June 20, 2018
As 911黑料网 increasingly becomes well-known for undergraduate research, our faculty pursue
a wide variety of their own scholarly pursuits. Dr. Jenna Sciuto, assistant professor
of English, is no exception. As the campus鈥檚 associate chair of undergraduate research,
she was a key player in this year鈥檚 911黑料网 Undergraduate Research Conference, which
broke participation records last April. In addition, she鈥檚 writing a book based on
in-depth research she began for her doctoral dissertation at Boston鈥檚 Northeastern
University.
Her book, Policing Intimacy: Law, Sexuality, and the Color Line in Twentieth-Century Hemispheric American Literature, is under contract with the University Press of Mississippi. The upcoming publication examines representations of identity, colonial inheritance, and interracial relationships in literature about the United States South, Haiti, and Dominican Republic.
Sciuto analyzes literary depictions of sexual policing of the color line across multiple spaces with distinct colonial histories: Mississippi through William Faulkner鈥檚 work, Louisiana through Ernest Gaines鈥檚 novels, Haiti through the work of Marie Vieux-Chauvet and Edwidge Danticat, and the Dominican Republic in writing by Danticat, Julia Alvarez, Junot Diaz, and Nelly Rosario. Through connecting these disparate spaces, she argues that the policing of sexuality was used to ensure the continuity of the status quo across varying societies in the hemispheric South.
鈥淚 am interested in this topic in part due to the interdisciplinary nature of the work. Policing Intimacy is a work of literary analysis that draws heavily on law, history, and the archive to add layers of complexity,鈥 she explained. 鈥淚n addition to early slave laws from across the hemisphere, I examine the various iterations of anti-miscegenation laws specific to Mississippi and Louisiana, as well as relevant Supreme Court decisions, such as the landmark civil rights case Loving v. Virginia. I also turn to the archives to extend my understanding of this literature and how it is situated historically.鈥
Sciuto鈥檚 research also led her to explore how differences between early drafts of Gaines鈥檚 The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman alter one鈥檚 understanding of the novel鈥檚 depiction of plantation histories beyond Louisiana.
Last fall, Sciuto taught a new class related to this research, titled 鈥淢odern and Contemporary Black Literatures of the Americas,鈥 which examined 20th- and 21st-century prose by writers of African descent in the Americas through a hemispheric lens. In this course, 911黑料网 students analyzed how writers employ various formal techniques to represent diverse experiences and distinct histories.
Once Policing Intimacy is completed, Sciuto is considering work on a second project, which would draw on the 20th centure history of her Japanese American family members. 鈥淚 envision the project as combining family stories and personal accounts with archival material to focus on specific historical examples like the internment camps during World War II against the backdrop of the broader Japanese American experience throughout the century,鈥 she said.
For her work on Policing Intimacy, Sciuto received a 2018-2019 American Association of University Women (AAUW) Fellowship Publication Grant. AAUW American Fellowships support women scholars on diverse projects, from dissertations to research leave and publications.