Dr. Melissa M. Caldwell
Department Advisor, Professor of English Office: 3050 - Coleman HallPhone: 217-581-7481
Email: mcaldwell@eiu.edu
INTRODUCTION
Fall 2024 Office Hours: Mondays & Wednesdays, 9am - 10am, 11am - 12:00pm, Fridays 11am - 1pm, other times by request. Meetings will take place in my office (CH 3050) or by Zoom. Please indicate your preference when scheduling.
My research interests include early modern intellectual history and moral philosophy; the transmission, adaptation and influence of skepticism in England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; religious and political polemical literature of the Reformation and the English Civil War; hybridity in literary-philosophical texts; and the relationship between word and image in literary, philosophical, and religious texts. Based on these interests, I have published Skepticism and Belief in Early Modern England: The Reformation of Moral Value (Routledge, 2016).
Beyond early modern literature, my research also focuses on literary adaptation. I have three forthcoming articles focused on adaptation before cinema, and Margaret Atwood's Hag-Seed and Penelopiad, adaptations of Shakespeare's The Tempest and Homer's Odyssey respectively.
I am also interested in war literature, specifically the literature of the Iraq War, and I have published "'Did You Kill Anyone?': The Pathography of PTSD in The White Donkey" in Performativity, Cultural Construction, and the Graphic Narrative (Routledge, 2019).
Finally, I have a growing interest in linguistics, literacy, ESL pedagogy and working with Emergent Bilinguals.
Education & Training
PhD, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Publications
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“Rivers, Monstrosity, and National Identity in Izaak Walton’s The Compleat Angler” in Reading the River in Shakespeare’s England, ed. Lisa Hopkins and Bill Angus. Under contract, Edinburgh University Press.
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"'The Isle Is Full of Noises': The Many Tempests of Margaret Atwood's Hag-Seed," Comparative Drama, 57.1 (2023)
- “Poetry after Descartes: Henry More’s Adaptive Poetics.” Adaptation before Cinema. Ed. Glenn Jellenik and Lissette Lopez Szwydky-Davis. Palgrave, 2023.
- “Performance and the Political Subject in Richard II.” “The King is But a Man”: William Shakespeare and 21st Century Politics, Culture and Leadership. Ed. Kristen Bezio and Anthony Russell. Edgar Elger, 2021.
- “‘Did you kill anyone?’: The Pathography of PTSD in The White Donkey.” Accepted for publication in Performativity, Cultural Construction, and the Graphic Novel. Ed. Leigh Anne Howard and Susanna Hoeness-Krupsaw. (Routledge, 2019).
- Skepticism and Belief in Early Modern England: The Reformation of Moral Value (Routledge, 2016).
- “Skepticism and Post-Reformation Ethics: Richard Hooker’s Galen,” Studies in Philology, 109.5 (2012): 582-609.
- “Minds Indifferent: Milton, Lord Brooke, and the Value of Adiaphora on the Eve of the English Civil War,” The Seventeenth Century, 22.1 (2007): 97-123.
Frequently Taught Courses
ENG 1105, English Major Forum
ENG 2205, Introduction to Literary Studies
ENG 2901, Structures of English
ENG 3800, Medieval British Literature
ENG 3802, Shakespeare
ENG 3803, Renaissance and Early Modern Literature
ENG 5003, 17th Century British Literature
ENG 5061, The Iraq War
ENG 5061, Literary Adaptation
ENG 5091, Second Language Acquisition: Bilingualism, Translanguaging, and Cultural and Linguistic Equity
Research & Creative Interests
Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century British studies, intellectual history, skepticism, religion and literature, and classical transmission
Twentieth and twenty-first century war literature
Textual Adaptation
ESL Pedagogy