麻豆传媒

Marlo Starr, Ph.D.

Marlo StarrAssistant Professor of English
Hollenbeck 127
937-327-7597
starrm@wittenberg.edu

Marlo Starr is a writer and interdisciplinary scholar specializing in contemporary poetry and postcolonial studies. She teaches courses in creative writing, advanced poetry, composition, environmental literatures, and global literatures in English. 

She holds a PhD in English from Emory University, where her research focused on women鈥檚 poetry and publishing practices in the Caribbean and Pacific Islands. After her PhD, she completed an MFA in Poetry at Johns Hopkins University. Her research and teaching emphasize Indigenous feminist perspectives that critique settler colonial structures and stress reciprocal relationships with the environment. Other research interests include publishing and small print culture; archival studies; climate change; militarization and nuclearization. 

Her poems have appeared in The Threepenny Review, Ghost City Review, Napkin Poetry Review, and elsewhere.

Degrees

  • 2020 MFA in Poetry, The Writing Seminars, Johns Hopkins University 
  • 2018 PhD in English, Emory University
  • 2008 BA in English, Rutgers University鈥揘ewark

Notable Achievements

  • 2021 Shortlisted for the Amsterdam Open Book Prize
  • 2020 Pangea Prize for Best Series of Poems 
  • 2020 National Poetry Series Open Competition Finalist 
  • 2020 Benjamin T. Sankey Fellowship 
  • 2019鈥2020 Founder & Co-organizer, Postcolonial Ecocriticism Research Cluster, Johns Hopkins (University grant awarded for proposal) 

Research & Teaching Interests

  • Global and postcolonial studies
  • Settler colonial studies
  • Poetry & poetics
  • Creative writing
  • Ecocriticism
  • Caribbean literature
  • Pacific Island literature
  • Trans-Indigenous studies
  • Indigenous feminisms
  • Gender and sexuality

Selected Publications

Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles

鈥淟ittle Magazines from across Island Networks.鈥 Asian Journal of African Studies 48 (2020), 55鈥81. (Special issue from 2019 ACLA panel, 鈥淭exts Travelling Beyond the West.鈥)  
 
鈥淢edbh McGuckian鈥檚 Aesthetics of Introversion.鈥 Textual Practice 34.4 (2020), 627-646. 
 
鈥淧aradise and Apocalypse: Critiques of Nuclear Imperialism in Kathy Jetn虅il-Kijiner鈥檚 Iep Ja虅ltok.鈥 Commonwealth Essays and Studies 41.1 (2018), 119鈥132. 
 
鈥淏eyond Machine Dreams: Zen, Cyber-, and Transnational Feminisms in Ruth Ozeki鈥檚 A Tale for the Time Being.鈥 Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism 13.2 (2016), 99鈥122. 

Essays

翱苍诲辞产辞苍诲辞鈥檚 Visual Publics: Small Print Culture in Papua New Guinea.鈥 Contemporaries at Post45 (Forthcoming). 
 
鈥淩e-Staging the American 鈥楩reakshow鈥 in Olio: Tyehimba Jess鈥檚 Syncopated Sonnets.鈥 Sonnets from the American. University of Iowa Press (Forthcoming).
  
鈥淪low Writing: Archival Research in the Digital Age鈥 from 鈥淒ead Forms; or, A Defense of Good, Old-Fashioned Scholarly Writing.鈥 PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 133.1 (2018), 190鈥198.  

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