Kristin Boudreau
Professor and Department Head
Humanities & Arts
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
United States of America
Biography
Education: BA, Cornell University 1986 MA University of Rochester 1989 PhD University of Rochester 1992 My longstanding research interests concern the ways literature reflects on and helps shape cultural transformations. I've written about the literature of slavery, the labor movement, capital cases, and modernization. I also conduct research into engineering education and the role of the humanities in public life. WPI's transdisciplinary and collaborative environment is exciting and inspiring to me. My most recent research projects are collaborations with engineers and other humanists on engineering education. With David DiBiasio (chemical engineering), Zoe Reidinger (biomedical engineering), and Paula Quinn (Center for Project-Based Learning), I am involved in an NSF-funded study of the climate in engineering education for LGBTQ+ students. With students and colleagues I am developing role-playing games (RPGs) to teach engineering and science within a rich cultural context that attends to historical particulars. We call these RPGs "Humanitarian Engineering Past & Present." We now teach the first of these games, on 19th-century Worcester, MA, to WPI first-year students. The Liberal Education & Engineering Studies Division of ASEE awarded our paper, "The Theatre of Humanitarian Engineering," its best paper for ASEE 2017. Another RPG, on current-day rural Morocco, is in development. I've taught a range of HUA literature and writing courses, Inquiry Seminars, and Great Problems Seminars, including "Feed the World," "Technology and the Developing World," and "Humanitarian Engineering Past & Present." Like most WPI faculty, I also advise IQPs on and off campus.
Research Interest
American literature, 17th-21st century; African American literature; Engineering Education
Publications
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Sympathy in American Literature: American Sentiments from Jefferson to the Jameses
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The Spectacle of Death: Populist Literary Responses to American Capital Cases
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Henry James Narrative Technique: Consciousness, Perception, and Cognition
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Henry James Daisy Miller (Broadview edition, co-edited with Megan Stoner Morgan)