Joseph
Carroll
http://www.umsl.edu/~carrolljc
Curriculum Vitae
B.A. in
English, University of California at Berkeley, June 1974
M.A. in
Comparative Literature, University of California at Berkeley, June 1976
Ph.D. in Comparative Literature, University of
California at Berkeley, June 1981
university
appointments
9/77-6/81 University of California at Berkeley, instructor,
Comparative Literature
9/81-6/85 University of Denver, assistant
professor, English
9/85-6/87 University
of Missouri-St. Louis, assistant professor, English
7/87-6/91 University
of Missouri-St. Louis, associate professor, English
7/91-9/08 University of Missouri-St. Louis,
professor, English
9/08- University of Missouri-St.
Louis, Curators’ Professor, English
publications
I. Books:
1.
The Cultural Theory of Matthew Arnold
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982).
2.
Wallace Stevens’ Supreme Fiction: A New
Romanticism (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1987).
3.
Evolution and Literary Theory
(Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1995).
4.
Literary Darwinism: Evolution, Human Nature, and Literature (London:
Routledge, 2004).
5.
Reading Human Nature: Literary Darwinism
in Theory and Practice (New York: SUNY Press, 2011).
II. Edited Works:
1.
On the Origin of Species by Means of
Natural Selection, by Charles Darwin. (Peterborough, Ontario: Broadview,
2003).
2.
The Evolutionary Review: Art, Science,
Culture, edited by Joseph Carroll and Alice Andrews, vol. 1, 2010.
3.
Special Evolutionary issue of the journal Politics
and Culture, 2010, issue 1: http://www.politicsandculture.org/2010/04/28/contents-2.
4.
Evolution, Literature, and Film: A Reader,
edited by Joseph Carroll, Brian Boyd, and Jonathan Gottschall (New York: Columbia
University Press, 2010).
5.
The Evolutionary Review: Art, Science,
Culture, edited by Joseph Carroll and Alice Andrews, vol. 2, 2011.
III. Journal Articles
and Chapters in Books:
1. “Minna von Barnhelm and Le Genre Sérieux: A
Revaluation,” Lessing Yearbook 13 (1981): 1-14.
2. “Arnold and Bolingbroke,” The Victorian Newsletter,
no. 61 (1982): 23-26.
3. “The Ancient and the Modern Sage: Tennyson and Stevens,” Victorian
Poetry 22 (1984): 1-14.
4. “Arnold, Newman, and Cultural Salvation,” Victorian
Poetry 26: (1988): 163-78.
5. “Pater’s Figures of Perplexity,” Modern Language
Quarterly 52 (1991): 319-40.
6. “The Use of Arnold in a Darwinian World,” Nineteenth-Century
Prose 21 (1994): 26-38.
7. “Teaching Stevens as a Late Romantic Poet,” in Teaching
Wallace Stevens: Practical Essays, ed. John N. Serio and B. J. Leggett
(Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1994): 242-56.
8. “Evolution and Literary Theory,” Human Nature 6
(1995): 119-34.
9. “Pluralism, Poststructuralism, and Evolutionary Theory,” Academic
Questions 9, no. 3 (1996): 43-57.
10. “Biology and Poststructuralism,” Symploke 4
(1996): 203-219.
11. “’Theory,’ Anti-Theory, and Empirical Criticism,” in Biopoetics:
Evolutionary Explorations in the Arts, ed.
12. “The Deep Structure of Literary Representations,” Evolution
and Human Behavior 20 (1999): 159-73.
13. “Human Universals and Literary Meaning: A Sociobiological
Critique of Pride and Prejudice, Villette, O Pioneers!, Anna
of the Five Towns, and Tess of the d’Urbervilles,” Interdisciplinary
Literary Studies 2 (2001): 9-27.
14. “Universalien in der Literaturwissenschaft” (“Universals
in Literary Study”), in Universalien und Konstruktivismus, ed. Peter M.
Hejl (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 2001): 235-56. (Reprinted, in English, as
“Universals in Literary Study,” in Literary Darwinism: Evolution, Human
Nature, and Literature)
15. “The Ecology of Victorian Fiction,” Philosophy and
Literature 25 (2001): 295-313.
16. “Organism, Environment, and Literary Representation,” Interdisciplinary
Studies in Literature and Environment 9 (2002): 27-45.
