Chiara Cillerai

Chiara Cillerai, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Writing, Institute for Core Studies
First-Year Writing Program, Institute for Writing Studies
B.A. and M.A., The University of Florence, Italy, 1992
Ph.D., Rutgers University, 2007
cillerac@stjohns.edu

My scholarship is in Early American literature and culture, and my book project explores the connection between the rhetoric of cosmopolitanism and literary genres and how this is also reflected in the language that defines what America is. I recently completed an essay on the role of correspondence in late eighteenth-century American culture which will be published in Correspondences: Essays on the History, Theory, and Practice of U.S. Letters, 1770-1860 (Ashgate, forthcoming 2009).

What drew me to study the complexities, the richness and the contradictions of early American literary culture are the similarities with what this culture has become today. What I consider the most rewarding part of my research is the hands-on type of work I do in the archives as well as the interdisciplinary character of the work. I read and write about poetry, newspapers, letters, novels, and political pamphlets, to name a few. If variety and interdisciplinarity are essential components of my research, they are also essential components of how I teach my students in the writing courses here at St. John’s. Most of the writing projects that my students complete entail reading, talking and writing about a very diverse group of texts in different writing genres, and they are introduced to writing as an interdisciplinary task that entails composing as much as it entails conversation and connective thinking.


Chiara Cillerai