Assistant Professor of 19th-century Global Anglophone Literature, Tenure Track
Emory University
About this role
An Assistant Professor position in 19th-century Global Anglophone Literature at Oxford College of Emory University, focusing on teaching and research in areas such as race and empire, diaspora, environmental studies, and transnational feminisms.
Skills
About Emory University
emory.eduEmory University is a private research university based in Atlanta, Georgia, with a historic campus in Oxford and a broad, global footprint. It offers a wide range of undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs across fields such as arts and sciences, business, medicine, public health, and theology. The university is known for its robust research enterprise and its affiliated hospitals and institutes that support advanced patient care and scientific discovery, all guided by a mission to serve humanity. Emory emphasizes interdisciplinary collaboration, global engagement, and a commitment to education, innovation, and community service.
About Emory University
Headquarters
San Francisco, CA
Company Size
201-500 employees
Founded
2018
Industry
Technology
Glassdoor Rating
4.2 / 5
Leadership Team
Sarah Johnson
Chief Executive Officer
Michael Chen
Chief Technology Officer
Emily Williams
VP of Engineering
David Rodriguez
VP of Product
Jessica Thompson
Chief Financial Officer
Andrew Park
VP of Sales
Unlock Company Insights
View leadership team, funding history,
and employee contacts for Emory University.
More jobs at Emory University
Similar Jobs
Assistant Professor (tenure-track) in German and Comparative Literature
Tulane University
Tenure-Track: Assistant Professor- Latino/a Literature and Culture
Texas A&M University
English Tenure-Track Assistant Professor Position in Pre-1900 American Literature
wooster
Visiting Assistant Teaching Professor of Russian Studies
Carnegie Mellon University
Visiting Assistant Professor of English (Transatlantic Literature)
Knox College
Tenure-Track: Assistant Professor (Asian American Literature and Culture)
Texas A&M University