You are here
Jonathan Radocay
Jonathan Radocay is a PhD candidate in English Literature, with a Designated Emphasis in Native American Studies, and a citizen of Cherokee Nation. His dissertation reconceptualizes Cherokee storytelling forms that emerged from the allotment and privatization of Cherokee lands during the early 20th century around place-based, Indigenous environmental and geospatial practices, counter-geographies, and geographic knowledges.
PUBLICATIONS
Refereed Journal Articles
“Winnemem Wintu Geographies and Lyric Modernity,” Modernism/modernity Forums 5:4 (March 2021) online, doi:10.26597/mod.0192
Collections
“Geographies of Allotment Modernisms,” Routledge Handbook to North American Indigenous Modernities and Modernisms, eds. Kirby Brown, Alana Sayers, and Stephen Ross (September 2022)
Scholarly Reviews & Other Publications
“Miwok Mosaics,” “California,” Energy In/Out of Place, West Virginia University Press, (forthcoming 2022).
“Review of Aurum by Santee Frazier (Cherokee Nation),” Transmotion 6:2 (Winter 2020), doi:10.22024/UniKent/03/tm.960
TEACHING
Associate Instructor
Department of English
- ENL 3: Introduction to English
- ENL 3A: Writers' Workshop
University Writing Program
- UWP 1Y: Introduction to Academic Literacies (Hybrid Version)
- UWP 1: Expository Writing
Teaching Assistant
Department of English
- ENL 185B: Literature by Women II
- ENL 137: British Literature 1900-1945
Department of Asian American Studies
- ASA 4: Asian American Cultural Studies
PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
Native American and Indigenous Studies Association
Modernist Studies Association
EDUCATION
PhD candidate, English with a Designated Emphasis in Native American Studies, University of California, Davis
BA, English, Philosophy, University of California, Irvine