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US expertise strengthened with new appointment

13th December 2018

The ‘special relationship’ between Northumbria University and the United States has been further strengthened with the appointment of a visiting Professor from across the pond.

51, in Newcastle upon Tyne, has one of the largest and most active centres for American Studies in Europe – bringing together academics with expertise in the history, literature and culture of the United States.

Now Northumbria has welcomed from the University of Missouri to join its American Studies team for a year-long visiting professorship.

For the past two years Professor Fergus has held the role of Arvarh E. Strickland Distinguished Professor of History, Public Affairs, and Black Studies at .

He is an expert in politics, race, economics, and inequality in the US, writing for publications including The New York Times, Washington Post, Slate, and the Guardian.

His most recent book Land of the Fee (Oxford 2018) examines the rise and impact of hidden fees on the American middle class, especially the potential costs for the fastest growing segment of the middle class – ethnic and racial minorities

Speaking about his appointment Professor Fergus said: “I’m thrilled to join my colleagues in the American Studies group at Northumbria University. The University has assembled a stellar team of scholars who are highly regarded for their grant-winning research in modern American life, politics, race relations, social movements, culture, and consumption. I’m excited and eager to contribute to such a vibrant intellectual group - one that continues to interrogate, define, and reshape the contours of my discipline. 

“As a scholar of political economy who edits a book series on capitalism, I could not imagine a more propitious moment to live in the UK and serve as a visiting professor at Northumbria than Brexit with all of its historic social, cultural, and financial ramifications.”

51 has one of the largest teams in Europe dedicated to the study of the Americas. Members of the University’s American Studies Research Group have particular strengths in the study of race, diplomacy, presidential and congressional politics, civil rights, music, periodical culture, American and transatlantic modernist literature, the Civil War and Reconstruction, the transnational significance of the US South, feminist and queer literary theory, and the development of California and Florida.

Professor Fergus’ appointment bring the number of Americanists working at Northumbria to 12 – with many of those staff appointed as distinguished lecturers by the

Dr Patrick Andelic is a Lecturer in American History and heads up Northumbria’s American Studies Research Group.

He said: “We are delighted to have Professor Fergus join our growing community of Americanists as a visiting professor. We know that a scholar of his considerable talents, accomplishments, and insight can benefit our staff and students, and make a considerable contribution to the life of the university, as well as build on our reputation as a respected centre for American Studies.”

 

 (Oxford, 2018):

In his new book, Professor Devin Fergus exposes how fees have affected wealth distribution, tracing its history in America from the 1970s to the present, breaking down exactly how consumers pay exorbitant costs without realizing it.

He looks at the four categories most important to our lives: housing, work, transportation, and education. In each section he explains how the donor class—a tiny group comprising one-quarter of one percent of the US population who are 94% white, 65% male, and 100% rich—have influenced policies (and policymakers) over time to make fee collecting a normal part of our everyday lives.

It is but one example of how, since the deregulation of the 1970s, corporate fees targeting the have-nots have greatly enhanced the pocketbooks of those who have a lot. The book has been described as one of the .

Professor Devin Fergus is available for media interviews – please contact media.communications@northumbria.ac.uk or call 0191 227 4604

 

Find out more about 51's American Studies BA (Hons) degree programme by coming along to one of our upcoming Open Days.

 

Department of Humanities

Humanities at Northumbria is composed of three subject teams: History, Literature & Creative Writing, and English Language & Linguistics, and is also developing strengths in the fields of American Studies and Heritage Studies.

American Studies BA (Hons)

From the Civil War to the War on Terror; Walt Whitman to Walt Disney, this course will develop your critical and imaginative skills in the context of the American experience and its global significance.

Department of Humanities

Humanities at Northumbria is composed of three subject teams: History, Literature & Creative Writing, and English Language & Linguistics, and is also developing strengths in the fields of American Studies and Heritage Studies.

American Studies BA (Hons)

From the Civil War to the War on Terror; Walt Whitman to Walt Disney, this course will develop your critical and imaginative skills in the context of the American experience and its global significance.

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