Department of English
Patrick D. Murphy

Patrick D. Murphy

  • Professor

pmurphy@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu
407-823-0989
Office Hours: fall: mondays and wednesdays 1-2:30pm; Thursdays, 6:30-7:30pm; and by appointment
Campus Location: CNH307A

I was born in 1951 in a small town in Illinois, earned a B.A. in History from UCLA in 1973, an M.A. in English from California State University, Northridge, in 1983, and a Ph.D. in English from the University of California, Davis, in 1986. I taught at Indiana University of Pennsylvania from the fall of 1987 through the summer of 2002, including a 10-month senior lecture/research Fulbright at the University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan. I joined the UCF English Department as Professor and Chair in August of 2002 and returned to full-time teaching in 2004. For more biographical details, as well as information on ecocriticism and climate change, go to http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~pmurphy.

Education

Research Interests

Recent Research Activities

Patrick D. Murphy has just completed an Afterword for the book Ecofeminism and Rhetoric, edited by Douglas Vakoch, and forthcoming from Berghahn Books.

He has completed an essay on "ecocritical dialogics" for an edited book, European Contrbutions to Ecocritical Theory, edited by Axel Goodbody of the UK and Kate Rigby of Australia, which is forthcoming in 2010 from the University of Virginia Press.He has completed an ecocritical essay on ecology and postcolonialism in the translated versions of Pablo Neruda's Canto General and Ernesto Cardenal's Cosmic Canticle, for an edited book, Postcolonial Green, edited by Alex Hunt and Bonnie Roos, forthcoming at the end of 2009 from the University of Virginia Press.His authored book, Ecocritical Explorations in Literary and Cultural Studies, was published by Lexington Books of Rowman and Littlefield in May oof 2009.

He continues to work on rhetorical and narrative analyses of climate change texts and web sites and expects to expand that study to include web site design and usability in conjunction with a doctoral level course he is teaching for the Textsand Technology program in the fall of 2009.

In late October of 2009 he is leading a faculty research seminar sponsored by the Spanish Group for ecocritical research, based at the University of Alcala, Spain, in discussing Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible and delivering a paper providing an ecofeminist revisioning of the masculinist sublime.

Selected Publications

Books

Articles/Essays

Conference Papers/Presentations

Miscellaneous Publications

Spring 2010 Courses

Course Number Course Title Mode Date and Time
21361 AML4321 MODERN AMERICAN LITERATURE Rdce Time M,W 1:30PM - 2:20PM
AML 4321.0M01 Modern American Literature


MW 1:30-2:20 in Cl1 Room 117


PR: ENC 1102 and ENG 3014; 3 s.c.h.

Course Description


In order to select among the large number of authors that we could choose to read in this course, I will use attention to nature, place, and environment as a limiting device. We will read across the three genres of fiction, poetry, and nonfiction prose. Our course readings will range from works written before World War I up through the late twentieth century

Texts


Anderson, Winesburg, Ohio


Austin, The Ford


Frost, selected poems available online


Moore, selected poems available online


Hogan, Solar Storms


Hogan, The Woman Who Watches Over the World


Jeffers, Selected Poems (book or online)


Oliver, American Primitive


Sinclair, The Jungle


Gaines, Carbon Dreams


Snyder, The Gary Snyder Reader