Meryl Altman is Professor Emerita of English and Women's Studies at »¨¼¾´«Ã½, where she served for many years as Director of Women's Studies. She came to Greencastle in 1990, after teaching at William and Mary and studying at Swarthmore College and at Columbia, where she earned her Ph.D in English literature with a dissertation on modernist American poetry. She has written regularly for the Women's Review of Books, and has published scholarly articles on Djuna Barnes, H.D., Faulkner, Sappho, metaphor, women's migrant domestic labor, and the history of sexuality, and on Simone de Beauvoir, the topic of her recent book, Beauvoir in Time (Brill, 2020). Other interests include feminist and queer theory, translation studies, and gender and sexuality in Ancient Greece.
Recent and current courses:
20th-century U.S. Literature and the Working Class
Modern Poetry
Political Economy of Women
Recent publications:
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“Policy Gaps and Theory Gaps: Women and Migrant Domestic Labor,” with Kerry Pannell. Feminist Economics. Volume 18, No. 2, April 2012. (Special issue on Gender and International Migration, guest edited by Lourdes Beneria, Carmen Diana Deere, and Naila Kabeer).
“Necessity but [unintelligible].” Introduction to a previously unpublished manuscript fragment by Simone de Beauvoir. The Useless Mouths and Other Literary Writings of Simone de Beauvoir, edited by Margaret A. Simons and Marybeth Timmerman, Illinois University Press, 2011.