BARRY FAULK, Associate Professor, Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, l994. Dr. Faulk is the author of Music Hall and Modernity (Ohio UP, 2004). He is a contributor to the forthcoming Blackwell Companion to T.S. Eliot and has published essays on late Victorian culture, Modernism, contemporary British literature (Nick Hornby), and popular culture in Victorians Institute Journal, Victorian Literature and Culture, Modernism / Modernity, Cultural Critique, and American Book Review. He teaches classes in late Victorian literature and culture, critical theory, and popular culture.
PUBLICATIONS
Books
- Music-hall and Modernity, Ohio University Press (in press, 2003). Details how Victorian literary professionals constructed "the Popular."
Essays
- "Cultural Studies and the New Populism." In The Aesthetics of Cultural Studies, Form, Function, Fashion, (Blackwell, in press). Edited by Michael Berube.
- "Modernism and the Popular: Eliot's Music Halls." Modernism/Modernity 8 (2001): 603-621."
- Camp Expertise: Music-hall and the Defense of Theory," Victorian Literature and Culture 23 (2000): 171-197.
- "Spies and Experts: Laura Ormiston Chant and Victorian Professionals," Victorians Institute Journal, 23 (1996): 51-85.
- "Tracing Lipstick Traces: Cultural Studies and the Reception of Greil Marcus." Works and Days 11 (1993): 47-65.
Reviews
- Sideshow USA: Freaks and the American Cultural Imagination, Rachel Adams, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002). In Modernism/Modernity, 10 (March 2003), 193-4.
- Inventing Popular Culture, John Storey, (Oxford: Blackwell's, 2003), in Modernism/Modernity, 2004.
AWARDS
- University Teaching Award, 2002.