Dr



Curriculum vitae for Dr. Simon C. Estok

I. EDUCATION .

Ph.D. (English)--University of Alberta, 1996 (conferred June 6, 1996)

- Thesis: “Reading the ‘Other’ Where Fancy is Bred: Designating Strangers in Shakespeare”

- Supervisor: Dr. Linda Woodbridge

- External examiner: Dr. Carol Thomas Neely

M.A. (English)--University of Alberta, 1991 - Area of specialization: Children’s Literature

Bachelor of General Studies (English major)--Athabasca University, 1990

II. RECENT MAJOR AWARDS and HONORS (2007( present) .

1] Samsung Academic Research Award (삼성학술연구비) Announced July 1, 2018. Accepted.

2] Foreign Expert of the Double First Class Discipline Cluster, Sichuan University. June 1, 2018-June 1,

2021.

3] Five publication Incentive Awards, Sungkyunkwan University, announced March and September 2017

by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

4] Four publication Incentive Awards, Sungkyunkwan University, announced March and September 2015

by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

5] Samsung Academic Research Award (삼성학술연구비) Announced July 1, 2015. Accepted.

6] Oriental Scholar, Shanghai Normal University, 2015-18 (东方学者). Accepted.

7] Three publication Incentive Awards, Sungkyunkwan University, announced March and September 2014 by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

8] Monograph Research Grant: 2014-2017 National Research Foundation, Writing in the Humanities Program, announced July 2014 by the National Research Foundation of Korea. (인문저술지원사업). Accepted.

9] Awarded Sungkyunkwan University Fellowship. Announced February 26, 2014. Accepted.

10] Invitation: Visiting Fellow, Shanghai Normal University, November 1 – December 31, 2013. Accepted.

11] Four publication Incentive Awards, Sungkyunkwan University, announced January, March, June, and September 2013 by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

12] Samsung Academic Research Award (삼성학술연구비). Accepted.

13] Awarded Sungkyunkwan University Young Fellowship for 2011-2014. Announced February 21, 2011. Accepted.

14] Samsung Academic Research Award (삼성학술연구비), announced June 4, 2010 by Samsung and Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

15] Invitation: Distinguished Visiting Professor, Tamkang University, July 1-31, 2010. Accepted

16] Cumulative 2010 Research Incentive Award, Sungkyunkwan University, announced May 2010 by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

17] Two publication Incentive Awards, Sungkyunkwan University, announced January and March 2010 by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

18] Book Award: 2009-2011 National Research Foundation, Writing in the Humanities Program, announced

July 2009 by the National Research Foundation of Korea. (인문저술지원사업). Accepted.

19] Award: Sungkyunkwan University 2008 Top Research Award (성균학술상), announced January 2009 by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted

20] Publication Incentive Award, Sungkyunkwan University, announced November 2008 by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

21] Grant: 2008 SeokChun Research Grant (석천연구지원, announced July 2008 by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

22] Two publication Incentive Awards, Sungkyunkwan University, announced June and October 2007 by Sungkyunkwan University. Accepted.

III. PUBLICATIONS .

Books:

1] Mushroom Clouds: Ecocritical Approaches to Militarization and the Environment in East Asia. (co-edited with Iping Liang and Shinji Iwamasa). Contracted with Routledge for publication in 2020.

2] Anthropocene Ecologies of Food (co-edited with Rayson Alex and S. Susan Deborah). Contract with Routledge for publication in 2020.

3] The Ecophobia Hypothesis (Routledge, 2018). Recipient of the "Writing in the Humanities Book Research Award" (인문저술지원사업) from the National Research Foundation, Korea.

4] Landscapes, Seascapes, and the Spatial Imagination (co-edited with Jonathan White and I-Chun Wang). Routledge, 2016.

5] International Perspectives on Feminist Ecocriticism (co-edited with Greta Gaard and Serpil Oppermann). New York: Routledge, May 2013.

6] East-Asian Ecocriticisms: A Critical Reader (co-edited with Won-Chung Kim). New York and London: Macmillan, April 2013.

7] Ecocriticism and Shakespeare: Reading Ecophobia. New York and London: Palgrave, 2011. Shakespeare Globe Book Prize Finalist (July 2012). Winner of the "Writing in the Humanities Book Award" (인문저술지원사업) from the National Research Foundation, Korea

Special issues edited:

1] “Suffering, Endurance, Understanding: New Discourses in Philosophy and Literature.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture (September 2019): (AHCI).

2] “Forum Kritika on Food Transformations.” Kritika Kultura. (Spring 2019): 547-694. (AHCI).

3] “Revisiting Ecophobia.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment (Spring 2019): 379-485. (AHCI).

4] “Western Canons in a Changing Asia.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 16.6 (2014): . (AHCI).

5] “ New Work in Ecocriticism.” Co-edited with Murali Sivaramakrishnan. Thematic Issue

CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 16.4 (December 2014): . (AHCI).

6] “Activist Ecocriticism Studies.” Thematic Cluster World Literature Forum 6.2 (2014): 261-334.

7] “East Asian Ecocriticism: Special Column.” Foreign Literature Studies 35.1 (February 2013): 1-34. (AHCI)

8] “Ecocritical Approaches to Food and Literature in East Asia: the Special Cluster.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 19. 4 (Fall 2012): 681-750. (AHCI)

9] “Ruth Ozeki Study.” Foreign Literature Studies 32.1 (February 2010): 23-55. (AHCI)

10] “Shakespeare and Ecocriticism: the Special Cluster.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 12. 2 (Summer 2005): 109-178. (AHCI)

Book chapters

1) “The Ecophobia/Biophilia Spectrum in Turkish Theatre: Anatolian Village Plays and (Karagöz-Hacivat) Shadow Plays.” Co-authored with Z. Gizem Yılmaz Karahan. Eds. Serpil Oppermann and Sinan Akilli. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington, 2020: forthcoming.

