ºÚ¹Ï³ÔÁÏÍø

ºÚ¹Ï³ÔÁÏÍø cookie policy

We use cookies on reading.ac.uk to improve your experience, monitor site performance and tailor content to you.

Read our cookie policy to find out how to manage your cookie settings.

Dr Cato Marks

Dr Cato Marks portrait

Areas of interest

My research interests range from Romantic, Anglophone-Caribbean, to African American literature. 

My work in Romanticism focuses on the interface between radical and dissenting culture, and literary texts in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In addition, I explore the ways writers like William Blake respond to and interpret artistically the political legacy of John Milton. I also examine the writings of Hannah More, situating her work within the broader context of loyalist responses to radical thought in the 1790s. I have published academic articles on Blake and More. I am currently working on a chapter on Blake’s The Four Zoas.

In terms of Anglophone Caribbean literature, I examine the ways authors explore the legacy of colourism/shadism through Caribbean Gothic tropes. I have published on the Jamaican author Marlon James. 

Other research interests include contemporary fiction. I’m currently working on the African American writer Colson Whitehead; and I work on Black British fiction.

Teaching

I teach a range of modules. These include: ‘Prose: Writing Identities’ (EN1PWI); ‘Poetry in ·¡²Ô²µ±ô¾±²õ³ó’ (EN1PE); ‘Contemporary Fiction’ (EN2CF); ‘Enlightenment, Revolution and Romanticism’ (EN2ERR); and ‘Critical Thinking’ (EN2CT). I convene and teach ‘British Black and Asian Voices’ (EN3BAV).

Background

I completed an MPhil in British Romanticism at the University of Oxford, and a PhD at Queen Mary, University of London. My PhD is entitled: ‘Forging a Political Aesthetic: The influence of John Milton’s Political Prose on the Later Prophetic Poems of William Blake’ (2008). Before coming to the ºÚ¹Ï³ÔÁÏÍø, I taught at Oxford Brookes University, the University of the West of England (UWE), Middlesex University, the Open University, Kingston University, and Queen Mary (University of London)

Publications

Loading your publications ...