Alison Glassie

Postdoctoral Research Associate in Environmental Humanities

Specialties:

Hemispheric Literatures, Marine Environmental Studies, Modern and Contemporary Literatures

Ali Glassie is Postdoctoral Fellow in Environmental Humanities. Her research explores the ways that the ocean’s biology, physical dynamics, and cultural histories influence the literature of the Americas. She is currently working on a book entitled Atlantic Shapeshifters: Sea Literature’s Fluid Forms. Ali has taught courses in global Anglophone literature, literature of the Americas, cultural studies, and literature and the environment; she has also taught aboard sailing vessels in the Atlantic and the Caribbean. Ali has published most recently in Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and the Environment; Coriolis and Blue Water Sailing have also published her work.
 
Degrees:
 
Ph.D. in English, University of Virginia, 2019
M.A. in Marine Affairs, University of Rhode Island, 2011
B.A. in English, Middlebury College, 2008
Minor: Environmental Studies
 
Dissertation:
Novels of the Floating World: Ocean, Climate, and Contemporary Sea Fiction
Committee: Anna Brickhouse, Mary Kuhn, Njelle Hamilton
 
Recent Publications:
2019: “Archipelago’s Voyage: Climate and Seamanship in Monique Roffey’s Contemporary Sea Novel” Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and the Environment
 
2017: “Review of Steve Mentz Shipwreck Modernity.” Resilience. 4.1
 
2012: “The Lost Mother: Overfishing and the Discourse of Gender in Morrissey’s Sylvanus Now” Coriolis: Interdisciplinary Journal of Maritime Studies Vol. 3, Issue 1 pp. 21-40
 
Fellowships:  
2018:  Center for the Americas/Centro de las Américas Graduate Fellowship, University of Virginia
 
2017:  Public Humanities Fellowship in South Atlantic Studies, Virginia Foundation for the Humanities
 
2015:  Humanities Teaching Fellow, Sea Education Assocation
 
2014:  Mellon Graduate Fellowship, University of Virginia
 
Conference Activities:
 
2018     “With Only the Wind in their Hands: Maritime Modernisms and Marine Ecosystem People” American Comparative Literature Association, March 29-April 1. Los Angeles, CA
 
2017     “The Cloak, the Boat and the Shoes:” Selkie Mythology and Environmental Justice in J.M. Synge.” Association for the Study of Literature and Environment, Biennial Conference. June 20-24. Detroit, MI
 
2017     Panel Organizer: “Local Exposures/Collective Weathering” Association for the Study of Literature and Environment, Biennial Conference. June 20-24. Detroit, MI
 
2017     Publicity Manager and Logistics Coordinator: Beyond Representation: Creative and Critical Practice in the Environmental Humanities. UVa. Environmental Humanities Symposium. April 16-18. Charlottesville, VA
 
2017     “A Novel of the Floating World: Gyre Memory, Marine Debris, and Species Transport in Ruth Ozeki's A Tale for the Time Being” Annual Convention of the Modern Language Association. January 5-8 Philadelphia, PA.
 
2015     “Diving into the Wreck: Fathoming History and the ‘Infested Ocean’ in Lawrence Scott’s Witchbroom.” Caribbean Studies Association 40th Annual Conference. May, 25-29. New Orleans, LA.
 
2014     “Océan’s Reefs: Familial and Emotional Reanimation in Monique Roffey’s Archipelago.  86th Conference of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association, November 7-9. Atlanta, GA.
 
2014     “Our Part in it All:” Human Ecology and the Imperiled Ocean in Peter Matthiessen’s Far Tortuga and Monique Roffey’s Archipelago. 20th International Conference of the Society for Human Ecology. October 22-25. College of the Atlantic, Bar Harbor, ME.
 
2014     “Mother-fish: Overfishing, the Gendering of Atlantic Cod, and Donna Morrissey’s Sylvanus Now” Atlantic World Foodways Conference, January 30-February 2. University of North Carolina Greensboro, Greensboro, NC
 
2011     “Beyond the Aquarium: An Urban Environmental Pedagogy” Association for Environmental Studies and Sciences Conference, June 23-26. University of Vermont, Burlington, VT