Dr. Ann Campbell teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on the eighteenth-century British novel, the gothic novel, and courtship novels at Boise State University. She joined the faculty of the Department of English in 2003 after completing a Ph.D. in English from Emory University where she specialized in eighteenth-century British literature. She also has a Certificate in Electronic Pedagogy from the Georgia Institute of Technology where she was a Brittain Doctoral Fellow. Dr. Campbell's research focuses largely on women’s novels and courtship novels, and she is an active in the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies.
Articles
The Strange and Surprising World of Curriculum Reform and Its Consequences for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Digital Defoe: Studies in Defoe and His Contemporaries (2011)
Despite every conceivable obstacle, including innumerable departmental, college, and university committees seemingly created for the...
Punitive Subplots and Clandestine Marriage in Eliza Haywood’s The History of Jemmy and Jenny Jessamy, Eighteenth-Century Women (2008)
Magdalen or Harlot?: Satire, Sentiment, and the Fallen Woman in William Dodd’s The Sisters, Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (2007)
The Limits of "Laudable Action": Women's Marital Choice in John Shebbeare's The Marriage Act, Topic: The Washington and Jefferson College Review (2007)
Tristram Shandy and the Seven Years' War: Beyond the Borders of the Bowling Green, The Shandean (2006)
Contributions to Books
Indentured Servitude as Colonial America’s ‘Semi-Slavery’ Business in Sally Gunning’s Bound, Comparing Slavery and Servitude in the British Eighteenth-Century Imagination (forthcoming) (2013)
Presentations