Instructor (Services for Students with Disabilities, 2022)
- Field Development Grant from the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals (RSVP), with co-investigators Jennifer Hayward and Michelle Prain Brice, to develop a digital archive of the English-language press in Chile (2018)
- Curran Fellowship from the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals (RSVP) for research in Buenos Aires (2016)
- Nominated for Harpur College teaching award, 绿帽社 (2016, 2017, 2018, 2020)
- Winner: NASSR/Romantic Circles Pedagogy Contest (2015)