Rethinking women/history/literature: a feminist investigation of disciplinarity in Lucy Hutchinson, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Charlotte Lennox, and Jane Austen (1993)
Devoney Kay Looser (born April 11, 1967) is an American literary critic and Jane Austen scholar. She is Regents Professor of English at Arizona State University, where she focuses on women's writing and the history of the novel.
As a first-generation college student, Looser received a Bachelor of Arts in English from Augsburg College in 1989 and later earned her doctorate in English with a certification in women's studies from Stony Brook University.[5]
In 2018, Looser was appointed a Foundation Professor of English for her outstanding faculty accomplishments.[6] In 2020, she was named a Regents Professor, the highest faculty honor awarded at Arizona State University.[7]
She has played roller derby as Stone Cold Jane Austen.[8]
Books and essays
Looser's book Sister Novelists: The Trailblazing Porter Sisters Who Paved the Way for Austen and the Brontës is the first biography of Jane and Anna Maria Porter, pioneers of historical fiction.[9]
She is also the author of The Making of Jane Austen, which focused on how Austen's popular influencers shaped her reputation, including as "a transnational figure used in support of women's suffrage."[10]Publishers Weekly named The Making of Jane Austen a Best Summer Book (Non-Fiction).[11]
Her first book was British Women Writers and the Writing of History, 1670–1820, which examined British women writers and their contributions to historiography.[12] She followed this up with Women Writers and Old Age in Great Britain, 1750–1850 in 2008.[13]
Looser's essays and op-eds have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Atlantic, Salon, Slate, and The TLS. In 2019, Looser brought back into view a forgotten fictional pen portrait of Austen published in an 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine.[14] In 2021, she published discoveries about the Austen family's complicated relationship to slavery and anti-slavery, which revealed the previously unknown fact that Jane Austen's brother, Henry Thomas Austen, had been a delegate to an Anti-Slavery Convention.[15]
She has done lectures on Jane Austen for The Great Courses[16]
^Murphy, Patricia (2009). "Review of Women Writers and Old Age in Great Britain, 1750–1850". Nineteenth-Century Literature. 64 (3): 400–402, 435–436. doi:10.1525/ncl.2009.64.3.400. ProQuest211937903.