Julian
Yates, a renowned scholar of medieval and Renaissance British
literature, has been appointed H. Fletcher Brown Professor of English at
the University of Delaware.
"Your appointment to this professorship is in recognition of your
achievements as a scholar and educator," read a letter from President
Dennis Assanis and Interim Provost Robin Morgan.
The appointment was effective April 1.
Yates, who also specializes in
literary theory, material culture studies and questions of ecology and
environmental humanities, is known for his innovative,
interdisciplinary scholarship, said John Ernest, chair of the
Department of English.
His most recent book, Of Sheep, Oranges, and Yeast: A Multispecies Impression,
won the 2017 Michelle Kendrick Memorial Book Prize from the Society for
Literature, Science and Arts, which praised its success in bringing
together animal studies, plant studies, eco-theory and bio-politics in
new and fascinating ways. Published by the University of Minnesota
Press, the book imagines ways for literary and historical scholars to
explore how humans exist in relation to other animal, plant, fungal,
microbial, viral, mineral and chemical actors.
Julian Yates is one of UDs most eminent scholars, and one of the
English Departments most dedicated teachers, Ernest said. He has been
recognized in many ways through the years for his outstanding
contributions to scholarship in his field.
The University is extremely fortunate to have someone so dedicated to research, teaching and service, Ernest said.
Yates earned his bachelors degree in English language and literature
from St. Annes College at Oxford University in 1990 and his doctorate
in English literature from the University of California Los Angeles in
1996.
He is the author of some 40 essays on medieval and Renaissance
literature and culture, questions of ecology, the posthuman and literary
theory. In addition to Of Sheep, Oranges and Yeast, he is the author of three earlier books: Error, Misuse, Failure: Object Lessons from the English Renaissance, which was a finalist for the Modern Language Associations Best First Book Prize in 2003; Whats the Worst Thing You Can Do to Shakespeare? (co-authored with Richard Burt) and Object-Oriented Environs in Early Modern England (co-edited with Jeffrey Jerome Cohen).
Yates research has been supported by grants from the Andrew W.
Mellon Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Folger
Shakespeare Library, the Huntington Library and the American
Philosophical Society.
He is currently working on two projects: a book on Shakespeares dramaturgy and contemporary ecologies of refuge titled Cosmopolitical Shakespeares and a study of the legacies of Noahs Ark in contemporary accounts of global warming with Jeffrey Jerome Cohen titled Noahs Arkive: Towards an Ecology of Refuge.
About the professorship
The H. Fletcher Brown Professorship was established through the
estate of H. Fletcher Brown, who served on the University of Delaware
Board of Trustees and received an honorary Doctor of Science degree in
1930. He is remembered for his philanthropy and dedication to public
service in the state of Delaware.
Article by Ann Manser; photo by Kathy F. Atkinson