2) “Teaching East Asian Ecocriticisms.” Resources for Teaching Environmental Literature and Media. Ed. Cajetan Iheka. New York: MLA, 2020: forthcoming.

3) “Tripping on the Edge of Everything: Landscape and Ecocriticism.” Landscapes, Seascapes, and the Spatial Imagination. Eds. Simon C. Estok, Jonathan White, and I-Chun Wang. New York: Routledge, 2016. 209-21.

4) “Foreword: Packaging Concerns.” Ecodocumentaries: Critical Essays. Eds. Rayson K. Alex and S. Susan Deborah. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. vii-xiv.

5) “Writing Madness and Ecophobia.” Hermeneutics of Textual Madness: Re-Readings / Hermeneutique de la Folie textuelle: re-lectures. Fasano, Italy: Schena Editore Alain Baudry & Cie, 2016. 151-64.

6) “Queerly green: from meaty to meatless days and nights in Timon of Athens” Ecological Approaches to Early Modern English Texts – a Field Guide to Reading and Teaching. Eds. Lynne Bruckner, Jennifer Munroe, and Edward J. Geisweidt. Farnham: Ashgate, 2015. 91-8.

7) “Painful Material Realities, Tragedy, Ecophobia.” Material Ecocriticism. Eds. Serpil Opperman and Serenella Iovino. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 2014. 130-40.

8) “Blowing Smoking: Theorizing from a Space of Eco-exceptionalism.” Green Growth: from theory to practice; from action to power. Ed. Muriel Cassel-Piccot. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013. 13-28.

9) “Spectators to future ruin: ecological representations and their consumption.” Culture and Media: Ecocritical Explorations. Eds. Rayson K. Alex, S. Susan Deborah and Sachindev P.S. Newcastle upon Tyne. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013. 49-65.

10) “The Ecophobia Hypothesis: Remembering the Feminist Body of Ecocriticism.” International Perspectives on Feminist Ecocriticism. Eds. Gaard, Estok, and Oppermann. New York: Routledge, 2013. 70-83.

11) “Introduction” (with Greta Gaard and Serpil Oppermann). International Perspectives on Feminist Ecocriticism. Eds. Gaard, Estok, and Oppermann. New York: Routledge, 2013. 1-16.

12) “Partial Views: An Introduction to East Asian Ecocriticisms.” East Asian Ecocriticisms: A Critical Reader. Eds. Simon C. Estok and Won-Chung Kim. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. 1-13.

13) “Situational affective ethics: self-writing and ecocriticism.” Ecology and Life Writing. Eds.Alfred Hornung and Zhao Baisheng. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag, 2013. 321-33.

14) “Afterword: Ecocriticism on the Lip of a Lion.” Ecocritical Shakespeares.  Eds. Lynne Bruckner and Dan Brayton.  New York: Ashgate, 2011. 239-46.

15) “Ecocritical Theory, Presentism, and Praxis.” The Future of Ecocriticism: New Horizons. Serpil Oppermann, Ufuk Özdağ, Nevin Özkan, and Scott Slovic. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011. 30-42.

16) “New Directions in Ecocriticism.” Ecocriticism from Wuhan: Conference Proceedings to the 2008 Wuhan International Conference on Literature and the Environment. (eds. Nie Zhenzhao and Chen Hong).  Wuhan, China: Huashong Normal University Press, 2010.  27-44.

17) “Doing Ecocriticism with Shakespeare.” Early Modern Ecostudies. Eds. Karen Raber and Ivo Kamps. New York and London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. 77-91.

18) “Ecocritical Theory and Pedagogy for Shakespeare: Teaching the Environment of The Winter’s Tale”. Shakespeare Matters: History, Teaching, Reproductions. Ed. Lloyd Davis. Newark, NJ: University of Delaware Press, 2003. 177-195.

Articles:

1) “Theorising Ecophobia on a Vegan Plate.” Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment 11. 2 (Autumn 2020): forthcoming.

2) “Introduction to Special Issue on ‘(Re)writing and Editing Body in the Age of Anthropocene.’” Neohelicon: Acta comparationis litterarum universarum 47 (2020): forthcoming. (AHCI)

3) “Corporeality, Hyper-consciousness, and the Anthropocene EcoGothic: Slime and Ecophobia.” Neohelicon: Acta comparationis litterarum universarum 47 (2020): (AHCI)

4) “Theorising the EcoGothic.” Gothic Nature. 1 (Sept 2019): 34-53. < >

5) “Suffering and Climate Change Narratives.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 21 (2019): (AHCI)

6) “Bibliography to Special Issue on Suffering.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 21 (2019): (AHCI)

7) “The Environmental Imagination in the Slime of the Ancient Mariner.” ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes, and Reviews Aug 2019: DOI: 10.1080/0895769X.2019.1643700 (AHCI)

8) “Introduction to the Forum Kritika on Food Transformations.” Kritika Kultura 33 (2019): 557-64. (ACHI).

9) “Timon of Athens, Food Transformations, and the Global Supermarket.” Kritika Kultura 33 (2019): 667-83. (ACHI).

10) “Ecophobia, the Agony of Water, and Misogyny.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 26.2 (2019): 473-85. (AHCI)

11) “Introduction: Theorizing Ecophobia, Ten Years In.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 26.2 (2019): 379-87. (AHCI)

12) “Questioning the Anthropocene: Is It Really Our –Cene?” NANO: New American Notes Online 13 (December 2018):

13) “Climate Change Narratives and the Need for Revisioning of Heritage, Knowledge, and Memory.” Cultura. International Journal of Philosophy of Culture and Axiology 15.1 (2018): 7-21. (AHCI)

14) “Hollow Ecology and Anthropocene Scales of Measurement.” Mosaic: A journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 51. 3 (September 2018): 37-52. (AHCI)

15) “Material ecocriticism, genes, and the phobia/philia spectrum.” Neohelicon: Acta comparationis litterarum universarum 44 (2017): 297-313. (AHCI)

16) “The Semiotics of Garbage, East and West: A Case Study of A. R. Ammons and Choi Sung-ho.” Cultura. International Journal of Philosophy of Culture and Axiology 14.1 (2017): 121-131. (AHCI)

17) “Foreword: The City and the Anthropocene.” (co-authored with Serena Chou). Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies 43.1 (March 2017): 3-11. (AHCI)

18) “Anthropocene, What Anthropocene? The City and the Epoch in A Fine Balance and The Dog.” Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies 43.1 (March 2017): 33-50. (AHCI)

19) “Virtually there: ‘Aesthetic pleasure of the first order,’ Ecomedia, Activist Engagement.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 24.1 (2017): doi:10.1093/isle/isw087 (AHCI)

20) “Ecocriticism and Shakespeare, until 2016.” Theoretical Studies in Literature and Art 211.1 (December 2016): 105-24.

