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Milt Moise

Ph.D. Student

 

Milt in Central Park, New York City. He is wearing a dark T-shirt and crosses his arms while facing the camera. While my primary research is an examination of the uses of absence in contemporary American bipolar fiction, my interests range from prestige TV to self-referentiality in Caribbean fiction, which was the focus of my MPhil dissertation at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill. I’ve served as a mentor and taught writing classes, world literature, prestige TV aesthetics, film analysis, and an upper division course on Capitalism in Contemporary American Cinema, for which I received a departmental teaching award.

Along with my compatriot Thomas Johnson, I created the television reading group in the English department, which is devoted to examining academic and industry trends in contemporary television.

My publications include:

“Consciousness, the Epistolary Novel and the Anglophone Caribbean Writer.” Journal of West Indian Literature, 22(2).

“Beyond the Flames: the Castries Fire, Traumatic Discourse and the Utility of Faith in Derek Walcott’s “A City’s Death by Fire” and Garth St. Omer’s “Another Place, Another Time.” Garth St. Omer: A Casebook, Peepal Tree Press, 2017.

“I-n-I Re-member Now”: A Rastafari Reading of HBO’s Westworld. Reading Westworld, Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.

When I’m not teaching, engaged in research, watching television or at the movies, I may often be found traversing, to borrow Jhumpa Lahiri’s expression, “unaccustomed earth” in search of avian inspiration, as an avid birder and nature enthusiast.

Fields of Study:

  • 21st-Century American literature
  • Film Studies and Prestige TV
  • Postcolonial Studies
  • Caribbean literature

Contact:

UF Email: mmoise@ufl.edu