17. “Adaptationist Literary Study: An Emerging Research Program,” Style
36 (2003): 596-617.
18. “Evolutionary Psychology and Literary Study,” in Handbook
of Evolutionary Psychology, ed. David Buss, (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2005):
931-52.
19. “Aestheticism, Homoeroticism, and Christian Guilt in The
Picture of Dorian Gray: A Darwinian Critique,” Philosophy and Literature
29 (2005): 286-304.
20. “Human Nature and Literary Meaning: A Theoretical Model
Illustrated with a Critique of Pride and Prejudice,” in Literature
and the Human Animal, ed. Jonathan Gottschall and D. S. Wilson (Evanston,
IL: Northwestern, 2005): 76-106. (Previously published in Literary
Darwinism: Evolution, Human Nature, and Literature)
21. “Adaptationist Literary Study: An Introductory Guide,” Ometeca
10 (2006): 18-31.
22. “An Academic Visit to Russia,” Academic Questions 18,
no. 4 (2006): 54-58.
23. “The Human Revolution and the Adaptive Function of
Literature,” Philosophy and Literature 30 (2006): 33-49.
24. “Literature and Evolution,” in Human Nature: Fact and
Fiction, ed. Robin Headlam Wells and Johnjoe McFadden (London: Continuum,
2006): 63-81.
25. “Human Nature and Agonistic Structure in Canonical
British Novels of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries: A Content
Analysis,” by Joseph Carroll and Jonathan Gottschall, in Heuristiken der Literaturwissenschaft: Disziplinexterne
Perspektiven auf Literatur, ed. Uta
Klein, Katja Mellman, and Steffanie Metzger (Paderborn, Germany: Mentis Verlag,
2006): 473-87.
26. “The Adaptive Function of Literature,” in Evolutionary
Approaches to the Arts, ed. Paul Locher, Colin Martindale, Leonid Dorfman,
Vladimir Petrov, and Dimitry Leontiev (Amityville, NY: Baywood Publishing,
2007): 31-45.
27. “Stevens and Romanticism,” in The Cambridge Companion
to Wallace Stevens, ed. John Serio (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2007): 87-102.
28. “Evolutionary Approaches to Literature and Drama,” in The
Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, ed. Robin Dunbar and Louise
Barrett (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007): 637-48.
29. “An Evolutionary Paradigm for Literary Study,” (target article
to which scholars and scientists were invited to respond), Style 42
(2008): 103-35.
30. “Rejoinder” (reply to 35 scholars writing commentaries on the
target article identified in the previous item), Style 42 (2008):
309-412.
31. “The Cuckoo’s History: Human Nature in Wuthering Heights,”
Philosophy and Literature 32 (2008): 241-57.
32. “Hierarchy in the Library: Egalitarian Dynamics in Victorian
Novels,” by John Johnson, Joseph Carroll, Jonathan Gottschall, and Daniel
Kruger, Evolutionary Psychology 6 (2008): 715-38.
33. “The Historical Position of Literary Darwinism,” Forbes,
February 5, 2009.
34. “Human Nature in Nineteenth-Century British Novels: Doing the
Math,” by Joseph Carroll, Jon Gottschall, John Johnson, and Daniel Kruger, Philosophy
and Literature, 33 (2009): 50-72.
35. Interview with David DiSalvo, Neuronarrative,
http://neuronarrative.wordpress.com/, posted February 27, 2009.
36. “The Science Wars in a Long View: Putting the Human in Its
Place,” in Interdisciplinary Essays on Darwinism in Hispanic Literature and
Film: The Intersection of Science and the Humanities, ed. Jerry Hoeg and
Kevin S. Larsen (Lewiston, NY: Edward Mellen Press, 2009):
37. “Literature as a Human Universal,” in Grenzen der
Literatur: Zu Begriff und Phänomen des Literarischen, ed. Fotis Jannidis, Gerhard Lauer, and Simone Winko (Berlin: de
Gruyter, 2009): 142-60.
38. “Commentary on ‘The Evolution and End of Art as Hegelian
Tragedy,’” Empirical Studies of the Arts 27
(2009): 147-51.
