Kerry Hasler-Brooks
Associate Professor of English, Chair of the Department of Language, Literature, and Writing
Associate Professor of English, Chair of the Department of Language, Literature, and Writing
Dr. Hasler-Brooks researches and teaches a textual history of American life, with a particular focus on race and gender, from Phyllis Wheatley to Marilynne Robinson, Frederick Douglass to Gloria Anzaldua, Herman Melville to Toni Morrison.
Building on interests in feminist pedagogies and vocation, Dr. Hasler-Brooks’s scholarly and classroom projects explore podcasting as a medium for public literary analysis; silence as textual, spiritual and pedagogical practice; and Black women writers as public curators of antiracism literacies.
Dr. Hasler-Brooks believes stories speak truth and teaches students to be the creative thinkers, engaged conversationalists, perceptive readers, and responsible writers the world needs.
American literature, borderlands literature, African American literature, women’s literature, pedagogy, and composition