Fraser Easton

Associate Professor
Photo of Fraser Easton.

PhD, Princeton
MA, Princeton
BA, British Columbia

Extension: 43359
Email:
easton@uwaterloo.ca

Biography

Born in St. Boniface, I grew up in North Vancouver and studied physics and math at UBC before switching to English. In graduate school I specialized in British literature of the period 1740 to 1830; my dissertation was on cross-dressing in eighteenth-century culture and society. After holding a Killam post-doctoral fellowship in the History Department at UBC, I came to 蓝莓视频 where I teach and research eighteenth-century and Romantic literature.

I am a member of the Advisory Board of the Comparative Literature Department at Fordham University. In August 2004 I was a visiting Associate Professor in the Fachbereich Literaturwissenschaft at the University of Konstanz in Germany and in April 2013 I was a visiting Associate Professor in the School of Foreign Languages at Zhejiang Gongshang University in China. From 2003 to 2007 I chaired the Women's Studies Advisory Board, a university-wide committee. From 2008 to 2015 I served two terms as chair of the English Department.

Selected publications

鈥淪mart (Studies) Now,鈥澨Eighteenth-Century Studies听57 (2024): 479-89.

鈥淛ane Austen and the Art of Elocution: Discerning Feeling in听Persuasion,鈥 in Jakub Lipski and M-C. Newbould, eds.,听Edinburgh Companion to the Eighteenth-Century British Novel and the Arts听(Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2024), 307-326.

鈥淓nlightenment and Exchange,鈥 in 鈥淩efusing Eighteenth-Century Fictions, Part 2,鈥 ed. Eugenia Zuroski and Manu Samriti Chander, a special issue of听Eighteenth-Century Fiction听36 no. 2 (2024): 309-314.

鈥淵orick鈥檚 Speech and the Starling鈥檚 Song: The Limits of Elocution in听A Sentimental Journey,鈥 in W. B. Gerard and M-C. Newbould, eds.,听Laurence Sterne鈥檚 鈥淎 Sentimental Journey鈥: A Legacy to the World (Bucknell University Press, 2021), 121-149.

Plebeianizing the Female Soldier: Radical Liberty andThe Life and Adventures of Mrs. Christian Davies,鈥Eighteenth-Century Fiction32.3 (2020): 427-461.

鈥淪mart鈥檚 Professors: Birdsong and Rhetorical Agency in听Jubilate Agno,鈥 in Christopher GoGwilt and Melanie Holm, eds.,听Mocking Bird Technologies: The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes听(New York: Fordham University Press, 2018): 68-96.

鈥淐hristopher Smart鈥檚 Elocution,鈥 in Reading Christopher Smart in the 21st Century, edited by Min Wild and Noel Chevalier (Bucknell UP, 2013): 63-84.

鈥,鈥 Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 35 (2006): 97-127.

鈥,鈥 Past and Present 180 (August 2003): 131-174.

鈥,鈥 Studies in Romanticism 42 (2003): 99-125.

鈥溾楳ary鈥檚 Key鈥 and the Poet鈥檚 Conception: The Orphic versus the Mimetic Artist in Jubilate Agno,鈥 in Clement Hawes, ed., Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment (New York: St. Martin鈥檚, 1999), 153-175. 听听

Christopher Smart鈥檚 Cross-Dressing: Mimicry, Depropriation, and Jubilate Agno ,鈥 Genre 31 (1998): 193-243.

鈥,鈥 Textual Practice 12 (1998): 459-488.

Fellowships & Awards

  • Outstanding Performance Award, University of 蓝莓视频

  • SSHRC听(Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council) Standard Research Grant, University of 蓝莓视频
  • Isaac Walton Killam Memorial Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Department of History, University of British Columbia
  • Princeton University Graduate Fellowship, Princeton University

Current research

I am currently at work on two scholarly projects:

The first project aims to map and make visible a wide range of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century cross-dressing practices, and the complex ways in which those practices were represented across historical periods, report genres, and different sexes and genders (including gender transitions and transgender individuals), especially in periodical reports. One of the outputs of this research is a digital humanities database: the听听(WXDA). Another is a听听for the WXDA.

The second project seeks to explore the theme and practice of communication in Laurence Sterne, Christopher Smart, William Wordsworth, and Jane Austen through the lens of elocution, the foremost theory of communication in Britain c. 1740 to 1820. In an era of increasing print literacy, elocution focused on and sought to theorize the paralinguistic features of performed speech such as gesture and tone, which among other things were seen as communicative attributes shared between humans and animals. This "body language" gives a materialized rhetorical shape to matters that can otherwise seem inchoate, abstract, or spiritualized, such as sensibility, identity, embodiment, affect, and sentiment.

Areas of graduate supervision

  • Eighteenth-century and Romantic literature
  • The novel
  • Political economy and empire (Adam Smith, Maria Edgeworth)
  • Gender and sexuality studies; literary theory (especially Foucault)
  • Enlightenment rhetoric and media