39. “The Adaptive Function of Literature and the Other Arts,”
Invited on-line posting, responses from readers, and my answers to the
responses, in Forum, part of the
project On the Human at the National
Humanities Center, June 22-26, 2009: http://onthehuman.org/
40. “A Darwinian Revolution in the Humanities,” Politics and Culture 2010, issue 1: http://www.politicsandculture.org/2010/04/28/contents-2/
.
41. "Imagining Human Nature," in Evolution,
Literature, and Film: A Reader, edited by Brian Boyd, Joseph Carroll,
and Jonathan Gottschall (New York: Columbia University Press, 2010): 211-18.
42. “Three Scenarios for Literary Darwinism,” New Literary History 41
(2010): 53-67.
43. “Intentional Meaning in Hamlet:
An Evolutionary Perspective,” Style 44
(2010): 230-60.
44. “Quantifying Tonal Analysis in The
Mayor of Casterbridge,” Style 44
(2010): 164-88.
45. “Paleolithic Politics in British Novels of the Nineteenth
Century,” by Joseph Carroll, Jonathan Gottschall, John Johnson, and Daniel
Kruger, in Integrating Science and Humanities, ed. Edward Slingerland and
Mark Collard (New York: Oxford University Press, forthcoming).
46. “The Adaptive Function of the Arts: Alternative Evolutionary
Hypotheses,” a collection of essays (not yet titled), edited by Dirk Vanderbeke
(forthcoming).
47. “Portrayal of Personality in Victorian Novels Reflects Modern
Research Findings but Amplifies the Significance of Agreeableness,” by John
Johnson, Joseph Carroll, Jonathan Gottschall, and Daniel Kruger. Journal of Research in Personality,
forthcoming.
48.
“Violence, Homicide, and War in Literature,” The Oxford Handbook of Violence, Homicide, and War, ed. Todd
Shackelford (New York: Oxford University Press, forthcoming).
IV. Encyclopedia
Entries:
1. “Arnold, Matthew,” The Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism, ed.
Michael Groden and Martin Kreiswirth (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1993) (2,200 words).
2. “Matthew Arnold,” Encyclopedia of
Aesthetics, ed. Michael Kelly (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998)
(4,000 words).
4-7. Four entries in Encyclopedia of the Novel,
ed. Paul E. Schellinger (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 1999): “George Eliot”
(1,300 words), “Middlemarch”
(1,000 words), “Vanity Fair”
(1,000 words), “Representations of War in the Novel” (3,300 words).
8-17. Ten entries in An Encyclopedia of Literature and Science, ed. Pamela Gossin
(Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002): “Matthew Arnold” (100 words), “Charles
Darwin” (250 words), “Darwinism” (500 words), “Evolutionary Theory” (1,250
words), “T. H. Huxley” (100 words), “Jack London” (50 words), “Karl Popper” (75
words), “Poststructuralism” (250 words), “Science Wars” (100 words) Social
Darwinism” (250 words).
18. “Darwin, Charles,” The Encyclopedia of
Science, Technology, and Ethics, ed. Carl Mitcham, et al. (New York:
Macmillan, 2005) (1,000 words).
19.
“Evolution and Verbal Art,” The Cambridge
Encyclopedia of Language Sciences, ed. Patrick Colm Hogan (New York:
Cambridge University Press, forthcoming) (2,000 words).
20.
“Evolutionary Literary Study,” The
Blackwell Encyclopedia of Literary and Cultural Theory, vol. 2, ed. Robert
Eaglestone (London: Blackwell, forthcoming) (3,000 words)
21.
“M. H. Abrams,” The Blackwell
Encyclopedia of Literary and Cultural Theory, vol. 2, ed. Robert Eaglestone
(London: Blackwell, forthcoming) (1,000 words)
V. Reviews:
1. review of Harold Bloom’s Wallace Stevens: The Poems of Our Climate, in University
Publishing: An International Quarterly Review, no. 4 (spring 1978): 7-8.
2. review of Ricardo Quintana’s Two Augustans: John Locke, Jonathan Swift, in University Publishing, no. 6 (winter 1979): 9.
3. review of Jon Silkin’s Out of Battle: The Poetry of the Great War, in University
Publishing, no. 7 (spring 1979): 8-9.
4. exchange with Jon Silkin on Out
of Battle, in University Publishing, no. 8 (fall
1979): 18-20.
