Kristin Girten is Associate Professor of English at University of Nebraska Omaha. She is a cultural historian and theorist whose research focuses on intersections between literature, philosophy, and science. She seeks to recover hidden histories embedded within the British Enlightenment, giving special emphasis to how women and other marginalized communities contributed to such histories. She also devotes her work to understanding the enduring psychological, political, and ecological legacies of the Enlightenment era, particularly as they persist to the present day. Currently, she is completing a book whose working title is Touching Nature: Sublime Knowledge-Making and the Sensitive Witness in British Women’s Literature and Philosophy of the Long Enlightenment and is co-editing a book titled British Literature and Technology, 1600-1830. She has published on various eighteenth-century British authors and also specializes in the philosophies of Epicurus, John Locke, and Immanuel Kant.
COVID-19 upended Americans’ sense of individualism and invited us to embrace interconnectedness
By Kristin GirtenThe ability to lift oneself up by their own bootstraps has long been celebrated in the United States. This admiration of self-reliance derives from the 17th-century English… read more