Joseph C.  MurphyProfessor
Literature and Religion、American Literature、Literature and Visual Culture、Modernism and Post Modernism

Joseph C. Murphy received his PhD in English from the University of Pennsylvania, where he wrote a dissertation on the synergy between world’s fairs and American literary culture in the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His teaching and research delineate a crossroads between American literature, visual culture, and allegorical traditions, and his publications focus on a number of writers, including Benjamin Franklin, Walt Whitman, Flannery O’Connor, Cormac McCarthy, and especially Willa Cather. He is currently writing a book exploring Cather’s modernism as a distillation of turn-of-the-century cultures of spectacle, e.g., Wagnerism, Indian pageants, art museums, urban development, minstrelsy, and religious ritual. Beginning in 2015, he will contribute the annual review of Cather criticism to American Literary Scholarship (Duke UP). His most recent project is a study of Venice in the American literary imagination.

Education

University of Pennsylvania English PhD University of Pennsylvania English MA Stanford University English BA

Experience

Fu Jen Catholic University English Department Department Chair Fu Jen Catholic University English Department Associate Professor Fu Jen Catholic University English Department Editor, Fu Jen Studies: Literature and Linguistics St. Vincent College English Department Visiting Assistant Professor Fu Jen Catholic University School of Continuing Education Assistant Professor Fu Jen Catholic University English Department Assistant Professor

Fields of Specialty

Literature and Religion, American Literature, Literature and Visual Culture, Modernism and Post Modernism