5. review of Jakob Thomas’ Glossologie oder Philosophie der Sprache, in Lessing Yearbook XIII
13 (1981): 315-16.
6. review of Park Honan’s Matthew Arnold: A Life, in
Denver Quarterly 17, no. 1
(spring 1982): 112-14.
7. review of Peter Brazeau’s Parts of a World: Wallace Stevens Remembered, in Denver Quarterly 19, no. 3 (winter 1985): 94-102.
8. review of James Livingston’s Matthew Arnold and Christianity and Robert Giddings (ed.) Matthew Arnold: Between Two Worlds, in Victorian Studies 31
(1987): 137-39.
9. review of J. S. Leonard’s and C. E. Wharton’s
The Fluent Mundo: Wallace Stevens and the
Structure of Reality, in The
Wallace Stevens Journal 12, no. 1 (spring 1988): 71-74.
10. review of Henry Sussman’s High Resolution: Critical Theory and the
Problem of Literacy and Ellen Rooney’s Seductive
Reasoning: Pluralism as the Problematic of Contemporary Literary Theory, in
Journal of English and Germanic Philology
90 (1991): 232-36.
11. review of W. David Shaw’s Victorians and Mystery: Crises of
Representation, in Journal of English
and Germanic Philology 91 (1992): 453-56.
12. review of Kia Penso’s Wallace Stevens: “Harmonium” and the Whole of “Harmonium”, in American Literature 64 (1992):613-14.
13. review of Daniel Schwarz’s The Case for a Humanistic Poetics, in Journal of English and Germanic Philology 94 (1995): 554-56.
14. review of three books: John Bowlby’s Charles Darwin: A New Life, Adrian
Desmond’s and James Moore’s Darwin,
and Janet Browne’s Charles Darwin:
Voyaging, in TLS (Times Literary Supplement), no. 4951
(February 20, 1998): 8-9.
15. review of John Ellis’s Literature Lost: Social Agendas and the Corruption of the Humanities,
in TLS (Times Literary Supplement), no. 4967 (June 12, 1998): 27.
16. review of Robert Storey’s Mimesis and the Human Animal: On the
Biogenetic Foundations of Literary Representation, in Journal of English and Germanic Philology 97 (1998): 226-28.
17. “Literary Study and Evolutionary Theory: An Essay Review,” a
review of five books on evolution and literature, Human Nature 8 (1998):
273-92.
18. “Steven Pinker’s Cheesecake for the Mind,” a commentary on
Pinker’s How the Mind Works, Philosophy
and Literature 22 (1998): 478-85.
19. “Wilson’s Consilience and Literary Study,” a review of
E. O. Wilson’s Consilience: The Unity of
Knowledge, Philosophy and Literature 23 (1999): 393-413.
20. review of John Glendening’s The
Evolutionary Imagination in Late-Victorian Novels: An Entangled Bank, in Journal of British Studies 48 (2009): 252-54.
21. A review of Denis Dutton’s The Art Instinct, in The Evolutionary Review: Art, Science,
Culture 1 (2010): 48-54.
22. “Human Life History and
Gene-Culture Co-Evolution: An Emerging Paradigm,” a review of Nicholas Wade’s Before the Dawn: Recovering the Lost History
of Our Ancestors, Richard Wrangham’s Catching
Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human, and Gregory Cochran’s and Henry
Harpending’s The 10,000 Year Explosion:
How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution, in The Evolutionary Review: Art, Science, Culture 2 (2011):
forthcoming.
conference papers and invited Lectures
1. “The Neoclassical and the Romantic in the
Critical Theory of Matthew Arnold,” Colorado Seminar, Denver, 1981.
2. “The Force of Reason” (response to Stanley
Fish’s paper “Force”), Midwest Modern Language Association, St. Louis, November
1985.
3. “Pure and Normal Poetry: Philosophical
Structures and Stylistic Modes in Stevens Late Poems,” Modern Language
Association, New York, 1986.
4. “Wallace Stevens and the Romance of the
Abstract,” Northeast Modern Language Association, Providence, 1988.
5. Response to Catharine Stimpson’s keynote
address, “The Culture of Criticism,” Midwest Modern Language Association, St.
Louis, November 1988.
