Dr. Kathryn Pratt Russell's Homepage

 

Kathryn Pratt Russell, Associate Professor of English
Ph.D., Vanderbilt University
Department of English
Email: kathrynprattrussell@clayton.edu

ENGL 4011 ENGL 2122
ENGL 4241 MALS 5000

 

 

Dr. Kathryn Pratt is Associate Professor of English in the Department of Language and Literature at Clayton State University, where she is a member of the undergraduate and graduate faculties.  She teaches courses on British Romanticism, Eighteenth-Century British literature, critical theory, pop culture, world literature, and writing.  Before coming to Clayton, she was Visiting Assistant Professor at Tulane University and Assistant Professor at Auburn University.

 

Her articles on Romantic literature and culture have been published in Studies in Romanticism, SEL, Wordsworth Circle, and the South Atlantic Review, and her essay on Mary Wroth is included in the Ashgate Press edition Privacy, Domesticity & Women in Early Modern England.  Dr. Pratt has presented her work at the annual conferences of the North American Society for the Study of Romanticism, the South Atlantic Modern Language Association, the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, and at other national and regional conferences.  She is also a poet and fiction writer, and her creative work has been published in Black Warrior Review, Chelsea, Red Mountain Review, and Paragraph.

 

Dr. Pratt earned her Ph.D. from Vanderbilt University, where she was the Harold Stirling Vanderbilt Graduate Scholar, and won the Edgar Hill Duncan Memorial Award for Outstanding Graduate Student Career, the English Graduate-Division Dissertation Year Fellowship, the Rheney Summer Study Fellowship, the John M. Aden Award, the Susan Ford Wiltshire Prize, and a College of Arts & Sciences Dissertation Enhancement Grant.  She attended the School of Criticism & Theory at Cornell University, and earned M.A. degrees from Vanderbilt and the University of Colorado-Boulder, and a B.A. with honors from the Louisiana State University.

 

Her professional awards include a NEH Summer Fellowship, an Auburn University Competitive Research Grant, an Auburn University Humanities Research Travel Grant, and a grant from the Georgia Humanities Council to support Clayton State University’s 2007 Supernatural Shakespeare Festival.

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright 2006, Clayton State University
Last Updated, June 2006