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Bainard Cowan, PhD

Bainard Cowan, PhD

Professor of Literature, Louise Cowan Chair

Email: bcowan@udallas.edu

Office: Anselm #219

Office Hours: MW 1:30 - 3:00 p.m. or by Appointment

Biography

Bainard Cowan joined the Թ faculty as the Cowan Chair in 2009. Animating his teaching, writing and academic projects have been the great forms of the poetic imagination, whose deep unity he first encountered in Թ’s literary tradition course sequence. Since then, he has sought to bring that priceless realization to as many others as possible.

Prior to the Թ, Cowan taught American and world literature at Louisiana State University for over thirty years. There, he co-founded the Comparative Literature Doctoral Program and co-developed a classic-core curriculum in the honors college. From 1992 to 1997 he directed a series of summer institutes on “poetics of the Americas” for some 100 Louisiana college teachers, supported by substantial grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Louisiana Board of Regents. In 1984-85 he was LSU’s first visiting professor at the Université de Provence in Aix-en-Provence, and from 2006 to 2008 he was the D’Alzon visiting professor at Assumption College.

Also a fellow of the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture, he has given approximately 50 special lectures to audiences there and at colleges across the United States. 

  • B.A. in English Literature, Թ, 1970
  • Fulbright-supported study, Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich, 1970-71
  • PhD in Comparative Literature, Yale University, 1975
  • Louisiana State University: Instructor to Professor, 1975-2008
  • Թ: Cowan Chair, Professor of Literature, 2009-present
  • Visiting positions:
    • University of Provence, Aix-en-Provence, 1984-85
    • Թ, 2001
    • D’Alzon Visiting Professor, Assumption College, 2006-2008
  • Undergraduate Courses: Literary Tradition 1; The European Novel; Epic Traditions of India, China, Japan
  • Undergraduate/Graduate Cross-Listed Courses: Russian Novel; Literary Criticism and Theory; Melville and Hawthorne
  • Graduate Courses: The Ancient World; History & Theory of the Novel; (with Dr. Robert Wood) Hegel, Nietzsche, Dostoevsky
  • The novel as a form, especially in America, Russia, France, and Germany
  • The Western epic from Homer to Dante
  • Ancient and modern critical thought
  • Book: Exiled Waters: “Moby-Dick” and the Crisis of Allegory (LSU Press, 1982)
  • Selected edited books:
    • Poetics of the Americas (LSU Press, 1997)
    • Gained Horizons: Regensburg and the Enlargement of Reason (St. Augustine’s Press, 2011)
    • The Prospect of Lyric (Dallas Institute Publications, 2012)
  • Selected articles:
    • “Walter Benjamin’s Theory of Allegory,” New German Critique No. 22 (1981): 109-22
    • “Dante’s ‘Novella Tebe,’” Comparatist 6 (1982): 16-23
    • “Moby Dick as the Preservation of Reading,” Approaches to Teaching Melville’s “Moby-Dick,” ed. Martin Bickman (MLA, 1985), 51-55
    • “America Between Two Myths: Moby-Dick as Epic,” The Epic Cosmos, ed. Larry Allums (Dallas Institute Publications, 1992), 219-248
    • “Tarrying with the Tragic: Hegel and His Critics,” The Tragic Abyss, ed. Glenn Arbery (Dallas Institute Pubns., 2004), 39-58
    • “Through the Unlit Door of Earth: Sophocles’ Transformation of Tragedy,” The Tragic Abyss 145-164
    • “Reason and Revelation in Dante’s Divine Comedy,” Ramify 5.2 (2016): 81-88