6. Organizing a panel and giving a paper on
“Problematic Narrative Authority and Suspended Resolutions in Victorian
Fiction,” Midwest Modern Language Association, Minneapolis, November 1989.
7. Organizing a panel and giving a paper on “The
Relations between Victorian Fiction and Non-fiction Prose,” Midwest Modern
Language Association, Kansas City, November 1990.
8. “Darwin and Arnold: The Evolution of Cultural
Theory,” Armstrong Library International Conference on Matthew Arnold, Baylor
University, April 1993.
9. “Poststructuralism and Darwinian Naturalism,”
Society for Literature and Science, Boston, November 1993.
10. “The Biological Basis of Figuration,” Modern
Language Association, Toronto, December 1993
11. “Poststructuralism, Cultural Constructivism,
and Evolutionary Biology,” Human Behavior and Evolution Society,” Ann Arbor,
July 1994.
12. “An Evolutionary Theory of Literary
Figuration,” Human Behavior and Evolution Society,” Santa Barbara, July 1995.
13. “An Evolutionary Theory of Literary
Figuration,” Society for Literature and Science, Los Angeles, October 1995.
14. “What Should Evolutionary Literary Critics
Do?” Human Behavior and Evolution Society, Evanston, July 1996.
16. “Huxley, Weinberg, and The Science Wars,”
Society for Literature and Science, Atlanta, October 1996.
17. “’Theory,’ Pragmatic Criticism, and Empirical
Literary Study,” Modern Language Association, Washington, December 1996.
18. “Reduction and Complexity in Literary
Analysis,” Human Behavior and Evolution Society, Tucson, June 1997.
19. Organizing a panel and giving a paper on
“Structuring Domains for Literary Analysis,” Society for Literature and
Science, Pittsburgh, October 1997.
20. “The Origin of Charles Darwin,” invited speaker, Association of Literary Scholars and
Critics, San Francisco, November 1997.
21. “Evolution and Literary Theory,” invited
speaker, Colloquium on Evolution and Culture, University of Tennessee,
Knoxville, March 1998.
22. “Inclusive Fitness, Psychological Models, and
Literary Analysis,” Human Behavior and Evolution Society, Davis, July 1998.
23. “The Deep Structure of Literary
Representation,” invited speaker, English Department, University of Alberta,
Edmonton, October 1998.
24. “Narrative and the Emotional Brain,” Society
for Literature and Science, Gainesville, November 1998.
25. “Marrying Up in Victorian Fiction,” Human
Behavior and Evolution Society, Salt Lake City, June 1999.
26. “Universals and Literary Meaning,” Human
Behavior and Evolution Society,” Amherst, June 2000.
27. “Universals and Literary Meaning,” Society
for the Empirical Study of Literature, Toronto, August 2000.
28. “The Development of Sociobiological Literary
Criticism,” invited speaker, “Art/Body/Mind,” Ohio University, October 2000.
29. “Ecocriticism and Darwinian Literary Theory,”
Human Behavior and Evolution Society, London, June 2001.
30. “Adaptation, Environment, and Literary
Study,” invited speaker, Association for
the Study of Literature and the Environment, Flagstaff, Arizona, June 2001.
31. “Adaptationist Literary Study: An Emerging
Research Program,” invited speaker, Darwin Day, University of Evansville,
Illinois, March 2002
32. “Adaptationist Literary Study: An Emerging
Research Program,” keynote speaker, Midwest Conference on Film, Language, and
Literature, Northern Illinois University, April 2002
33. “The Organization of Meaning in Fictions of
Paleolithic Life,” organizing a panel and giving a paper, Human Behavior and
Evolution Society, Rutgers, June 2002.
34. “Inclusive Fitness and Point of View in
Victorian Fiction,” International Society for Human Ethology, Montreal, August
2002.
35. “The New Paradigm for Human Nature,” invited speaker,
Texas A&M, February 2003.
36. “Darwinian Literary Studies,” organizing a
panel and giving a paper, Human Behavior and Evolution Society,” Lincoln, NE,
June 2003
37. “Evolved Motive Dispositions, Open Programs,
and Creative Flexibility,” invited speaker, “Literature, Science, and Human
Nature,” Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, England, May 2004
38. “Creativity and Environmental Challenges: The
Adaptive Context,” invited speaker,
Association for the Study of Literature and Environment, Chichester, England,
June, 2004
39. “Content Analysis, Human Nature, and
Deviation from the Norm in Victorian Novels,” organizing a panel and giving a
paper, Human Behavior and Evolution Society, Berlin, Germany, July 2004
40. “The Human Revolution and the Adaptive
Function of Literature,” organizing a panel and giving a paper, International
Society for Human Ethology, Ghent, Belgium, July 2004
41. “Human Nature, Literary Study, and Empirical
Methodology,” invited speaker, Department of Media Studies, University of
Siegen, Germany, February 2005
42. “The Adaptive Function of Literature,”
invited speaker, Creativity and the Psychology of Art, University of Perm,
Russia, June 2005
43. “Adaptationist Literary Study,” invited speaker,
co-sponsored by the
Institute of Cognitive and Decision Sciences and the Humanities Center, University of Oregon, Eugene, January 2006
44. “Graphing Jane Austen: Toward a New
Humanities,” organizing a panel and giving a paper, Human Behavior and
Evolution Society,” Philadelphia, June 2006.
45. “Human Nature as Source and Subject of
Literary Representation,” invited speaker, “Literature and Evolution:
Possibilities, Problems, Prospects,” Center for Cultural Inquiry, University of
Auckland, New Zealand, December 2006.
46. “Male and Female Characters in Male and Female
Authors,” Human Behavior and Evolution Society, Williamsburg, Virginia, June
2007.
47. “Human
Nature and Imaginative Culture,” invited speaker, “Autonomy, Singularity,
Creativity: The Human and the Humanities,” National Humanities Center, North
Carolina, November 2007.
48. “Consilience
and Human Nature: Integrating Knowledge in the University,” keynote speaker,
Future of the University, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville, April,
2008.
49. “The
Historical Position of Literary Darwinism,” invited speaker, University of
Calgary, September, 2008.
50. “Graphing
Jane Austen: Quantifying Literary Meaning in the Victorian Novel,” invited speaker, Integrating Science and the
Humanities, University of British Columbia, September, 2008.
51. "The Historical Position
of Literary Darwinism," invited speaker, University of Lund, Sweden,
November, 2008.
52. “Graphing Jane Austen:
Quantifying Literary Meaning in the Victorian Novel,” invited speaker,
University of Gothenburg, Sweden, November, 2008.
53. “The Historical Position
of Literary Darwinism," invited speaker, University of Southern Denmark,
Odense, November, 2008.
54. “The Historical Position
of Literary Darwinism,” invited speaker, symposium on Darwinism in studies
of literature and film, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, November, 2008.
55. “Graphing Jane Austen:
Quantifying Literary Meaning in the Victorian Novel,” invited speaker, symposium
on Darwinism in studies of literature and film, University of Copenhagen,
Denmark, November, 2008.
56.
“The Historical Position of Literary Darwinism,” keynote speaker,
Symposium on Modern Evolutionary Theory, University of Trent, Peterborough,
Ontario, February, 2009.
57. “The Historical Position of
Literary Darwinism,” invited speaker, Darwin Bicentennial Celebration, Monmouth
College, Monmouth, Illinois, March 2009.
58. “The Historical Position of
Literary Darwinism,” keynote speaker, Darwin Bicentennial Celebration,
University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, May, 2009.
59. “The Once and Future
Discipline,” Geschichten Erzählen/Telling
Stories, keynote speaker, Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany, May,
2009
60. “Paleolithic Politics in
British Novels of the Nineteenth Century,” Human Behavior and Evolution
Society, Fullerton, CA, May, 2009.
61. “Integrating Evolutionary
Psychology and Literary Criticism,” American Culture Association, St. Louis,
MO, March 2010.
62. “The Historical Position of Literary Darwinism,” invited speaker,
lecture sponsored by the departments of English and Biology, University of
Missouri, Columbia, March 2010
63. “The Historical Position of Literary Darwinism,” invited speaker, St.
Louis Association for the Advancement of Science, Craft Alliance, December 2010
64. “The Historical Position of Literary Darwinism,” invited speaker, Max
Planck Institute, Andechs, Germany, February 2011
65. “The Historical Position of
Literary Darwinism,” invited speaker, Helsinki Institute for Advanced Studies,
Finland, February 2011