21) “Ecomedia and Ecophobia.” Neohelicon: Acta comparationis litterarum universarum 43 (2016): 127-45. (AHCI)

22) “Life Writing, Conflict, and Environmental Crises, Post 9/11.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 17.3 (2015): . (AHCI)

23) "Bull and Barbarity, Feeding the World." Cultura: International Journal of Philosophy of Culture and Axiology 12.1 (2015): 221-232. (AHCI)

24) “Tracking Ecophobia: The Utility of Empirical and System Studies for Ecocriticism.” Comparative Literature 67.2 (2015): 29-36. (AHCI)

25) “A Leap Beyond Leopold: Agamben, Ecocriticism, and Global Realignments.” Foreign Literature Studies 37.1 (April 2015): 37-48. (AHCI)

26) “Introduction to New Work in Ecocriticism” (co-authored with Murali Sivaramakrishnan). CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 16.4 (2014): . (AHCI)

27) “European Publishing and the Urgency of Ecocriticism.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 16.4 (2014): . (AHCI)

28) “Introduction to Western Canons in a Changing Asia.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 16.6 (2014): . (AHCI)

29) “Information Fatigue, Environmental Fatigue: Producing Affect in Ecomedia.” Journal of English Language and Literature 60.3 (2014): 441-59.

30) "Activist Ecocriticism: An Introduction." Activist Ecocriticism Studies. Thematic Cluster World Literature Forum 6.2 (2014): 261-271.

31) “Postcolonial Ecocriticism Afterword: Reckoning with Irreversibilities in Biotic and Political Ecologies.” Ariel: A Review of International Literature (Special Issue: Post-Colonial Ecocriticism Among Settler-Colonial Nations) 43.4 (Fall 2013): 219-32. (AHCI)

32) “Terror and Ecophobia.” Special Issue on Ecocriticism. Frame, a Journal of Literary Studies 26.2 (Fall 2013): 87-100.

33) “Re-defining South Korean Scholarship and Education within the Context of Globalization.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 15.2 (2013): (AHCI).

34) “Ecocriticism in an Age of Terror.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 15.1 (2013): < > (AHCI).

35) “Reading Ecoambiguity.” Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment. 4.1 (Spring 2013): 130-8.

36) “Global problems, local theory: moving beyond particularity and eco-exceptionalism to action in ecocriticism.” Foreign Literature Studies 35.1 (February 2013): 1-12. (AHCI)

37) “Cannibalism, Ecocriticism, and Portraying the Journey.” CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 14.5 (2012): < > (AHCI)

38) “An Introduction to ‘Ecocritical Approaches to Food and Literature in East Asia’: The Special Cluster.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 19. 4 (December 2012): 681-90. (AHCI)

39) “A Progress Report on Shakespearean and Early Modern Ecocriticism.” Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses 64 (April 2012): 47-60.

40) “Theorizing the Disconnect Between What We Eat and the Environment.” Literature and Environment 10.2 (Winter 2011): 241-57.

41) “Narrativizing Food in and Out of Asia: Ruth Ozeki and Ecocritical Problematics.” English and American Cultural Studies. 11.3 (Winter 2011): 109-34.

42) “Narrativizing Science: the Ecocritical Imagination and Ecophobia.” Configurations. 18.1-2 (December 2010). 141-59. (AHCI)

43) “An ecocritical reading, slightly queer, of As For Me and My House.” Journal of Canadian Studies 4.3 (Fall 2010): 75-95. (AHCI)

44) “Hands, Power, Masculinity: New Readings of Dismemberment in Titus Andronicus” (co-authored with Jungyoun Kim). Shakespeare Review 46.2 (Summer 2010): 365-84.

45) “Challenging Ecocriticism.” Literature and Environment 9.1 (Summer 2010): 79-90.

46) “Reading Ecophobia: A Manifesto.” Inaugural issue of Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment (entitled “New Ecocritical Perspectives: European and Transnational Ecocriticism”). 1.1 (Spring 2010): 75-9.

47) “Diethylstilbestrol, Ecocriticism, Nation: Ruth Ozeki Goes Where No One Has Gone Before.” Foreign Literature Studies 32.1 (February 2010): 34-43. (AHCI)

48) “From Meat to Potatoes: An Interview with Ruth Ozeki.” Foreign Literature Studies 31.6 (December 2009): 1-14. (AHCI)

49) “The Muddy Shakespearean Green: Theorising Ecocriticism.” Green Letters 11 (2009): 83-92.

50) “Discourses of Nation, National Ecopoetics, and Ecocriticism: Canada and Korea versus the US as Case Studies.” Comparative American Studies 7. 2 (June 2009): 1-13.

doi: 10.1179/147757008X280803

51) “Theorizing in a space of ambivalent openness: ecocriticism and ecophobia.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 16. 2 (2009): 203-225. doi:10.1093/isle/isp010

52) “The Ecocritical Unconscious: Early Modern Sleep as “Go-Between.” Foreign Language Studies 30. 5 (Fall 2008): 20-29. (AHCI)

53) “Coriolanus and Ecocriticism: a Study in Confluent Theorizing.” Shakespeare Review 44. 3 (Fall 2008): 365-86.

54) “Water Real, Water Imagined: Activist Ecocriticism, Watered Down Theory.” Literature and Environment 7. 1 (Summer 2008): 7-19.

55) “Theory from the Fringes: Animals, Ecocriticism, Shakespeare.” Mosaic: A journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 40. 1 (March 2007): 61-78. (AHCI)

56) “Environment and the Queer in Sinclair Ross: Toward a Canadian Ecocriticism.” English and American Cultural Studies 6. 2 (Summer 2006): 223-253.

57) “Forays in Canadian Ecocriticism.” Literature and Environment 5. 1 (Summer 2006): 177-89.

58) “Bridging the Great Divide: Ecocritical Theory and the Great Unwashed.” ESC: English Studies in Canada 31. 4 (December 2005): 197-209. (AHCI)

59) “An Introduction to Shakespeare and Ecocriticism: the Special Cluster.” ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 12. 2 (Summer 2005): 109-17.

60) “ASLE 2005: the Eugene Report.” Literature and Environment 4 (Summer 2005): 258-80.

61) “What insights can ecocriticism offer on ‘home’ and ‘power’ in King Lear.” AUMLA: The Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association 103 (May 2005): 15-41. (AHCI)

62) “Boston Report: Ecocriticism 2003.” Literature and Environment 3 (Summer 2004): 237-251.

63) “Pushing the Limits of Ecocriticism: Environment and Social Resistance in 2 Henry VI and 2 Henry IV.” Shakespeare Review 40.3 (Summer 2004): 631-658.

64) “The State of Affairs/ Affairs of the State: Where is ecocriticism now?” English and American Cultural Studies 3. 2 (Winter 2003): 415-432.

65) “A Report Card on Ecocriticism.” AUMLA: The Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association 96 (Nov 2001): 220-38. (AHCI)

66) “Conceptualizing the Other in Hostile Early Modern Geographies: Situating Ecocriticism and Difference.” Journal of English Language and Literature 45. 4 (December 1999): 887-915.

67) “Contribution to the PMLA Forum on Literatures of the Environment.” PMLA 114. 5 (October 1999): 1095-6. (AHCI)

68) “An Update on the Status of Ecocriticism: A Case Study Using The Environmental Imagination”. CRCL: The Canadian Review of Comparative Literature 25. 3 (1998): 496-509.

69) “Environmental Implications of the Writing and Policing of the Early Modern Body: Dismemberment and Monstrosity in Shakespearean Drama.” Shakespeare Review 33 (Spring 1998): 107-42.

70) “Introduction.” Hers and His: An Instructor’s Guide for Exploring Language and Gender. Ed. Kay Stewart. Edmonton: U of Alberta Printing Services, 1992. 1-13.

Reviews

1) Review of Routledge Handbook of Ecocriticism and Environmental Communication, edited by Scott Slovic, Swarnalatha Rangarajan, and Vidya Sarveswaran. Green Letters (forthcoming Spring 2020)

2) Review article of Shakespeare’s storms, by Gwilym Jones; Shakespeare and the natural world, by Tom MacFaul; and Shakespeare and ecocritical theory, by Gabriel Egan. Green Letters 21.1 (2017): 108-112.

3) Review of Todd Borlik, Ecocriticism and Early Modern Literature: Green Pastures. ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 19. 1 (Winter 2012): 198-200.\

4) Review of Robert N. Watson, Back to Nature: the Green and the Real in the Late Renaissance. ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 14. 2 (Summer 2007): 291-2.

5) Review of Darko Suvin, Lessons of Japan: Assayings of Some Intercultural Stances. CRCL: The Canadian Review of Comparative Literature 27. 1 (March 2000): 313-6.

6) Review of T.G. Bishop, Shakespeare and the Theatre of Wonder. CRCL: The Canadian Review of Comparative Literature 25. 1.2 (March-June 1998): 249-52.

7) Review of Cheryll Glotfelty and Harold Fromm, The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology. CRCL: The Canadian Review of Comparative Literature 23. 4 (Dec. 1996): 1241-4.

IV. PLENARY and KEYNOTE PRESENTATIONS .

1) “The Titanic is Sinking: Multi-Media Apocalypticism and the Growing Environmental Crises.” ASLE-Korea Autumn 2019 Conference. Sungkyunkwan University, Seoul, South Korea. 26 October 2019.

2) “Intermedial Apocalypticism and the Growing Anthropocene Crises.” Intermedial Ecocriticism: The Anthropocene Condition Across Media and the Arts. Babeș-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania. 31 August 2019.

3) “Climate Change and Migration.” Ecological Migrations and Transcultural Ethics. Madras Christian College, Chennai, India. 21 March 2019.

4) “An Intersectional Approach to Food Justice and Environmental Justice.” Public lecture for the Forum Kritika on Food Transformations. Ateneo de Manila University, Manila, Philippines. 12 March 2019.

5) “Ecophobia and the Gothic Body.” “‘Re-bodying’ the Body and the Anthropocene”International Conference, Konkuk University, Seoul, South Korea. 11 December 2018.

6) “Climate change narratives and the need for revisioning heritage, knowledge, and memory.” International Symposium: The Interpretation of Values, University of Iasi, Romania. 27 April 2018. Presented via Skype.

7) “Food Justice and Environmental Justice: An Intersectional Approach.” Environmental Justice: Culture, Resistance and Ethics and tiNai Ecofilm Festival 2017 (TEFF). Dr. K. N. Modi University Newai, Tonk, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India. 24 March 2017.

8) “Shakespeare and the Global Supermarket: Spatial, Cultural, Temporal Matters.” International Symposium on Contemporary Literature as Cultural Production and Its Research Paradigms. College of International Languages and Cultures, Hohai University, Nanjing. December 17, 2016.

9) “Sci-fi/cli-fi case studies in Imagining the End.” A Symposium on Sci-Fi and Planetary Healing. Tamkang University, Taipei. November 12, 2016.

10) “Anthropocene, What Anthropocene?: The City and the Epoch in A Fine Balance and The Dog.” International Symposium on Sustainable Urban Forest and Environmental Humanities. Seoul City Hall, Dongguk University, Seoul. November 6, 2016.

11) “Cosmopolitanism, Food, Environment.” International Conference on the Culture of Food. M. E. S. College of Arts & Commerce, Zuarinagar, Goa. February 26, 2016.

12) Opening Plenary: “Virtually There: ‘Aesthetic Pleasure of the First Order,’ and the place of action in ecocriticism.” Environmental Humanities on the Ground: Materiality, Sustainability, and Applicability. Shanghai Normal University, November 6, 2015.

13) “Ethics Towards the Future: Empirical and Systemic Studies and the Environmental Humanities.” The 4th International Symposium on Ethical Literary Criticism. Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai. December 21, 2014.

14) “Agamben, Ecocriticism, and Post 9/11 Global Realignments.” 2014 Contemporary Foreign Literature Symposium. School of Foreign Languages, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China. May 24, 2014.

15) “Information Fatigue, Environment Fatigue: Producing Affect in Eco-media.” E(co)-Media: Restoring Affect and Creativity (a one-day symposium with Simon Estok and Joni Adamson). Electronic Commerce Research Center at the National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 7, 2013.

16) “Charting East Asian Ecocriticisms.” East Asia Symposium on Literature and Environment. National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan. December 7, 2012.

17) “Ecocriticism(s) Without Borders.” The Fifth Tamkang International Conference on Ecological Discourse—Ecocriticism in Asia: Reorienting Modernity, Reclaiming Nature? Tamkang University, Danshui, Taipei, Taiwan. December 17, 2010.

18) “Situational Affective Ethics: Self-writing and Ecocriticism.” Ecology and Life Writing. Johannes Gutenberg University. Mainz, Germany. June 24-7, 2010.

19) “Future directions of ecocriticism.” The International Conference on Literature and Environment, Central China Normal University, Wuhan, China. November 9, 2008.

20) “Rationalizing Presentist Ecocritical Theory: Praxis Matters.” An International Conference—The Future of Ecocriticism: New Horizons. Hosted by Hacettepe University and Ankara University. Hotel Limak Limra, Kemer, Antalya, Turkey. November 4, 2009.

21) “Theorizing Ecocriticism: Narrative Science and the Ecocritical Imagination.” Ecological Literature and Environmental Education: Asian Forum for Cross-Cultural Dialogues. Institute of World Literature, Peking University, Beijing, China. August 15, 2009.

22) “Rationalizing an aesthetics of contact: nature, women, Peer Gynt.” Green Ibsen International Symposium. Central China Normal University, Wuhan, China. May 19, 2009.

23) “Theorizing in a Space of Ambivalent Openness: Ecocriticism and Ecophobia.” The International Conference on Literature and Environment, Central China Normal University, Wuhan, China. November 10, 2008

V. INVITED PRESENTATIONS ________ ____ .

1) “Action, Focus, Change, Behavior/Inaction/ Off-focus, Climate Change, Flight Behavior—Notes on Literary Representations of Ecomedia.” Environmental Imagination and the Responsibility to Act. Shanghai Normal University, June 10, 2017.

2) “Cosmopolitanism, Food, Environment.” Sungkyunkwan University. December 2, 2016.

3) “Sustainability and Literature.” The Research Center for Comparative Literature and World Literatures at Shanghai Normal University. Shanghai, China. May 21, 2016.

4) “Early Modern Self-fashioning and Presentism.” The Research Center for Comparative Literature and World Literatures at Shanghai Normal University. Shanghai, China. April 11, 2016.

5) “Shakespeare and Ecophobia.” The Research Center for Comparative Literature and World Literatures at Shanghai Normal University. Shanghai, China. March 29, 2016.

6) “Shakespeare and Ecocriticism.” The Research Center for Comparative Literature and World Literatures at Shanghai Normal University. Shanghai, China. March 22, 2016.

7) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Life-writing and ecocriticism, affect and ethics.” Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 20, 2016.

8) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Where Material Ecocriticism Fears to Tread: Genes, Animals, and the Phobia/Philia Spectrum.” National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 22, 2015.

9) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Ecocriticism, Life of Pi, and Boundary Crossing.” Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 21, 2015.

10) “Here and there, then and now: Shakespeare and the global supermarket.” Oecologies: Engaging the World, from Here. University of British Columbia/Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada. October 2, 2015.

11) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Boundary fracking, ecocriticism, Life of Pi.” Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou, China. May 16, 2015.

12) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Ecophobia and Biophilia: A Spectrum.” Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou, China. May 16, 2015.

13) "Theorizing pain, ecophobia, and the material turn." Envisioning “Things”: An International Conference on Material Culture. National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 18, 2014.

14) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Ecocriticism and Shakespeare in Four Parts.” Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai. May 20, 2014.

15) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Post 9/11 Ecocriticism” Kaohsiung Normal University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 14, 2014.

16) Invited Speaker for Faculty Presentation. “Ecophobia and Shakespeare.” Tamkang University, Danshui, Taipei, Taiwan. October 13, 2014.

17) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Ecocriticism and nineteenth century lit (with a focus on Ibsen).” Kaohsiung Normal University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 8, 2013.

18) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Transnational Literary Scholarship in an Age of Globalization: Notes from a Canadian in Korea, reprise.” I-Shou University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 8, 2013.

19) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Film, Apocalypse, and Environment.” National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. December 10, 2012.

20) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Shakespeare and Ecocriticism: A Brief History.” Kaohsiung Normal University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. December 10, 2012.

21) Invited speaker for Faculty Presentation. “Marginalizing Ecocriticisms East and West: Case Studies of Korea and Canada.” Research Center for the Humanities and Social Sciences. National Chung Hsing University. Taichung, Taiwan. November 5, 2012.

