![]() Contact Courtney Baker Education B.A. Harvard University, Ph.D. Duke University, in progress
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Courtney Baker Joined Connecticut College: 2005 Specializations:
Courtney Baker graduated cum laude with a B.A. from Harvard University in 1996 and will be obtaining a Ph.D. in Literature from Duke University this year. Before coming to Connecticut College in 2005 as a Visiting Instructor, she taught classes in film, literature, and cultural studies at Duke and at Denison University in Ohio. Her research and teaching focus on the complexities of culture and social relations. She believes that the most interesting objects of study are the issues and artifacts that influence the ways we inhabit the world. She has taught courses on "Constructing the Human" and "Representation and Visual Culture" to delve deeply into the stories, histories, and images that inform our knowledge of ourselves and others. In her literature classes, such as "Introduction to African-American Literature" and "Narratives of Black Travel", she approaches the texts from multiple perspectives, including race, gender, and period critiques but also formal and linguistic methods. She invites her students to maintain their skepticism while remaining open to new ways of thinking. She aims to make the classroom a dynamic space filled with lively conversation, and looks forward to teaching new classes on "Toni Morrison" and "Race and Literature." Professor Baker researches races and visual culture. Her dissertation project explored the political implications of racialized viewing positions. She looked at the application and reception of images of black suffering and death, including the photographs of Emmett Till (the 14 year-old African-American boy who was lynched in Mississippi in 1955), images of actual and imagined lynchings, and filmic representations of murder. Her article on Emmett Till, entitled "Emmett Till, Justice, and the Task of Recognition", was published in the June 2006 issue of the Journal of American Culture. She has also written and published in the magazine Art Papers. Presently, her interests are turning to more issues of crime and representation. In June 2006 Professor Baker presented a paper entitled "Stranger Than Fiction: Photographic Representations of Haunted Houses" at the Space, Haunting, Discourse conference in Karlstad, Sweden. The paper focused on the work of contemporary photographer Corinne May Botz whom she met when interviewing her for Art Papers. Baker has spoken at conferences in London, UK; Tours, France; and Baton Rouge, LA. View the department of English Web site. |