English at Mount Holyoke Mount Holyoke College home English home

Welcome

Major

Minor

Prizes

Profiles

Events Calendar

Glascock Poetry Contest

English Student Board

Contact

Links

Course Catalogue

floral

Leah Glasser

Dean of First-Year Studies & Lecturer in English
309 Mary Lyon Hall
D9 Torrey Hall
(413) 538-2855
(413) 538-2177
lglasser@mtholyoke.edu

Education
Ph.D. Brown University, 1982
M.A. SUNY at Stony Brook, 1973
B.A. SUNY at Stony Brook, 1972

American literature, nineteenth through early twentieth centuries; women writers; nature writing; women's autobiography and biography

glasser

Leah Blatt Glasser teaches courses in nineteenth- through twentieth-century American literature, women writers, biography, autobiography, and creative and expository writing. Glasser's writing seminars become workshops in which students read each other's works and learn to develop an ear for effective strategies in analytical, persuasive, and descriptive writing. She also enjoys teaching seminars in which students actively participate in discussion about literature in connection to other disciplines, such as environmental studies, women's studies, and American history. Glasser's seminars often focus on works by or about women. She encourages students to understand the context for the history of women's lives and works and to consider its relationship to their own experiences as women of the twenty-first century.

Glasser is the author of In a Closet Hidden: The Life and Work of Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, a literary biography of the late nineteenth-century New England writer whose short stories and novels focused on the psychology of women's lives at the turn of the century. The book, which establishes Freeman's significance in the field of American literature and women's studies, was described in American Literature as an "eloquent testimony to Freeman's self-division . . . illuminating the darker corners of her experience and bringing the complexities of Freeman's feminism to light."

Glasser is currently working on a new manuscript that will build on a course she teaches on nature and gender in American literature. The new work, "A Landscape of One's Own: Nature Writing and Women's Autobiography," will study women who chose to tell the stories of their lives in the context of the islands, forests, prairies, and deserts of the United States. Glasser is also preparing a new course on the theme of gender and war in American literature.

In addition to her scholarly and teaching endeavors, Glasser works closely with first-year students and their faculty advisers as the Dean of First-Year Studies. In this capacity, Glasser focuses on listening well and offering advisees academic guidance as they shape their education at Mount Holyoke.

"American Literature and Korean Landscape," Office of Communications, August 16, 2007
"Glasser Writes about Author's 'Hidden' Life," College Street Journal, October 11, 1996

Selected Publications
In a Closet Hidden: The Life and Work of Mary E. Wilkins Freeman (University of Massachusetts Press, 1996).

"She Is the One You Call Sister: Discovering Mary E. Wilkins Freeman," in Between Women
ed. Ascher, DeSalvo, and Ruddick (Routledge Press, 1994).

Contributing Editor to The Heath Anthology of American Literature and Teaching Guidelines, Heath, 1997.

Teaching Schedule 2007-2008
English 373f Nature and Gender
English 201s Introduction to Creative Writing

This page created by the English Department at Mount Holyoke and maintained by Maryanne Alos.
Copyright © 2007 Mount Holyoke College.