Misplaced Pages

Anne K. Mellor

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
American academic
Anne Mellor
BornAnne Kostelanetz Mellor
(1941-07-15) July 15, 1941 (age 83)
Academic background
EducationBrown University (BA)
Columbia University (MA, PhD)
Academic work
DisciplineEnglish Literature
Women's Studies
InstitutionsUniversity of California, Los Angeles

Anne Kostelanetz Mellor (born July 15, 1941) is an American academic working as a Distinguished Professor of English Literature and Women's Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. She specializes in Romantic literature, British cultural history, feminist theory, philosophy, art history and gender studies. She is most known for a series of essays and books that introduced forgotten female Romantic writers into literary history, and she edited the first volume of feminist essays on Romantic writers in 1988, entitled Romanticism and Feminism.

Education

Mellor received her Bachelor of Arts, summa cum laude, from Brown University in 1963. She earned a Master of Arts in English in 1964 and a PhD in comparative literature in 1968, both from Columbia University.

Scholarship

Her most important books on women and Romanticism include Mothers of the Nation: Women's Political Writing in England, 1780-1830 (2000), Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters (1988), Romanticism and Gender (1993). She also co-edited British Literature 1780-1830, a literary anthology that contributed to the prominence of women writers in Romanticism course syllabi and literary criticism.

Awards

In 1999, Mellor received the Keats-Shelley Association Distinguished Scholar Award. She has received, among many others, two Guggenheim Fellowships and several National Endowment for the Humanities grants.

References

  1. "Reports of the President and of the Treasurer". 1971.
  2. Anne K. Mellor, Distinguished Professor Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine at www.english.ucla.edu. Retrieved on 8 July 2007.
Categories: