University of Richmond

Dr. Kevin Pelletier

Assistant Professor of English
303-A Ryland Hall
Office: (804) 289-8776

Whether it appears in the fire and brimstone rhetoric of Jonathan Edwards’ sermons, the doomsday paranoia of the Nuclear Age, or the season-to-season calamities of television’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the apocalypse has endured in the American popular imagination. My current research project examines the apocalypse as one of America’s foundational conceptual categories. In particular, I consider the ways in which representations of apocalypse help to structure and inform nineteenth-century discourses on race and slavery. By carefully attending to the writings and performances of figures such as Nat Turner, David Walker, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Martin Delany, Frances Harper, and Wovoka, I demonstrate that the apocalypse is a vital, and often inextricable, organizing principle that shapes the way race and slavery are understood in this period.

Teaching:
Eng 400: US Apocalyptic Literature and Culture (senior seminar)
Eng 326: Age of the American Renaissance
Eng 325: From Revolution to Romanticism: American Literature Through 1860
Eng 204: Literature and Culture -- Representations of Race in 19th-century Literature

Education:
Ph.D., SUNY Buffalo
M.A., University of Rhode Island