Position Title
Associate Professor of English
Position Title
Associate Professor of English
213 Voorhies
Office Hours
Fall 2024: Tu 1:45-2:45 and F 12-2 (both in 213 Voorhies)
Bio
Currently Teaching:
- 125-- 21st Century Irish Fiction
- 189-- James Joyce's Ulysses
Biography:
Ph.D., Duke University (2002)
B.A., University of California, Berkeley (1994)
Awards:
- Finalist, ASUCD Excellence in Education Award, 2011
- Stern Dissertation Fellowship, Duke University, 2001-2002
- Foreign Language Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship, Dublin, Ireland, 2000
- Fullbright Fellowship, Dublin, Ireland, 1997-1998
- Highest Honors in English, University of California, Berkeley, 1994
- Phi Beta Kappa, 1994
Selected Publications:
- "'The Politics of Time and Eternity': A.E., Theosophy, and the Temporality of Emergence" in J. Valente and M Howes, eds. The Irish Revival: A Complex Vision (2022).
- "The Materialist Fabulist Dialectic: James Stephens, Eimar O'Duffy, and Magic Naturalism" in Liam Harte, ed. The Oxford Handbook to Irish Fiction (2020).
- "Retromania, the Canon, the Refusal to Work and the Present: The Crassical Connection" Social Text Periscope (January 2013).
- Lazy Idle Schemers: Irish Modernism and the Cultural Politics of Idleness (Field Day Publications of the University of Notre Dame, 2010).
- “‘Never a Day’s Work’: Synge and Irish Modernism.” in P.J. Mathews, ed. Cambridge Companion to John Miltington Synge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010)
- “Constitutional Laziness: Flann O’Brien and the Politics of Laziness.” Novel: A Forum on Fiction 42:1 (Spring 2009), 86-108.
- “Connolly, the Archive, and Method.” Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 10.1 (Jan/Feb 2008): 48-66.
- "Whenever Green is Red: James Connnolly and Postcolonial Theory." Nepantla: Views from South 1.3 (2000), 605-648
- "Scenes of Tawdry Tribute: Modernism, Tradition, and Connolly" in P. J. Mathews, ed. New Voices in Irish Criticism (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2000), 3-12
Email: gjdobbins@ucdavis.edu
Education & Interests:
- Ph.D. (Duke); 20th-c. Irish and British Literature, Modernism, Postcolonial Theory and Literature, Cultural Studies, Critical Theory, Theosophy ahd Esotericism, Magic Naturalism, Britain in the 1970s, Noir, Punk Rock, Extreme Metal, Popular Culture (primarily music and sports).