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

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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...

 

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)
 

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

Surrogate Brothers as the New Family Instructor in Moll Flanders, American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (2012)
 

Courtship Novels as Course Strategy, American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (2011)
 

Deflating Gothic Clandestine Marriage in Cecilia, The Burney Society of North America (2010)