Scott Henkel

HenkelAssociate Professor of English, Director of Wyoming Institute for Humanities Research

Hoyt 241, scott.henkel@uwyo.edu

Biography

Dr. Scott Henkel is the director of the Wyoming Institute for Humanities Research, the Wyoming Excellence Chair in the Humanities, and associate professor in the departments of English and African American and Diaspora Studies at the University of Wyoming. He is the author of Direct Democracy: Collective Power, the Swarm, and the Literatures of the Americas, which won a C. L. R. James Award for Best Published Book for Academic or General Audiences from the Working-Class Studies Association in 2018. Dr. Henkel shared his story on the Wyoming Humanities "What's Your Why?" podcast.

Education

Ph.D., Michigan State University

M.A., Ohio University

B.A., Western Michigan University

Recent and Upcoming Courses

Senior Seminar: A Better World is Possible

Slavery and Resistance in the Americas

Democracy and the Literatures of the Americas

The Literature of Equality

Banned Books and Stories Not Told

Selected Publications/Awards

Extraordinary Merit in Research Award from the College of Arts and Sciences (2017)

Henkel, Scott. After the General Strike: Democracy and Labor Resistance in the Long 19th Century. Monograph in progress.

Henkel, Scott. Direct Democracy: Collective Power, the Swarm, and the Literatures of the Americas. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2017. Published in the Caribbean Studies Series. Winner of the C. L. R. James Award for Best Published Book for Academic or General Audiences from the Working Class Studies Association (2018)

Henkel, Scott and Vanessa Fonseca. “Fearless Speech and the Discourse of Civility in Salt of the Earth.” Chiricú Journal: Latino/a Literatures, Arts, and Cultures. 1.1 (Fall 2016): 19-38.

Henkel, Scott. “The Advantages of Leaderlessness” What Comes After Occupy?: The Regional Politics of Resistance. Ed. Todd Comer. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Press, 2015. 22-41.

Henkel was selected by the Wyoming Institute for Humanities Research to be the university’s junior faculty nominee to the National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend Fellowship competition. His project is titled “Democracy’s Colleges: The Early History of the Public Humanities.”

To learn more about Scott’s publications, please see his full CV.

 
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