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Katherine Mannheimer

Assistant Professor of English

PhD  Yale University
Restoration and eighteenth-century literature

Research/Writing interests

Katherine Mannheimer’s research and teaching interests center on Restoration and eighteenth-century literature, particularly in relation to questions of print culture and the history of the book; visuality and visual culture; gender; literary theory; and law in literature.

Her dissertation, entitled “‘The Scope in Ev’ry Page’: Eighteenth-Century Satire as a Mode of Vision,” argued that visuality—both imagistic and typographic—lay at the heart of much of Britain’s Augustan-age satire, particularly that of Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift. She contended that, as eighteenth-century science and culture came to privilege an increasingly visual mode of experience, Pope and Swift used ekphrastic description, plot (portraying characters’ acts of looking), and experimental page-design, in order both to participate in, and to explore the limitations of, an ocularcentric epistemology. The implications of their satiric project extended to issues of gender, the task of the satirist, and the “ethics” of the eye.

The work of expanding her dissertation has led her to new areas of pursuit, as she has begun to examine eighteenth-century theatre and performance (as forms of visuality in competition with, or perhaps complementing, verbal imagery and typography). She is thus currently writing about a number of plays and poems that thematize or enact the relationship between print and performance.

Selected publications

  • “To the Letter: The Material Text as Space of Adjudication in Pope’s First Satire of the Second Book of Horace,” in Comparative Literature Studies, 43.1-2 (2006)
  • “Personhood, Poethood, and Pope: Johnson’s Life of Pope and the Search for the Man Behind the Author,” forthcoming in Eighteenth-Century Studies
  • "Echoes of Sound and Sense: Alexander Pope's Essay on Criticism and Ben Jonson's 'Eupheme,'" forthcoming in Literary Imagination

Teaching

Recent undergraduate courses

  • Eighteenth-Century Travellers (spring 2007)
  • Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Drama (spring 2007)
  • The Early British Novel (fall 2006)
  • Studies in Eighteenth-Century Literature: The Consumer Revolution (fall 2006)

Recent graduate courses

  • Literary Lives: The Life of the Author (fall 2007)

katherine.mannheimer@rochester.edu
(585) 275-2677
510 Morey Hall

Katie Mannheimer
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