Rachel Cole

Associate Professor of English

Miller 413, MSC: 58
Office Hours:

Fall 2024: Tuesdays & Thursdays 3-5pm & by appointment.

Rachel was raised in Kansas City and lived in the Berkshire mountains, Osaka, New York City, Baltimore, and Boston before moving West to join the department in 2004. She teaches a variety of courses on American literature from the colonial period through the present as well as one of the department’s gateway surveys and a section of the College’s first year core. Currently, her favorite classes to teach are her 300-level course on Whitman and Dickinson, her Words course on contemporary American novels, and her senior seminar, which focuses on how African-American authors in the twenty-first century use novels to frame the traumatic history of enslavement. Her research focuses on nineteenth-century American literature–she has published essays on Emerson and Melville and is working on a book that pairs nineteenth-century authors like Melville, Catharine Maria Sedgwick, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry James with twenty-first century writers like Ingrid Nunez and Tayari Jones. She is interested in questions of ethics and personhood, economies of scarcity, and the concept of satisfaction. She trained as a classical pianist for almost 20 years and has a second-degree black belt in tae kwon do, but these days spends most of her spare time enjoying her family, hiking, doing crossword puzzles, and hanging out with her cat, Frank.

Specialty

American Literature

Academic Credentials

PhD 2005 Johns Hopkins University

MA 2000 Johns Hopkins University

BA 1994 Williams College

Teaching

Fall 2024

CORE 120-05: Words

ENG 209-F1: Intro to American Literature

ENG 326-01: African American Literature

Research

“The Lawyer’s Tale: Preference, Responsibility, and Personhood in Melville’s ‘Story of Wall-street.’” Melville’s Philosophies. Ed. Branka Arsic and Kim Evans. Edinburgh: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017.

“Rethinking the Value of Lyric Closure: Giorgio Agamben, Wallace Stevens, and the Ethics of Satisfaction,” PMLA, 2011.

“At the Limits of Identity: Realism and American Personhood in Melville’s Confidence-Man,” Novel: A Forum on Fiction, 2006.

“The Reality Effect: Emerson’s Speakers and the Phenomenon of Personality,” The Yale Journal of Criticism, 2005.

Location: Miller Hall