Kelly Marsh(B.A. Dartmouth College, M.A. and Ph.D. Penn State University) teaches courses on the twentieth-century British and Irish novel, twentieth-century Irish literature, contemporary literature, women’s literature, literature and film, and others. Her research on nineteenth- and twentieth-century fiction includes articles on works by Jane Austen (Narrative), Charlotte Brontë (South Atlantic Review), Mary McCarthy (Studies in the Novel), Helen Fielding (College Literature), and Roddy Doyle (Critique). Her current book project is a narratological approach to novels of motherless daughters from Austen, Brontë, and Dickens through Elizabeth Bowen and Edith Wharton to Alice Walker, Arundhati Roy, and others.

