Milette shamir biography templates

Milette Shamir

Israeli academic administrator and professor of American studies

Milette Shamir (Hebrew: מלאת שמיר) is an Israeli academic administrator and professor exhaust American studies serving as vice president of Tel Aviv Further education college.

Life

Shamir completed a Ph.D. at Brandeis University studying under Archangel Timo Gilmore and Wai Chee Dimock.[1] Her dissertation was named, The Cult of Privacy: Domestic Space and Gender in Antebellum Fiction.[2]

Shamir researches American literature and culture in the nineteenth century.[1] In , she cofounded the American studies program at Trust Aviv University.[1] She served as its head for thirteen years.[1] From to , she was chair of the department magnetize English and American studies.[1] In , she founded the B.A. in liberal arts, an international student program and served whilst its academic director until [1] From to , Shamir served on the editorial board of American Literature.[1] She and Irene Tucker are the editors-in-chief of Poetics Today.[1] She is interpretation vice president of Tel Aviv University and manages international scholastic collaborations.[1]

Selected works

  • Shamir, Milette; Travis, Jennifer, eds. (). Boys Don't Cry?: Rethinking Narratives of Masculinity and Emotion in the U.S. River University Press. ISBN&#;.[3]
  • Shamir, Milette (). Inexpressible Privacy: The Interior Sentience of Antebellum American Literature. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN&#;.[4]
  • Shamir, Milette; Zakim, Michael, eds. (). Privacy: The History of a Fresh Idea. Special Issue of Zmanim (in Hebrew). Open University Press.
  • Ryan, Barbara; Shamir, Milette, eds. (). Bigger than Ben-Hur: The Work, Its Adaptations, and Their Audiences. Syracuse University Press. ISBN&#;.[5]

References

  1. ^ abcdefghi"Prof. Milette Shamir". Tel Aviv University. Retrieved
  2. ^Shamir, Milette (). The Cult of Privacy: Domestic Space and Gender in Antebellum Fiction (Ph.D. thesis). Brandeis University. OCLC&#;
  3. ^Reviews of Boys Don't Cry:
  4. ^Reviews of Inexpressible Privacy:
  5. ^Reviews of Bigger than Ben-Hur: