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research &
teaching |
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A cultural historian by training, I am a faculty member
in the graduate programs in Humanities
and History at York
University and an associate librarian
in the Scott Library. In the latter role I am responsible
for research collections in humanities, history, classical studies, and religious
studies. I am also co-editor of the Historical Papers of the
Canadian Society of Church History.
My current research interests lie mostly at the intersections of religion
and print culture. I am also interested in the expression of religious values
and themes in literature.
Although these two agendas are quite distinct in focus and method,
most of my published work is marked by a common
preoccupation with religion and the
nature of things: the human soul as a
thing; literary representations of being and
goodness; and, more recently, the relationship between religion and material culture.
At the moment I am editing a collection of essays for a book titled A Cultural History of the Bible in the Age of Empire, 1820-1920. This book will appear as the fifth volume in the forthcoming
Bloomsbury Cultural History of the Bible. Each volume in the set, arranged chronologically, will treat the Bible from a wide variety of perspectives and will include chapters on
history, politics, art, science, gender, translation, literature, theology, and popular culture.
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recent
papers |
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"Aiming the Most Deadly Blows at our Book Concern: Azor Hoyt and the Piracy of the
Methodist Hymnbook, 1824-1836." Paper
presented at the annual conference of the
Canadian Society of Church History,
Vancouver, British Columbia, June 2019. |
"His Style was Diffuse and Feeble: American Methodist responses to
Egerton Ryerson." Paper
presented at the annual conference of the
Canadian Society of Church History,
Toronto, Ontario, June 2017. |
"A Democratic Religious Press? Transatlantic Forces and the
Origins of Denominational Publishing in America." Paper
presented at the annual conference of the
Canadian Society of Church History (Presidential Address),
Calgary, Alberta, June 2016. |
"Injuring the Cause of God: John Wesley's struggle to control Methodist
publishing in America, 1769-1789." Paper
presented at the
annual conference of the
Canadian Historical Association,
Ottawa, ON, June 2015. |
"Anti-British in Every Sense of the Word? American books and the growth of Common,
public, and Sunday school libraries in Upper Canada, 1827-1857." Paper
presented at the
annual conference of the
Canadian Society of Church History,
Victoria, BC, June 2013. |
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selected
publications |
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Pulpit, Press, and Politics: Methodists and the Market for Books in Upper Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press. Studies in Book and Print Culture Series. August 2019. 264pp.
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A Canadian, then an English subject: American Impressions of Egerton Ryerson.
Historical Papers of the Canadian Society of Church
History (2017): 113-121.
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May I Print any of your Books? John Wesley and the rise of Methodist publishing in America.
Historical Papers of the Canadian Society of Church
History (2016): 127-144.
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Religion and the Book. Special issue of
Mémoires du livre/Studies in Book Culture. 6.2 Guest editor.
Includes introduction "The End of Religion and the Death of the Book."
September 2015. |
Producing the Text: Production and distribution of popular editions of the Bible.
New Cambridge History of the
Bible. Volume IV: Modernity, Colonialism, and Their
Successors. Edited by John Riches. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015. 49-82. With
Leslie Howsam. |
Brandishing Their Grey Goose Quills: The struggle to publish an official life of John Wesley, 1791-1805.
Book History 17 (2014):191-220.
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Anti-British in Every Sense of the Word? Methodist preachers, school libraries, and the problem of American books in Upper Canada, 1820-1860.
Historical Papers of the Canadian Society of Church History (2013): 55-76.
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Before the Christian Guardian: American
Methodist periodicals in the Upper Canadian backwoods, 1818-1829.
Papers of the Bibliographical Society of Canada. 49.2
(2011): 143-165.
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European Bible Societies.
Encyclopedia of the Bible and its Reception. Area editor
James Deming. Vol. 3. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2011. 1086-1088. |
Saving the Monsters? Images of redemption in the
Gothic tales of George MacDonald.
Christianity and Literature.
55.2 (2006): 245-269.* |
Hermeticism and the Metaphysics of Goodness in
the Novels of Charles Williams.
Mythlore. 93/94 24.3/4 (2006): 5-29. |
The Evolution of Joss Whedon's Vampire Mythology
and the Ontology of the Soul.
Slayage:
The Journal of Whedon Studies. 18 5.2 (2005): 29 pars.
[Link] |
A Problem of Morality: Sacramentalism in the
early novels of Charles Williams.
Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature.
56.2 (2004): 109-127. |
* Recipient of the
Lionel Basney Award |
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favourite
quotations |
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The distant baying of a hound, calling
to faraway, friendly, and familiar
places, provides the most beautiful
proof of the immortality of the soul. |
Søren
Kierkegaard |
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Improvement makes us straight roads;
but the crooked roads, without improvement,
are roads of Genius. |
William Blake |
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Civilization depends upon the vigorous
pursuit of the highest values by people
who are intelligent enough to know that
their values are qualified by their
interests and corrupted by their
prejudices. |
Reinhold
Niebuhr |
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The very outside of a book has a charm
to me. It is a kind of sacrament - an
outward and visible sign of an inward
and spiritual grace; as, indeed, what on
God's earth is not? |
George MacDonald |
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No place affords a more striking
conviction of the vanity of human hopes
than a public library. |
Samuel
Johnson |
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