Catherine Brown

Catherine-Brown
Academic Position:
Convenor and Senior Lecturer
Research Interests:
English literature since 1800
Dr Catherine Brown studied English under J.H. Prynne at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, then moved out into academic and practical politics, lived in New York and Moscow, and learned Russian and Spanish, before returning to Caius for her PhD as an English-Russian comparatist. She has taught English literature since 1800, at the universities of Cambridge, Greenwich, and Oxford. She is currently the Convenor and Senior Lecturer in English literature at New College of the Humanities. In 2011 Legenda published her monograph The Art of Comparison: How Novels and Critics Compare. This develops a meta-critical argument about the nature of comparative literature, and comparison per se, by comparing how three novels (Daniel Deronda, Anna Karenina, Women in Love) invite and complicate internal comparisons between their two major plots. Her next monograph will concern representations of torture in nineteenth and twentieth century literature, as considered from the points of view of ethics, genre, and reader response. It will explore the two-way interaction between the practice of torture and its representation – for example, ‘the ticking time-bomb scenario’, which is often used in defences of the practice of torture, first appeared in a novel by a former French paratrooper, Jean Lartéguy (The Centurions, 1960). Her main area of specialism is the novel thirty years either side of 1900, and her main authors are D.H. Lawrence and George Eliot (she is co-editing a book on the latter’s reception in Europe with Elinor Shaffer, forthcoming from Continuum in 2013). She also has interests in the British novel of the last thirty years (on which she gives a two-day conference annually at Perm State University in the Urals), twentieth century drama, and Anglophone Nigerian and Caribbean literature. In addition to Russian and Spanish, she knows French and maternal German. Comparativism and cosmopolitanism are ongoing concerns. Her theoretical inclinations are towards narrative theory, genre theory, reader response, Russian formalism, and Czech structuralism.
# Resource Title Description Contributor
11 DH Lawrence 6. Birds, Beasts and Children Catherine Brown gives the sixth lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
12 DH Lawrence 6. Birds, Beasts and Children Catherine Brown gives the sixth lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
13 DH Lawrence 5. The Alps Catherine Brown gives the fifth lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
14 DH Lawrence 5. The Alps Catherine Brown gives the fifth lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
15 DH Lawrence 4. The World at Large Catherine Brown gives the fourth lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
16 DH Lawrence 4. The World at Large Catherine Brown gives the fourth lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
17 DH Lawrence 3. Christianity Catherine Brown gives the third lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
18 DH Lawrence 3. Christianity Catherine Brown gives the third lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
19 DH Lawrence 2. Humour Catherine Brown gives the second lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown
20 DH Lawrence 2. Humour Catherine Brown gives the second lecture in the DH Lawrence series Catherine Brown