Richard Barney
Associate Professor
Ph.D. University of Virginia, 1991
Early Modern British Philosophy and Literature, History of the Sublime, Critical Theory, Film
Humanities 335
(518) 442-4058
rbarney@albany.edu
Professor Barney researches and publishes in
the areas of 18th-century British
studies,
critical and cultural theory, gender studies,
and film. He is currently working on several
projects, including The Corporeal Sublime,
a book-length study of the links between early
modern medical thinking and representations of
sublimity in 18th-century literature; an essay
on Edmund Burke's revision of contemporaneous
ocular physiology; and a collection of
interviews with the filmmaker David Lynch. He
teaches graduate courses on 18th-century
fiction, philosophy, and criticism, and
contemporary critical theory; and undergraduate
courses on cultural studies, 18th-century
British literature, and film.
Selected Items:
Publications
Plots of Enlightenment: Education and the Novel in Eighteenth-Century England. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999.
Edited VolumesOliver Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer, for The Broadview Anthology of Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Drama. General Ed. Douglas Canfield. Orchard Park, N.Y.: Broadview Press, 2001. Republished in the Anthology's Concise Edition, 2003.
The Culture of Filth. A special issue of
Genre 27.4 (Winter 1994). Co-edited with
Grant Holly.
Education, Identity, and Constructions of the Novel. A special issue of Genre 26.4 (Winter 1993).
Essays"Between Swift and Kafka: Animals and the Politics of J. M. Coetzee's Elusive Fiction," World Literature Today, Winter 2004.
Fellowships and AwardsHuntington Library / South Central Modern Languages Association Fellowship (2002).
Helfand Fellowship, The New York Academy of Medicine (2000).
Newberry Library Short-Term Fellowship (1999).
Clark Library / American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Fellowship (1993; 1999).
Research Fellow, Humanities Center, University of California, Santa Barbara (1998-99).
Oklahoma Foundation for the Humanities Grant (1997).
Huntington Library / South Central Modern Languages Association Fellowship (1996).
Service and TeachingDirector of Graduate Studies, Department of English
Member of the Delegate Assembly, MLA
Co-founder, Group for Early Modern Cultural Studies (GEMCS)
English Department Webmaster