22) Invited speaker for Faculty Presentation. “Narrativizing Fear: Terrorism and Environmentalism.” Tamkang University, Danshui, Taipei, Taiwan. November 1, 2012.

23) Invited speaker at “A symposium on Materialist Ecocriticism with Hannes Bergthaller, Simon C. Estok, Dana Phillips.”  National Chung Hsing University. Taichung, Taiwan. November 24, 2011.

24) Invited Speaker for Faculty Presentation. “Speculations on Pain, Death, and Material Ecocriticism.” Tamkang University, Danshui, Taipei, Taiwan. November 23, 2011.

25) Invited Speaker for Faculty Presentation. “Ecocriticism and Shakespeare.” Southern China University for Nationalities, Wuhan, China. September 28, 2011.

26) Invited Speaker for Departmental Presentation. “Selling Futures of Ecological Ruin in Contemporary Film.” National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. December 27, 2010.

27) Invited Speaker for Faculty Presentation: “Green Ibsen: Peer Gynt and Ecocriticism.” Huafan University, Shihtin Hsiang. Taipei County, Taiwan. December 21, 2010.

28) Invited Speaker for Faculty Presentation: “Pivotal moments in Renaissance literary medicine: shifts, roots, and environments.” Institute of History and Philology at Academia Sinica. Nankang, Taipei, Taiwan. December 15, 2010.

29) Invited Speaker: “Spectators to Future Ruin: Ecological Representations and Their Consumption.” Ecologies and Sustainable Development Workshop. City University of Hong Kong. Hong Kong. November 18-19, 2010.

30) Invited speaker: “Epidemiology, Climate, and Shakespeare: Understanding Causal Relations Between Climate and Disease in Early Modern Literature.” The Fifth Annual Society for the History of Medicine Conference (“Climate, Environment, and Disease: Crossing Geo-Historical Boundaries”). The Institute of Tropical Studies, Ajou University & Suwon LIG Ingenium, Suwon, South Korea. October 8, 2010.

31) Invited Speaker: “Green Shakespeare.” A Symposium of Environmental Studies and the Bard. The Rhodes College Environmental Program, in association with the Dr. Iris A. Pearce Shakespeare Endowment. Rhodes College, Memphis. March 26, 2010.

32) Invited speaker: “Transnational Literary Scholarship in an Age of Globalization: Notes from a Canadian in Korea.” Wuhan Institute of Physical Education. May 20, 2009.

33) Invited speaker: “Imagining America: Ecological Thinking and the Writing of Nation.” American Studies Institute. Seoul National University. February 8, 2007.

VI. CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS ________ ____ .

1) “Ecophobia and the Agony of Slime.” ASLE 2019 Conference—Paradise on Fire. University of California, Davis. 27 June 2019.

2) “Acting Out Anthropocene Fantasies.” The 116th Annual Conference of the Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association. Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington, USA. 10 November 2018.

3) “Militarization and the environment in East Asia: A View from Paolo Bacigalupi’s Future.” International Symposium on Literature and Environment in East Asia—War and Peace: Militarism, Biopolitics and the Environment in East Asia. National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan. 21 October 2018.

4) “Problems and Possibilities for Theorizing Ecophobia, a Performance Perspective.” 7th Biennial Meeting of the EASLCE (European Association for the Study of Culture, Literature and Environment). Université Libre de Bruxelles. October 30, 2016.

5) “Writing the frenemy: Macbeth’s witches and storms on stage and screen.” The 10th International Conference of the Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies. National Pingtung University, Pingtung, Taiwan. October 21, 2016.

6) “Food Waste and Garbage Poetry, Seoul.” Waste in Asia. Leiden University, Leiden, the Netherlands. June 11, 2016.

7) “Performing Shakespeare’s Strange Weather in our Very Strange Times.” Shakespeare in Shanghai. Shanghai Jaiotung University, Shanghai, China. March 13, 2016.

8) “Early Modern Madness and Ecophobia.” The 9th International Conference of the Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval and Renaissance Studies. National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan. October 23, 2015.

9) “Cannibalism, Ecophobia, and Titus Andronicus.” ASLE-UKI Conference: Green Knowledge. University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK. September 4, 2015.

10) “Hypothesizing Ecophobia.” ASLE 2015 Conference—Notes from the Underground: the Depths of Environmental Arts, Culture and Justice. University of Idaho, Moscow, ID. June 24, 2015.

11) “Agential Landscapes in Life of Pi and The Hungry Tide.” Session 352: “Agential Landscapes in East Asian Literatures.” The 130th Annual Modern Language Association Convention. Vancouver, BC. Canada. January 9, 2015.

12) “Editing in Space.” Session 273: “Journal Editing 101: An Introduction to the Role of Editor.” The 130th Annual Modern Language Association Convention. Vancouver, BC. Canada. January 9, 2015.

13) “Ecocritical boundary fracking: Life of Pi from fringes to mainstream, from nohuman to human, from narrative to activist pedagogy” 2014 International Symposium on Literature and Environment in East Asia—Unsetting Boundaries: Nature, Technology, Art. Okinawa, Japan. November 23, 2014.

14) “Migration, War, Tragedy, and Ecophobia.” Migrants and Their Memories. National Sun Yat -sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. October 4-5, 2013.

15) “Tragedy, terror, ecophobia, praxis.” ASLE 2013 Conference—Changing Nature: Migrations, Energies, Limits. University of Kansas, Lawrence KS. May 31, 2013.

16) “Reading Landscape in Shakespeare’s Tragedies: Testing the Ecophobia Hypothesis.” Landscape, Seascape, and the Spatial Imagination. National Sun Yat -sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. November 2, 2012.

17) “Landscape, Tragedy, Ecophobia.” The Association for Literature, Environment, and Culture in Canada (ALECC) Conference—Space+Memory=Place. Kelowna, BC, CANADA. August 10, 2012.

18) “Portraying the Journey: Cannibalism, Ecocriticism, and a Plateful of Implications.” The Journey and Its Portrayals: Explorers, Sailors, (Im)migrants. National Sun Yat -sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. November 25, 2011.

