Gert Buelens

BIOGRAPHY

Gert Buelens is a professor of English at Ghent University. He holds degrees from the University of Sussex (DPhil, 1990) and Ghent (Lic. English and German, 1984; Teacher training, 1985), and was a visiting scholar at Harvard in 1996-1997.

Gert BuelensHe has published several books on Henry James, multi-ethnic American literature, and cultural theory, and is the author of some sixty essays in collections and journals, the latter including American Studies in Scandinavia, Henry James Review, Modern Philology, Texas Studies in Literature and Language, and PMLA. He serves or has served on several editorial boards, including Canadian Review of American Studies, Comparative American Studies, E-REA, Henry James E-Journal, Henry James Review, MELUS, Open Humanities Press, and Queeries: International Journal of Queer Studies. He is a past president (2005) of the Henry James Society and is vice-president of the Belgian Luxembourg American Studies Association.

His current research in the area of literature and trauma mainly engages with the question of how the catastrophes that strike day in, day out, whether they form the legacy of well-recognized repressive political systems like Nazism (for instance in Michael Chabon’s The Final Solution) or Apartheid (J.M. Coetzee), or amount to less tangible forms of un-freedom (as in Herman Melville’s Bartleby), make it impossible to achieve more than a very limited ability to act for change, a point he explores in the context of Judith Butler’s theory of the inevitably citational basis of social agency (we are always constrained by something that lies outside our control but this something is also the motor of our ability to act). From a more strictly literary perspective, he is interested in how the ethical effect of literature must be situated in what he sees as the reader’s syntagmatic participation in the text rather than paradigmatic identification with protagonists.

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

  • Buelens, Gert, and Dominiek Hoens. “‘Above and beneath Classification’: Bartleby, Life & Times of Michael K, and Syntagmatic Participation.” Accepted, Diacritics.
  • De Baerdemaeker, Ruben, Marysa Demoor, and Gert Buelens. “notproud.com: Giving an Account of Oneself in the Cyber-Era.” Accepted, Textual Practice.
  • Craps, Stef, and Gert Buelens, eds. Postcolonial Trauma Novels. Spec. double issue of Studies in the Novel 40.1-2 (Spring-Summer 2008). 237 pp.
  • Craps, Stef, and Gert Buelens. "Introduction: Postcolonial Trauma Novels." Studies in the Novel 40.1-2 (Spring-Summer 2008): 1-12.
  • Hoens, Dominiek, Sigi Jöttkandt, and Gert Buelens, eds. The Catastrophic Imperative: Subjectivity, Time and Memory in Contemporary Thought. London: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2008. [forthcoming]
  • Buelens, Gert. “Disaster, Citationality and the Limits of Responsibility in Coetzee’s Disgrace.” The Catastrophic Imperative: Subjectivity, Time and Memory in Contemporary Thought. Ed. Dominiek Hoens, Sigi Jöttkandt, and Gert Buelens. London: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2008. [forthcoming]
  • Buelens, Gert. Henry James and the "Aliens": In Possession of the American Scene. Amsterdam Monographs in American Studies. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi, 2002. Awarded the American Studies Network Book Prize 2004.

CONTACT

English Department / Room D 0.14
Ghent University
Rozier 44
B-9000 Ghent
Belgium
Tel.: +32 (0)9 264 37 00
Mobile: +32 (0)472 75 23 12
Fax: +32 (0)9 264 41 84
Email:
Web: http://www.english.ugent.be/gertbuelens