Laura Doyle
Professor Emeritus
Faculty Bio
Laura Doyle is Professor of English at UMass Amherst, where she arrived in 1995 after seven years as Assistant Professor at Harvard University. She holds a BA from Beloit College, an MA from the University of Illinois, and a PhD from Brandeis University. In the Fall of 2010, as Leverhulme Research Professor in residence at the University of Exeter (UK), she presented Leverhulme lectures throughout Britain and Ireland. Doyle's latest book, Inter-imperiality: Vying Empires, Gendered Labors, and the Literary Arts of Alliance (Duke UP 2020), has been awarded the Immanuel Wallerstein prize from the American Sociological Association. The book offers a long-historical, decolonial, and interdisciplinary analysis of geopolitical economy, including the structural role of the arts as an instrument for both hegemony and dissent.
At UMass, Doyle is co-organizer of the World Studies Interdisciplinary Project (WSIP), together with Professor Mwangi-wa-Gĩthĩnji (Economics). WSIP fosters interdisciplinary work in global and postcolonial studies, with a strong historical focus. In a range of forums, WSIP brings together social scientists and humanists to engage with recent scholarship in world history, especially insofar as it enriches current studies of capitalism, empires, and cultural history. Doyle is the main PI for the Mellon Foundation grant awarded to WSIP for the 2015-16 Sawyer Seminar Series, "Beyond Medieval and Modern: Rethinking Global Paradigms for Political Economy and Culture."
Doyle's research and teaching explore the dynamic intercultural formation of literary texts: the ways that they are written and read within an uneven, volatile, geopolitical field of relations; the ways that literary genres and traditions often intimate the long history of these writing conditions; and the ways authors and readers imagine positions at odds with the geopolitical field. She has taught courses on global modernisms, history of the novel, body theory, Atlantic-world race studies, and postcolonial global studies. Her current projects develop an “inter-imperial” framework of analysis, including in her book in progress and recent essays (see "Dialectics in the Longer Durée" Globalizations 11.5, Oct 2014). Doyle also integrates existential philosophy into her work, including the thought of Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Frantz Fanon (Bodies of Resistance and the essay “Toward a Philosophy of Transnationalism”).
Doyle is co-editor of the book series "Critical Studies in Atlantic Literatures and Cultures" at Edinburgh University Press; co-editor of the "Global Circulations Project (GCP) at Literature Compass; and editor of the GCP series "Labor Travels, Art Forms," which addresses the ways that migrating laborers have carried expressive arts with them and in turn have transformed and linked cultures from below. She welcomes inquiries about these projects. Doyle has served as Associate Dean of the College of Humanities and Fine Arts, and she has been involved in the University's Center for Teaching, offering workshops for graduate students on leading discussion and facilitating a campus-wide Faculty Book Club on books related to teaching and the university.
Books
Bordering on the Body: The Racial Matrix of Modern Fiction and Culture (Oxford 1994, recipient of Narrative Society Perkins Prize)
Freedom's Empire: Race and the Rise of the Novel in Atlantic Modernity, 1640-1940 (Duke 2008)
Geomodernisms: Race, Modernism, Modernity, co-edited with Laura Winkiel (Indiana 2005)
Bodies of Resistance: New Phenomenologies of Politics, Agency, and Culture, editor (Northwestern 2001)
Research Areas
- 20th Century and Contemporary Literature
- African, African American, & African Diaspora Studies
- American Literature
- American, Atlantic, & Hemispheric Studies
- Colonial, Postcolonial, & Transnational Studies
- Critical Race and Ethnicity Studies
- Theory and Cultural Studies
Awards and Accolades
- Rockefeller Fellowship (Afro-American Studies, Princeton 1993-4)
- Two ACLS Fellowships (1992, 2010)
- Main PI for Mellon Sawyer Seminar Grant (2015-17)
- College of Humanities & Fine Arts Award for Outstanding Accomplishments in Research
- College of Humanities & Fine Arts Outstanding Teacher Award
- Gender and Sexuality Studies