19) “The evolution of a canon: ecopoetry and its theoretical implications.”  The 1st Convention of Chinese/American Association for Poetry and Poetics: Dialog on Poetry and Poetics. Central China Normal University, Wuhan, China. September 29, 2011.

20) “Blowing Smoke: theorizing a space from eco-exceptionalism to action in ecocriticism.” Croissance verte : de la théorie à la pratique; du savoir au pouvoir. Université Jean Moulin - Lyon 3. Lyon, France. September 15, 2011.

21) “Ecophobia, ecocriticism, feminism.” ASLE 2011 Conference: Species, Space, and the Imagination of the Global. Indiana University, Bloomington, IN. June 25, 2011.

22) “Activist to the core, theoretical at the root: ecocriticism’s only hope.” ACLA 2011: World Literature, Comparative Literature. Simon Fraser University. Vancouver, BC. April 1, 2011.

23) “Challenging Ecocriticism.” The 2010 ASLE-Korea Spring Conference: Green growth and environmental ethics. Kyungwon University, Seongnam, South Korea. June 5, 2010.

24) “Theorizing ecocriticism through the stomach.” The Second ASLE-Korea/Japan Joint Symposium. Sungkyunkwan University, Seoul, South Korea. October 31, 2010.

25) “Global Tensions: Ozeki, Science, Nation, and Narration.” The English Language and Literature Association of Korea Annual Conference, Kyeongju Educational Hall, Kyeongju, South Korea, November 20, 2009.

26) “Marketing concerns: ecocriticism and representations of environmental crises.” International Workshop on Eco-Philosophy and Future Direction for Ecocriticism. College of Foreign Languages and Literature, Tamkang University, Danshui, Tapei, Taiwan. July 16, 2009

27) “Contra O’Dair, More Please: Shakespeare and Ecocriticism.” The Eighth Biennial Conference of the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE). University of Victoria. Victoria, BC (Canada). June 4, 2009.

28) “A Report Card on Queer Ecocriticism.” Northeast Modern Language Association (NEMLA) 2009 Convention. Boston University. March 1, 2009.

29) “Discourses of Nation and Ecocriticism.” Northeast Modern Language Association (NEMLA) 2009 Convention. Boston University. March 1, 2009.

30) “Theorizing Ecocriticism: Praxis and Ecophobia.” The 124th MLA Annual Convention, San Francisco. December 28, 2008.

31) “The Unattended Call: Theorizing Ecocriticism.” The English Language and Literature Assocation of Korea, International Conference: Revisioning English Studies in Asia. Onyang, South Korea. November 22, 2008.

32) “Landscapes of the United States, of Canada, and of Ecocritical Theory.” The European Association for the Study of Literature, Culture and the Environment (EASCLE) Third Biennial Conference: Cultural Landscapes: Heritage and Conservation. Trinity College, Madrid. October 17, 2008.

33) “Discourses of Nation and National Ecopoetics: Case Studies.” Poetic Ecologies: Nature as Text and Text as Nature in English-Language Verse. Co-presented with Lee Younhyun. Université Libre de Bruxelles. May 15, 2008.

34) “Water real, water imagined: activist ecocriticism, watered-down theory.” ASLE Korea—2008 Spring Annual Conference: “Ecology of Watersheds.” Chonnam National University. April 26, 2008.

35) “Diethylstilbestrol, My Year of Meats, ecocriticism, and nation.” The ASLE Japan-Korea Joint Symposium. “Place, Nature, and Language: Thinking About ‘Now’ in Japanese and Korean Environmental Literature.” Kanazawa Bunka Hall, Kanazawa, Japan, August 20, 2007.

36) “Diethylstilbestrol, Ecocriticism, and Nation: Ruth Ozeki goes where no one has gone before.” The Seventh Biennial Conference of the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE). Wofford College, Spartanburg SC (USA), June 16, 2007.

37) “Doing Ecocriticism with Shakespeare.” The VIII World Shakespeare Congress. Panel: Ecocriticism and the World of Shakespeare. Organizer, chair, and panelist. Brisbane, Australia. July 19, 2006.

38) “A Report Card on Canadian Ecocriticism.” The 2006 International Conference of the Modern English Society of Korea: On “Earth, Man, and Culture.” Chungnam National University: Taejon, South Korea. May 27, 2006.

39) “Defining Ecocriticism.” The 2006 ASLE-Korea Spring Conference. Konkuk University: Seoul, South Korea. May 20, 2006.

40) “Oh, brave new world that hath ecocriticism in it: Possibilities and Problems for ecocritical Shakespeares.” The 121st MLA Annual Convention, Washington, DC. December 30, 2005.

41) “Ecocriticism, Shakespeare, and questions about activism: Environment and social resistance in 2 Henry VI and 2 Henry IV.” The 2005 meeting of the British Shakespeare Association, the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England, September 2, 2005. Proxy participation.

42) “Travel Writing, Cannibalism, and Ecocriticism.” Mobilis in Mobile—International Conference on Studies in Travel Writing. The University of Hong Kong, July 11, 2005.

43) “Being With the Ecocritics, Living in the Heteronormative.” The Sixth Biennial Conference of the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE). University of Oregon, Eugene Oregon, June 25, 2005.

44) “Cannibal theory, ecocriticism, and Shakespeare.” The Group for Early Modern Cultural Studies 12th Annual Conference. Orlando, Florida, November 20, 2004.

45) “Queer Ecocriticism.” The English Language and Literature Association of Korea. Bundang, South Korea. June 18, 2004.

46) “Making the World a Safe Place to Pillage: Shakespeare, Storms, and Theoretical Considerations.” The 119th MLA Annual Convention, San Diego, California. December 29, 2003.

47) “The State of Affairs/ Affairs of the State: Where is Ecocriticism Now?” ASLE—Korea Conference. Chungnam National University. Taejon, South Korea. November 29, 2003.

48) “Solid Earth/Ephemeral Theory: Taking Stock of Ecocriticism.” The Fifth Biennial Conference of the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment. Boston University. June 5, 2003.

49) “Nation, Home, and Environment in King Lear: Ecocritical Insights.” Renaissance Histories: Shakespeare and the History Play. University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK. 20 July 2002.

50) “New Starts from Old Blocks: Resistance and Change/ Sickness and Health/ Environment and Shakespeare’s Henriad.” Making a Start out of Particulars. The Fourth Biennial Conference of ASLE. Northern Arizona University. June 22, 2001.

51) “King Lear: ‘Home’ and ecocriticism.” The Nature of Shakespeare. The Ohio Shakespeare Conference. Toledo, Ohio. March 1, 2001.

52) “A long way from home: ecocriticism, early modern texts and the circulation of people.” SASMARS --City, Town and Country. University of Witswatersrand/ Rand Afrikaans University, Johannesburg, South Africa. September 5, 2000.

53) “Border Control: Crossing the Limits of Ecocriticism.” ANZSA 2000--Dislocating Shakespeare. University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand. July 7, 2000.

54) “Definitional moments: Early Modern nomenclature and Ecocriticism.” The open horizon of ecological fiction: towards a new relationship between man and environment. The Society of British and American fiction. SookMyung University, Seoul. November 13, 1999.

55) “Unlikely Case Studies in Unlikely Places: Shakespeare and Ecocriticism.” What to Make of a Diminished Thing. The Third Biennial Conference of the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment. Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo. June 3, 1999.

56) “Teaching the Environment of The Winter’s Tale: Ecocritical Theory and Pedagogy for Shakespeare.” ANZSA 1998--Material Shakespeare: Teaching, History, Performance. University of Queensland, Brisbane. July 12, 1998.

57) “Ecocritical Theory and The Winter’s Tale.” Shakespeare Association of Korea Annual Conference. Dongduk Women’s University, Seoul. May 2, 1998.

58) “Essential Drift--Bioregionalism and Commodifation in Troubled Waters: Notes on Othello and Oroonoko.” English Lang/Lit Assn of Korea Annual Conf. Kookmin Univ, Seoul. May 17, 1997.

59) Respondent to the “Shakespeare and Feminism” Panel at The 1997 International Shakespeare Conf.–Alternative Perspectives on Shakespeare. Sangmyung University, Seoul. May 9-10, 1997.

60) “Conceptualizing Difference: Writing the Other in Hostile Early Modern Geographies.” The Ends of Nature. 1996 Cultural Studies Symposium. Kansas State University, Manhattan. March 8, 1996.

61) “Policing Difference: Shakespeare and the Discipline of the Early Modern Body.” Arizona Centre for Medieval & Ren. Studies Annual Conference. Arizona State University, Tempe. February 16-18, 1995.

62) “The Good Ship Caliban: Silent Spaces, Ugly Faces, and the Problem of Alterity in The Tempest.” The Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association Annual Conference. Jackson, Wyoming. May 15, 1994.

63) “The Canon in the Closet: Notes on Some Implications of the Transvestite Challenge in a Few Shakespeare Comedies.” Queer Sites: Bodies at Work, Bodies at Play Conference. University of Toronto. May 13, 1993.

64) “Reading the ‘Other’ Where Fancy is Bred: Queers, Jews, and the Aesthetic of a Unified Self in The Merchant of Venice.” The Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association Annual Conference. Flagstaff, Arizona. April 10, 1993.

65) “Writing the Centre: An Exploration of Some Implications of the Colonialist Positionings in Rasselas.” The Contemporary 18th Century New Readings Conference: Hamilton, Ontario. September 24, 1992.

66) “In the Heart of the Country: Pilgrims and Histories of the Nation in Palace of the Peacock.” Ninth Triennial Conf. / Assn. for Commonwealth Lit. and Lang. Studies: Mona, Jamaica. Aug. 17, 1992.

VII. SEMINARS and PANELS .

1) Organized and chaired Conference Panel entitled “A Long Way from Paradise: Racism, its Intersections, and the Anthropocene.” ASLE 2019 Conference—Paradise of Fire. University of California, Davis. 27 June 2019.

2) EASLCE Webinar leader. “The Ecophobia Hypothesis.” EASLCE (European Association for the Study of Culture, Literature and Environment). May 22, 2017.

3) Seminar participant: “Toward Ecocriticism in Performance.” The 44th Annual Meeting of the Shakespeare Association of America. New Orleans, Louisiana. March 4, 2016.

4) ASLE Pre-conference seminar leader. “Ecocriticism in East Asia.” ASLE 2015 Conference—Notes from the Underground: the Depths of Environmental Arts, Culture and Justice. University of Idaho, Moscow, ID. June 23, 2015.

5) ASLE Pre-conference seminar leader: “Early Modern Literature and Ecocriticism.” ASLE 2011 Conference: Species, Space, and the Imagination of the Global. Indiana University, Bloomington, IN. June 21, 2011.

6) “Metaphors, Meta-narrative Moves, and Monsters: Ecocriticism, Shakespeare, and the Early Modern Period.” Interdisciplinary Studies: In the Middle, Across, or in Between. The American Comparative Literature Association. Seminar: Ecocriticism: nature, modernization, and postmodernization. Yale University. February 25-27, 2000.

VIII. PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT RECORD .

University Teaching positions

- Professor, Sungkyunkwan University, April 2013(

- Associate Professor, Sungkyunkwan University, 2007-2013

- Assistant Professor (Research), Konkuk University 2004-7

- Visiting professor, Catholic University of Korea, 2002–2004

- teaching professor, Sejong University, 2001-2

- Full-time instructor, Chungwoon University 1997-2001

- Sessional lecturer, University of Regina, 1995-96

- Sessional instructor, Grande Prairie Regional College, 1994-95 (full-time); 1993-94 (pt-time)

- Sessional lecturer, University of Alberta, 1993/ TA, University of Alberta, 1990-92

................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download