- Jonah Siegel
- Director of the Writing Program and Co-Director of Rutgers British Studies Center
- Distinguished Professor of English
- Unit: Writing Program Office - Administration
- CV Upload
- jsiegel@rutgers.edu
- Office: 36 Union Street, Room 301, College Ave Campus
- Primary Areas of Specialization: Literature and the Other Arts; Modernist Literature; Victorian Literature
- Field of Interest: Romantic, Twentieth Century, Victorian
- About:
My research focuses on the relations between art and literature from the end of the eighteenth century to the beginning of the twentieth. I write on novels and poems, but also on criticism, art history, aesthetic theory, and the history of institutions across the period, as well as on the intersection of violence and responses to the fine arts. At the undergraduate level I regularly teach classes ranging from Victorian Literature to James Joyce, as well as ones with a wider set of concerns, including Principles of Literary Study and Civilization and its Discontents, which are both Core courses. Recent graduate clasess include Aesthetics and Social Critique, War/After War, Decadent to Modern Revisited, and Matter, Thing, and Remain in the Nineteenth Century and After.
I am the author of Overlooking Damage: Art, Display and Loss in Times of Crisis (2022), Material Inspirations: The Interests of the Art Object in the Nineteenth Century and After (2020), Haunted Museum: Longing, Travel, and the Art -Romance Tradition (2005), and Desire & Excess: The Nineteenth-Century Culture of Art (2000) and editor of The Emergence of the Modern Museum: An Anthology of Nineteenth-Century Sources (2007). My articles include: “Display Time: Art, Disgust, and the Returns of the Crystal Palace.” (Yearbook of English Studies, 2010); “Owning Art after Napoleon: Trophy, Symbol, and the Question of Restitution at the Birth of the Museum.” (PMLA, 2010); "Speed, Desire, and the Museum: The Golden Bowl as Art Romance" (Henry James Review, 2002); and "Leonardo, Pater and the Challenge of Attribution" (Raritan, 2001).
Other representative publications include“Beauty and her Sisters in the Nineteenth Century and After,” in The Question of the Aesthetic, ed. George Levine (2022). “Beauty,” Victorian Literature and Culture (Winter 2020), "War and The Domestic Interior: Pater, Curtius, and Praz in the House of Life." Modern Language Quarterly (June 2017), "Lang's Survivals," The Andrew Lang Effect (Special issue, RaVoN, October 2013), "Mere Antiquarianism." Romantic Antiquarianism (Special issue, Romantic Praxis, June 2014), "Classical Things: Archeological Poetics, Aesthetics, and the Mediation of Antique Art." The Oxford Hisotry Classical Reception in English Literature, Vol. 4: 1780-1880 (February 2015),and "Victorian Aesthetics," The Oxford Handbook of Victorian Literary Culture. (May 2015).
I have served as President of the Northeast Victorian Studies Association and on the Executive Committee of the MLA Division on the Victorian Period. I have been the recipient of a National Humanities Center Fellowship (1999-2000), an ACLS/Burkhardt Fellowship, and a Rome Prize Fellowship (2003-2004).
- Book(s):
- Undergraduate Courses Taught:
- Seminar: Abroad in the Nineteenth Century
- Seminar: The Past as Crisis
- Principles of Literary Study
- British Writers II (1800-)
- Late Victorian and Edwardian Literature
- Victorian Literature
- Victorian Poetry
- Joyce
- Decadence and Aestheticism (seminar)
- Modern Poetry
- Terror and Empire (seminar)
- Civilization and its Discontents (Core)
- Graduate Courses Taught:
- Critical Nineteenth Century
- Culture of Art: Fantasy and Fragmentation in the 19th Century
- Introduction to Graduate Study
- Looking Away: Fantasies of the Foreign
- Mellon Summer Workshop
- Nineteenth-Century Literature and Society
- Nineteenth-Century Novel
- Victorian Poetry
- Aesthetics and Social Critique
- Matter, Thing, and Remain in the Nineteenth Century and After
- Decadent to Modern Revisited
- Awards:
- Rome Prize Fellow, American Academy in Rome, 2003-4
- Burkhardt Fellowship, American Council of Learned Societies, 2003-4
- Sonya Rudikoff Prize for best first book in Victorian Studies, Northeast Victorian Studies Association, 2000
- Membership Affiliations:
MLA, NVSA, NAVSA, ACLA
- Other Publications:
- "Speed, Desire, and the Museum: The Golden Bowl as Art Romance"
Henry James Review, Fall 2002 - "Leonardo, Pater and the Challenge of Attribution"
Raritan, Fall 2001 - "Among the English Poets: Keats, Arnold, and the Placement of Fragments"
Victorian Poetry, Summer 1999 - "Black Arts, Ruined Cathedrals, and the Grave in Engineering: Ruskin and the Fatal Excess of Art" Victorian Literature and Culture, Fall 1999
- "Schooling Leonardo: Collaboration, Desire, and the Challenge of Attribution in Pater"
Walter Pater: Transparencies of Desire (eds. Laurel Brake, Lesley Higgins, and Carolyn Williams, 2002) - "War and The Domestic Interior: Pater, Curtius, and Praz in the House of Life." Modern Language Quarterly (June 2017)
- "Lang's Survivals," The Andrew Lang Effect (Special issue, RaVoN, October 2013); "Mere Antiquarianism."
- Romantic Antiquarianism (Special issue, Romantic Praxis, June 2014)
- "The Material of Form: Vernon Lee at the Vatican and Out of It" (Victorian Studies, Winter 2013)
- "Classical Things: Archeological Poetics, Aesthetics, and the Mediation of Antique Art." The Oxford Hisotry Classical Reception in English Literature, Vol. 4: 1780-1880 (February 2015)
- "Victorian Aesthetics." The Oxford Handbook of Victorian Literary Culture. (May 2015).
- "Speed, Desire, and the Museum: The Golden Bowl as Art Romance"
- Education: PhD, Columbia UniversityM. Phil., Oxford UniversityBA, Middlebury College
Writing Program - College Avenue
- Alessandra Sperling
- Department Administrator
- Unit: Writing Program Office - Administration
- alill12@rutgers.edu
- Phone Number: (848) 932-7570
- Office: Murray Hall | 108A
- Crystal Smith
- Administrative Assistant
- Unit: Writing Program Office - Administration
- clharper@english.rutgers.edu
- Phone Number: (848) 932-7570
- Office: Murray Hall | 108
- Amandeep Ladhar
- Business Supervisor Specialist
- Unit: Writing Program Office - Administration
- aman@rutgers.edu
- Phone Number: (848) 445-4338
- Office: Murray Hall | 108C
- Lynda Dexheimer
- Executive Director of Writing Program
- Unit: Writing Program Office - Administration
- dexheime@rutgers.edu
- Phone Number: (848) 445-5658
- Office:
Murray Hall 108B
College Avenue Campus
- Office Hours:
Tuesdays 10 to 11 a.m. and by arrangement.
- Primary Areas of Specialization:
Student Protest Movements, Critical Race Theory, Access and Persistence in Higher Education, Educational Equity, History of Education
- Awards:
The Presidential Award for Excellence in Teaching, Rutgers University, May, 2018
Outstanding Contributions to the Rutgers Writing Program, Rutgers University, 2012
Covering Race and Ethnicity Fellowship, Knight Center for Specialized Journalism, 1993
- Membership Affiliations:
History of Education Society
Oral History Association
American Educational Research Association - Education:
ABD in Education, Culture and Society. Graduate School of Education, Rutgers University.
MSc in Government, London School of Econmics and Political Science.
BS in Political Science, Minor Comparative Literature, Rutgers University.