Dr. Kathleen Verduin

Professor of English
616.395.7609verduin@hope.edu
Profile photo of Dr. Kathleen Verduin

Dr. Kathleen Verduin started teaching at Hope in 1978, was tenured in 1985 and became a full professor in 1991. She teaches a range of courses: American literature and modern fiction, both surveys of the European literary classics and Modern English Grammar.

Kathleen worked with her husband, Leslie J. Workman, from 1982 until his death in 2001, to establish medievalism — that is, the post-medieval idea and influence of the Middle Ages —as a recognized area of academic investigation. Together, they established the book series Studies in Medievalism and the annual International Conference on Medievalism. They also organized two four-week summer programs on medievalism, held at the University of York, UK, in 1996 and 1998.

Kathleen has published scholarly articles on American literature and a range of modern writers, especially John Updike. Her continuing project is on the interest in Dante shown by American literary figures from George Ticknor to Ernest Hemingway.

AREAS OF INTEREST

  • American literature, seventeenth century to present
  • Modern fiction
  • Dante
  • Medievalism

EDUCATION

  • Ph.D., English, Indiana University, 1980
  • M.A., English and American literature, The George Washington University, 1969
  • B.A., English, TV, 1965

SELECTED HONORS, EDITORIAL POSITIONS & PRESENTATIONS 

  • Executive producer, A. J. Muste: Radical for Peace, documentary film by David Schock, 2019
  • Invited speaker, Modern Languages Association Convention, 2018
  • Plenary speaker, International Conference on Medievalism, 2014
  • Presenter, Dante in the Nineteenth Century conference at University of York, 2008
  • Editor of two memorial collections: A. James Prins: A Life in Literature, 2007, and True Things: The Writings of R. Dirk Jellema, 1996
  • Co-editor, Studies in Medievalism, 1992-1999

Selected publications 

  • “Living Voices: Letters, Language, and the Dante Studies of George Ticknor,” Massachusetts Historical Review, 2018
  • “Gestures of Reflection,” The John Updike Review, 2015
  • “Dante, Emerson, and American Nationalism,” in Dante in the Long Nineteenth Century, ed. A. Audeh N. Havely, Oxford University Press, 2012
  • “Bread of Angels: Dante Studies and the Moral Vision of Charles Eliot Norton,” Dante Studies, 2011
  • “Imprinting Mortality: Updike Reading Books,” Modern Language Quarterly, 2010
  • “Grace of Action: Dante in the Life of Longfellow,” Dante Studies, 2010
  • “The Founding and the Founder: Medievalism and the Legacy of Leslie J. Workman,” Studies in Medievalism, 2009
  • “Updike, Mythologized Sexuality, and Women,” in the Cambridge Companion to John Updike, ed. Stacey Olster, Cambridge University Press, 2006
  • “Dante's Inferno, Jonathan Edwards, and New England Calvinism,” Dante Studies, 2005
  • “Edith Wharton, Adultery, and the Reception of Francesca da Rimini,” Dante Studies, 2004
  • “Medievalism,” Dictionary of the Middle Ages Supplement, ed. William Chester Jordan, Gale, 2004
  • “’Why Do You Rend Me?’ Dante and the Pain of James Russell Lowell,” in Dante Beyond Borders, ed. Nick Havely, Legenda, 2024

Outside hope

Kathleen is a a member of the Sanctuary Choir at Third Reformed Church. For several years she assisted as a reader at the Ottawa County Juvenile Detention Center. She also has a background in journalism.

Profile photo of Dr. Kathleen Verduin
Dr. Kathleen Verduin

Phone Number616.395.7609

Lubbers Hall-Room 316 126 East 10th Street Holland, MI 49423-3516
Lubbers Hall-Room 316 126 East 10th Street Holland MI 49423-3516