
Jennifer Greeson
Associate Professor
Office Address/Hours
431 Bryan Hall / M 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. and by appointment.
Class Schedule
MW 9:30-10:45 a.m.
Degrees
Ph.D., American Studies, Yale University
M.A. and M.Phil., Yale University
B.A., English, Duke University
Books
- Our South: Geographic Fantasy and the Rise of National Literature (Harvard University Press, 2010)
- Ed., with Robert B. Stepto, Charles Chesnutt, The Conjure Stories (W.W. Norton, 2011)
- Ed., with Scott Romine, Keywords for Southern Studies (University of Georgia Press, 2016)
Recent and Selected Articles
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“Thomas Hobbes, the Virginia Company, and the Invention of Corporate Sovereignty” Critical Inquiry 52:1 (Autumn 2025 - forthcoming).
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“Speculation and Scientific Method: Thomas Harriot’s Virginia IPO” American Literature 97:2 (June 2025): 237-70.
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“Both Ends of the Telescope: Black Majority’s Global Local” William & Mary Quarterly, 3rd series 82:1 (January 2025): 119-123.
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“Plantation and Enlightenment” in The Cambridge History of Literature of the U.S. South, ed. Harilaos Stecopoulos (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021), pp. 54-69.
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“What Was ‘Southern Literature’?” American Literary History 32:3 (Fall 2020): 573-538.
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“American Enlightenment: The New World and Modern Western Thought,” American Literary History 25:1 (Spring 2013): 6-17.
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“The Prehistory of Possessive Individualism,” PMLA 127:4 (October 2012): 918-924.
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“Expropriating The Great South and Exporting ‘Local Color’: Global and Hemispheric Imaginaries of the First Reconstruction” American Literary History 18:3 (Fall 2006): 496-520.
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“The ‘Mysteries and Miseries’ of North Carolina: New York City, Urban Gothic Fiction, and Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl” American Literature 73:2 (June 2001): 277-309.
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“The Figure of the South and the Nationalizing Imperatives of Early United States Literature” Yale Journal of Criticism: Interpretation in the Humanities 12:4 (Winter 1999): 209-48.