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Eleanor Ty is Professor of English at Laurier and specializes in novels, memoirs, films, and graphic narratives by contemporary writers. She has published twelve books: on graphic novel, on Canadian literature, cultural memory, Asian American and Asian Canadian writing, and 18th century British women novelists. Her chapters and articles engaged with questions of gender, identity, trauma, abjection, migration, youth, diaspora, and life writing. A recent volume, Beyond the Icon: Asian American Graphic Narratives (Ohio State UP, 2022) won the Comics Studies Society's 2022 Prize for Edited Book Collection.
Her book, Asianfail: Narratives of Disenchantment and the Model Minority (2017) looks at how a new generation of Asian Americans and Asian Canadians struggle with the expectations, work ethic and self-sacrifice of their parents. Rejecting an ethos obsessed with professional status and accruing money, the protagonists of recent narratives are disenchanted with their lives and seek fulfillment by prioritizing relationships, personal growth, and cultural success, questioning outmoded notions of the "model minority." It was awarded best adult non-fiction book for 2017 by APALA: Asian Pacific American Librarians Association.
Professor Ty was awarded a Fulbright Canada Visiting Research Chair for 2018-2019 at the Department of Asian American Studies, University of California Santa Barbara. She conducted research on contemporary Asian North American Literature and taught a course on Asian American Graphic novels in winter 2019.
Ty was named Laurier's University Research Professor in 2015. The recipient of four Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council research grants and two SSHRC conference grants, she has been a visiting professor at Universität Trier, Philipps-Universität Marburg and the University of Saarland, Saarbrücken in Germany.
In 2017 she served as Program Co-Chair for the Association for Asian American Studies (Portland 2017); has served as Academic Co-Convenor of Congress 2012; Chair of the Department of English and Film Studies from 2004-2009; Graduate Officer for the Department of English, 2000-2003; Women’s Studies Program Coordinator, 2000-2003; and President of the Canadian Association of Chairs of English from 2008-2009.
Ty's undergraduate courses include Literature and Crime, Life Writing and Digital Media, Transculturalism and 21st Century Anglophone Narratives, Contemporary British Novels, 18th Century Literature, The Novel After 1900, Asian Canadian Literature. Her graduate seminars include The Graphic Novel, Canadian Literary Pluralities, Asian American Narratives.
My recent research has focused on Asian Americans and Asian Canadians and the ways their narratives (novels, films, graphic narratives, memoirs) represent their diasporic identities. Some of the topics I have worked on include memory, invisibility, globalization, second-generation immigrants and failure. Before 2000, I worked on late 19th-century British women writers such as Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Hays, Amelia Opie, Elizabeth Inchbald and others. I looked at how these female authors used the sentimental novel to recast stereotypes of the feminine – the seduced woman, the passive wife, or the obedient daughter — and how their novels empower women. I have published 12 books to date (5 monographs and 7 edited volumes).
I have research assistantship opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students interested in contemporary ethnic American and Canadian literature and culture. In the past, I have hired student assistants to help me with organizing conferences, editing and proofreading book manuscripts, and compiling bibliographies. Contact me for more information.
I am willing to supervise graduate students in 20th-century and contemporary literature and culture, especially those focusing on questions of ethnicity, gender, race, life writing, graphic novel, memory and identity. In addition, 18th-century British literature, especially fiction by women, remains an area of interest for me.
Books Authored:
Books Edited:
Graduate:
The Graphic Novel (EN 648)
Canadian Literary Pluralities (EN 636)
Feminist Theory and Women’s Writing (EN 610)
Voices of the Diaspora: Contemporary Asian North American Writers (EN 641)
Revolutionary Feminism: Women Novelists of the 1790s (En 609)
Undergraduate:
Precarious Worlds: 21st Century British Fiction (EN 334)
Life Writing and Digital Media (EN 420A)
Literature and Crime (EN 111)
21st Century Anglophone Literature (EN 335)
18th-Century Literature: Strange Wonders (EN 388)
Globality in 21st Century Narratives (EN 460q)
Growing Up Canadian Narratives (AF 101Q)
The Monsters We Imagine (AF 101Y)
Enriched Literary Studies (EN 165)
Reading Fiction (EN 119)
English Literary Tradition II: Post 1660 (EN 246)
Women Novelists of the 1790s (EN 410f)
Asian Canadian Literature and Film (EN 460G)
Diasporic Cinema (FS 343R): Atom Egoyan, Deepa Mehta, Ang Lee
Literary Theory (EN 291)
Feminist Theory and Critical Practice: Fiction by Minority Women (EN 325)
Restoration and 18th-Century Literature (EN 355)
Women and Identity (WS 201)
18th and 19th Century Novel (EN 345)
Contact Info:
E: ety@wlu.ca
T: 548 889 4876
Office location: DAWB 3-130
Office hours:
Email for appointment.
Languages spoken: English, French, some Chinese, German, Filipino