Hudson Short CV 1 of 1

Hannah Doherty Hudson

Department of English

University of Texas, San Antonio

One UTSA Circle

San Antonio, TX 78249

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Education

Ph.D., English, Stanford University, 2013

M.A., English, Stanford University, 2009

M.Phil., Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge, 2004

A.B., English, Princeton University, 2003, Summa cum Laude, Certificate in Medieval Studies

Academic Appointments

Assistant Professor, Department of English, The University of Texas, San Antonio, January 2014 –

Book Project

Minerva in the Marketplace: The Minerva Press and the Romantic Novel, manuscript in preparation

Publications

“Robert Bage’s Novel Merchandise: Commercialism, Gender, and Form in Late Eighteenth-Century Fiction,” in The Eighteenth-Century Novel, Vol. 9. New York: AMS Press, 2012, pp. 171-192.

editions

Edited Selections from Carlton-House Magazine, 1792 in Romantic Women Writers Reviewed, vol. 9, ed. Ann Hawkins. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2013, pp. 169-92.

Edited Selections from The Universal Magazine and Review, 1790 in Romantic Women Writers Reviewed, vol. 5, ed. Ann Hawkins. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012, pp. 129-57.

Fellowships and Awards

Labatt Scholar, College of Liberal and Fine Arts, University of Texas, San Antonio, January 2014-

Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowship, September 2012 - June 2013

Chawton House Library Visiting Fellowship, March 2013

NEH Summer Seminar Scholar, “Jane Austen and Her Contemporaries,” Summer 2012

Graduate Research Opportunity Grant, Stanford University, Summer 2012

Mellon Dissertation Fellowship, Stanford University 2011-2012

Jay Fliegelman Archival Research Award, Stanford University, 2010

Cambridge Overseas Trust Scholar, 2003-2004

Phi Beta Kappa, Princeton University, 2003

Princeton University Class of 1870 Old English Prize, Spring 2002

Selected Papers and Presentations

“Working Women: The Minerva Press Writes Consumer Culture.” Chawton House Library, Chawton UK, March 2013.

“ ‘I myself have read hundreds and hundreds’: Jane Austen and the Novels of the Minerva Press.” Invited lecture at the Jane Austen Society of North America (JASNA), Northern California, Austen’s 237th Birthday Gala, San Francisco, CA, December 2012

“Long-Term Prospects: Romantic Authorship and Literary Obsolescence” at the North American Society for the Study of Romanticism (NASSR), Neuchâtel, Switzerland, August 2012

“Pseudonymous Authorship and Fashionable Fiction,” NEH Summer Seminar Individual Projects Presentation, at the University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, July 2012

“Walter Scott’s Books” at the Stanford University Working Group on the Novel, Stanford, CA, May

2012

“Rare Book Rooms and Digital Collections: The Popular Novel in the Archive,” at the Stanford History Archival Workshop (SHAW) Colloquium at Stanford, CA, April 2012

“Gothic Authors, Popular Readerships, and the Material Book,” at the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS), San Antonio, TX, March 2012

“The Minerva Press and Walter Scott’s Readers: Innovation and Identity” at the North American Society for the Study of Romanticism (NASSR), Park City, UT, August 2011

“Franco Moretti’s ‘Style, Inc.’ and Paratextual Methodologies” Introductory remarks at the University of Cambridge Material Texts Seminar, May 2011

“The Curious Case of ‘Medora Gordon Byron’: Authorship and Identity in the Romantic Era” at the British Association for Romantic Studies (BARS) Early-Career and Postgraduate Conference, London, UK, May 2011

“Robert Bage, Minerva Press Author?” at the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS), Vancouver, BC, March 2011

“‘Imitators of Radcliffe’: The Minerva Gothic and the Development of Genre” at the Stanford University Seminar on Enlightenment and Revolution (SER), Stanford, CA, March 2011

“Byronic Advertising: Selling Romanticism in the Early Nineteenth Century” at “Burns and Byron in Scottish, British, and European Romanticism,” Manchester, UK, December 2010

“Braver Than Catherine Morland: Re-Reading the Gothic Heroine of the 1790s” at the North American Society for the Study of Romanticism (NASSR), Vancouver, BC, August 2010

“The Satirist in the Garden: (Re)gendering Space in Austen’s Emma” at the Stanford-Berkeley Graduate Student Conference, Stanford, CA, April 2007

Teaching Experience

the university of texas at san antonio

British Literature II: The Eighteenth Century to the Present, Spring 2014

Sex, Satire, and Sentiment: Restoration and Eighteenth Century Literature, Spring 2014

stanford university education program for gifted youth

Expository Writing: Word and Image, Summer 2012

Expository Writing: Writing Lives, Summer 2011

stanford university

Masterpieces of Contemporary Literature (as T.A.), Fall 2009

Judging a Book by Its Cover: The Rhetoric of Reading in the Twenty-First Century, Winter and Spring 2008

Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (as T.A.), Spring 2007

Research and Teaching Interests

The Novel Romanticism Popular Culture

Book and Publishing History Digital Archives Periodical Essays and Reviews

Eighteenth Century Literature Genre Studies Satire and Parody

Professional Associations

Modern Language Association; American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies; North American Society for the Study of Romanticism; Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing