UMass Boston

Holly Jackson, Department Chairman, American Studies

Holly Jackson

Department:
American Studies
Title:
Department Chair
Professor of English
Location:
Wheatley Hall Floor 06

Biography

Holly Jackson is the Bernard Bailyn Editor of The New England Quarterly. She is the author of two books and a number of essays on 19th-century US cultural history for both scholarly and popular venues, including PMLA, the New York Times, American Literature, GLQ, and the Boston Globe. Jackson is an elected member of the American Antiquarian Society and an Honorary Fellow of the Massachusetts Historical Society.

Area of Expertise

American literature and culture; American protest movements and utopian thought; the 19th-century novel; the Civil War era; African American studies; queer studies.

Degrees

PhD, Brandeis University

Professional Publications & Contributions

Ethan Frome’s Poly Pessimism: Anarchist Non-Monogamy and the Question of Care,” GLQ: A Journal of Gay and Lesbian Studies 30.4 (2024): 391–408.

 “Emerson and the Socialists: American Renaissance in the Age of Fourier,” Oxford Handbook of Ralph Waldo Emerson, ed. Christopher Hanlon (Oxford UP, 2024): 296-312.

“Garrisonian Sex Radicalism: Antislavery and the Free-Love Heresy.” Massachusetts Historical Review Special Issue 1 (December 2023).

“Introduction: On the Histories and Futures of Black New England Studies,” co-authored with Kerri Greenidge. “Revisiting Black Boston,” a special issue of The New England Quarterly co-edited with Kerri Greenidge (June 2022).

“All the World Will Burn: William Miller and the Roots of Eco-Millenarianism,” The Panorama: Expansive Views from The Journal of the Early American Republic (website), 30 May 2023.

“Slavery Was a War.” Interview with Vincent Brown. Boston Globe, 20 May 2020.

Additional Information

Conference presentations and invited talks:

Mahindra Humanities Center at Harvard University, American Literature and Culture Seminar
Johns Hopkins University, “Humanities for All” event, a Mellon-funded partnership with the Community Colleges of Baltimore County 
Simmons College, Gay Memorial Lecture keynote speaker
Early African American Print Culture in Theory and Practice Symposium, McNeil Center for Early American Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
Pictures and Progress: Early Photography and African American Identity Symposium, Duke University.
C19: The Society of Nineteenth-Century Americanists
Modernist Studies Association
American Literature Association
American Studies Association
African American Literature and Culture Society
Modern Language Association
Boston Book Festival
Tufts University English Department
Amherst College History Department

Courses Taught

  • American Romanticism;
  • Radical Boston: American Protest Literature to 1900;
  • Cultures of the American Civil War;
  • Reading Sexuality: Queer Theory;
  • Sex, Family, and Nation in the American Novel;
  • American Gothic Fiction.

Awards

  • Massachusetts Book Awards, Non-fiction Honoree 2019
  • Smithsonian Magazine, Ten Best History Books of the Year, 2019
  • Norman Foerster Prize (for best essay published in American Literature), 2015
  • Nineteenth-Century Studies Association Article Prize, 2008