Teaching
As an Associate Professor, I teach a variety of courses spanning the introductory, intermediate, and advanced levels of the fields of English, health, and medicine at both the undergraduate and graduate levels in addition to supervising postdoctoral candidates in a number of interdisciplinary areas.
Lehigh University
Sole Instructor of Record
How Literature Made Medicine Modern
Lower Division, Fall - 2022
Sole Instructor of Record
Medical Humanities
Lower Division, Spring - 2021
Sole Instructor of Record
Experimental Futures In Victorian Literature
Two-person Independent Graduate Study, Spring - 2021
Sole Instructor of Record
Medical Humanities
Lower Division, Fall - 2021
Sole Instructor of Record
Novel Pathologies in Victorian Literature and Culture
Graduate Seminar, Fall - 2022
Sole Instructor of Record
How Victorian Literature Made Medicine Modern
Upper Division, Spring - 2020
Co–Taught with Brooke Rollins
Theories of Literature and Social Justice
Graduate Seminar, Spring - 2018
Sole Instructor of Record
Working with Texts: Introduction to Literary Studies
Lower Division, Fall - 2019
Sole Instructor of Record
Neuroethics in Literature and Culture
Graduate Independent Study with Gillian, Fall - 2019
Sole Instructor of Record
Victorian Ambivalence: Prose, Poetry, and Fiction
Upper Division, Fall - 2019
Sole Instructor of Record
Medicine and Popular Culture
Lower Division, Sprin - 2018
Sole Instructor of Record
Victorian Literature and Medicine
Graduate Seminar, Fall - 2018
Sole Instructor of Record
What Zombies Teach us About Medicine
Upper Division, Fall - 2017
Sole Instructor of Record
How Victorian Literature Made Medicine Modern
Upper Division, Fall - 2017
California State University
Sole Instructor of Record
Accelerated Composition
Lower Division, Winter - 2017
Sole Instructor of Record
Accelerated Composition
Lower Division, Fall - 2016
University of California, Riverside
Sole Instructor of Record
Applied Intermediate Composition
Lower Division, Spring - 2016
Sole Instructor of Record
Intermediate Composition
Lower Division, Winter - 2016
Sole Instructor of Record
Applied Composition for Science and Engineering Majors
Lower Division, Spring - 2015
Sole Instructor of Record
Beginning Composition
Lower Division, Fall - 2015
Sole Instructor of Record
Beginning Composition
Lower Division, Winter - 2014
Sole Instructor of Record
Applied Intermediate Composition
Lower Division, Spring - 2014
Sole Instructor of Record
Intermediate Composition
Lower Division, Winter - 2013
Sole Instructor of Record
Applied Intermediate Composition
Lower Division, Spring - 2013
Sole Instructor of Record
Beginning Compositions
Lower Division, Fall - 2013
Current Courses
ENGL/HMS 315
This course will focus on the relationship between literature and medicine during the nineteenth and early twentieth century, the period in which medicine became “scientific.” We will consider how literary forms—science, detective, realist, and horror fiction—negotiated cultural anxieties and aspirations during the period of some of the most rapid, radical developments in medical science and practice: germ theory, epidemiology, toxicology, antibiotics, blood transfusion, among others. Reading literature from this period not only provides us with a fascinating account of medical history but more pressingly, it pushes us to consider how literary studies provide a unique way to understand the complexities, tensions, and ambiguities that come with medical advances. In this work, we will be doing a history of the present: using interdisciplinary humanistic inquiry to understand how we have wrought the biomedical present, in turn, putting into question the very idea of objectivity, the divide between science/art, and the notion that medical progress equates to better health outcomes, access to health care, and social justice.
HMS 170
This course will consider medicine’s scientific and practical dimensions within their cultural contexts. We will approach medicine through historical, literary, philosophical and theoretical dimensions. In this capacity, this course is focused on taking an interdisciplinary approach to medicine, reading work from medical history, literary studies, anthropology, sociology, bioethics, and science and technology studies. We will consider the human experience at difference scales (the individual to the population), and from diverse perspectives (from the patient to the practitioners), and consider concepts such as disease, illness, normality, health, and embodiment as they pertain to subjectivity, race, class, gender, and ability.