Assistant Professor of English &
African American and Africana Studies
University of Kentucky

Regina D. Hamilton Ph.D.

About

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Extended Office Hours Podcast

Extended Office Hours is a podcast created by Regina Hamilton and produced by David Cole in collaboration with UK Center for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching (CELT).

Listen to this episode from CELT Podcast Network on Spotify. Regina sits down with Dr. Nicole Breazeale from Community & Leadership Development to discuss how her early research interests and passion for the marriage of cultural justice and agriculture directed her to working within the College of Agriculture, pursuing the globalization in the field.

Regina sits down with Colleen Barrett, the rare books librarian at UK's Special Collections Research Center. Colleen operates as a faculty librarian, overseeing her section of Special Collections while simultaneously teaching within UK's larger ecosystem. Colleen talks about her early desire to follow happiness and how that lead her to learning about the way books are made.

Regina sits down with Dr. Jack Gieseking to discuss how a wayward love of writing brought him from an undergraduate study in geography to a focus on psychoanalysis and, ultimately, a career combining the fascinations of culture, gender, and race in regard to space.

Regina sits down with Dr. Pearl James from English to discuss how her engagement with reading as an escape directed her toward a storied career in academia. Dr. James digs into the inspiration she found in early feminist criticism of the popular literary canon.

Regina sits down with Dr. Corey Baker from Computer Science to talk about how his youthful engagement with tinkering turned into a career in teaching. Dr. Baker explores his past and the impact of guiding voices that encouraged him to pursue his Ph.D.

Dr. Regina Hamilton-Townsend is an Assistant Professor of English and affiliated faculty in the African American and Africana Studies Program and the Gender and Women Studies Department at the University of Kentucky. Dr. Hamilton-Townsend teaches primarily twentieth and twenty-first century African American literature, and she is the winner of both the University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences Outstanding Teaching Award (2022) and the University of Kentucky Provost Outstanding Teaching Award (2022). She received her doctorate from Rutgers University-New Brunswick in the English department, a master's degree from Georgetown University's department of English, and her bachelor's degree from Duke University in English. Her work on twentieth and twenty-first century Black speculative fiction, representations of race in video games, and the racial politics of narrative world-building in games has been published in the Journal of Games Criticism and The Black Scholar, and she has a forthcoming chapter in the edited collection She Dreams of Afrofutures: Speculative Black Girlhoods. She is currently completing a book manuscript titled Afrofutures and the American Nation, in which she analyzes the speculative literary devices contemporary Black authors use to remove the American nation as an obstacle to Black futurity and freedom.

Research Interests: Twentieth and twenty-first century African American literature, representations of race in video games, the racial politics of narrative world-building in games, Caribbean literature, postcolonial literature, Black feminist theory, Women’s and Gender studies


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