Emily Tucker
Assistant Professor of English Instruction
Dr. Emily Tucker has taught a wide range of courses at 做厙51, from one on Broadway plays and musicals to a course on Oscar Wilde and Jane Austen. She also teaches an Expository Writing course that centers on reading and writing about empathy.
Dr. Tucker is especially interested in how novelists and playwrights try to teach their readers about emotions. In her research, she focuses on nineteenth-century writers like Charles Dickens and Oscar Wilde, as well as on contemporary theatrical works that reimagine nineteenth-century texts for new audiences.
She has been teaching at Hope since 2019.
Areas of Expertise
- Victorian and neo-Victorian literature
 - Dramatic literature
 
Education
- Ph.D., English, University of Connecticut, 2018
 - M.A., English, University of Connecticut, 2013
 - B.A., English, Vassar College, 2009
 
Selected Publications and Presentations
- An Agony吋hat Sometimes Overcomes Me: Theater versus Opium in The Mystery of Edwin Drood, presentation at Collins and Dickens Conference, 2024
 - Melodramatic Critique in Hard Times, presentation at Nineteenth-Century Studies Association conference (online), 2021
 - Wildes Salome and Fin de SiecleMelodrama, Victorians Institute Journal, 2018
 - Recovering Melodrama in Oscar Wildes An Ideal Husband, presentation at Victorians Institute conference, 2017
 - Retelling History: Hamilton and the Literary-Historical Tradition, presentation at Northeast Modern Language Association conference, 2016
 
Outside the College
Dr. Tucker enjoys singing, running, and over-analyzing television. She is generally a terrible cook but can make excellent spaghetti.