Faculty Accomplishments

Mount Holyoke professors have won Guggenheim awards, NASA grants and Carnegie Fellowships.

They receive millions in funding from national foundations, leading to unique research opportunities for students.

They’re intense, passionate, innovative, determined and demanding. Explore their accomplishments here, read recent faculty news articles or search the faculty directory.

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Moskowitz, A. "Black Political Organizing and Radical Transcendentalism: David Walker and Margaret Fuller." Conversations, vol. 4, iss. 2, 2022, pp. 5-8.


Moskowitz, A. “Economic Imperception; or, Reading Capital on the Beach with Thoreau.” American Literary History, vol. 32, no. 2, 2020, pp. 221-242.


Moskowitz, A. “The Production of the Subject: Foucault, Marx, and the Ontology of the Market.” Polygraph: An International Journal of Culture & Politics, vol. 27, Feb. 2019, pp. 85-110.


Moskowitz, A. (2023) 1921 Prize in American Literature for “The Racial Economy of Perception: Reading Black Sociality in the Nineteenth Century.” NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction, vol. 56, no. 1, 2023, pp. 1-20.


Moskowitz, A. Clough Fellowship, The Clough Center for the Study of Constitutional Democracy at Boston College, 2018-2021.


Moskowitz, A. National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Fellowship, “Transcendentalism and Social Reform,” 2022.


Moskowitz, A. (2023) Invited Speaker, “Imperception,” Political Concepts: The Literature Edition, The Cogut Institute for the Humanities, Brown University. March 2023. 


 


Mrozik, S. (2020). Sri Lankan Buddhist nuns: Complicating the debate over ordination. Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion, 36 (1), 33-49.


Mueller, A. (2023). Blackness and whiteness in The Magic Flute: Reflections from Shakespeare studies. In Jessica Waldoff, ed., The Cambridge Companion to The Magic Flute (pp. 252-272). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108551328


Mueller, A. (2021). Roses Strewn Upon the Path: Rehearsing Familial Devotion in Late Eighteenth-Century German Songs for Parents and Children. Frontiers in Communication (Research Topic: "Songs and Signs: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Cultural Transmission and Inheritance in Human and Nonhuman Animals"). Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2021.705142