Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies

Research Profile

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The quality of research in the Department has been confirmed in the 2008 national Research Assessment Exercise (RAE). More than half of our research was rated as 'internationally excellent' or higher, with a further 40 per cent rated as of internationally recognised quality. Essex’s position as a leading university for research in the humanities was confirmed with history, art history and philosophy also achieving high rankings.

The Department provides an excellent environment for the pursuit of research in the four areas of literature, drama, film, and creative writing.  We have around twenty staff who are engaged in full-time research as well as providing support for the seventy or so research students working on their PhD theses (many of whom developed their research interests by taking an MA in the Department).  The variety of research being undertaken and supported can best be gauged from looking at our staff profiles at the list of research students and their topics, and at two of our current collaborative projects, the AHRC-funded American Tropics: Towards a Literary Geography and the ambitious collaboration with the V&A called Memory Maps .

The Department has a strong international perspective, apparent both in the background of its staff and in their research interests. Within the Department four consolidated and interlocking research groups provide the research framework, with several people belonging to more than one. Comparative Literary Studies are central to the Department's identity, embodying the main stream of departmental work in European literatures, cultures, and theatres. Within this research group there are additional specialist concentrations on the early modern period, on cultural history, and on drama and performance.  American Literatures and Cultures has its roots in the Department's long-standing commitment to the study of the USA and Latin America, bolstered by recent work on the Caribbean. World Cinema grows out of the transnational and transcultural interests of those working in Film Studies. Finally, Creative Writing and Translation marries the new research venture in creative writing with the Department's established strengths in literary translation and playwriting.

 

 

Particular areas of research include

  • Comparative media and adaptation
  • Contemporary French theatre
  • Documentary and ethnographic film
  • Icelandic literature
  • Literary geography
  • Literature of the US south
  • Modernism and modernity
  • Postcolonial literature
  • Shakespeare and performance history
  • Travel Writing
  • World Cinema

 

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Maintained by Penny Woollard (e-mail: pennyw; non-Essex users should add @essex.ac.uk to create full e-mail address).

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