jenee

Curriculum Vitae
Full Name
Jenée Wilde
First Name
Jenée
Last Name
Wilde
Pronouns
she/they
Affiliation
Instructor
Title
Senior Instructor of English
Additional Title
CSWS Dissemination Specialist
Phone
541-346-8033
Office
331 PLC
Office Hours
Fall 2024 Term: TR 10-1:30 am or by appt.
Departments
English
Affiliated Departments
Comics and Cartoon Studies
Teaching Level
Undergraduate
Interests
gender and sexuality studies, queer studies, science fiction, folklore, popular culture, creative nonfiction writing
Profile Section
CV Summary

Dr. Jenée Wilde has a PhD in English with a Folklore emphasis, a graduate certificate in Women's and Gender Studies, an MFA in Creative Nonfiction Writing, and a BA in English and Journalism. Her research areas include science fiction, gender and sexuality studies, queer theory, cultural studies, cinema studies, folklore, narrative studies, comics studies, and creative nonfiction writing. Her doctoral disseration, “Speculative Fictions, Bisexual Lives: Changing Frameworks of Sexual Desire,” investigates bisexuality in science fiction texts and fan communities to argue for a radical shift in how we conceive of sexual knowledge. As a Senior Instructor of English, Dr. Wilde teaches courses in science fiction film, literature, and comics as well as research writing and advanced composition. Dr. Wilde is past co-chair for the English Diversity Committee and coordinated the CSWS Inclusive Pedagogies Research Interest Group for five years. As a journalist, Dr. Wilde wrote news and feature stories for newspapers and magazines for more than a decade. In addition to teaching, she currently works for the Center for the Study of Women in Society (CSWS) as their Research Dissemination Specialist, writing stories and producing Center publications as well as managing their communications team.

Publications

Experimental Critical Writing: A Hybrid Approach to Advanced Composition. Broadview Press (forthcoming 2026).

“The Transgender Look in Science Fiction Film and Television,” in The Handbook of Transgender Science Fiction, edited by Sabine Sharp and Doug Vakoch. Routledge (forthcoming). [peer reviewed]

Co-editor, Science and Culture: Readings for Writers, UO Libraries, 2023. [Oregon Open Education Resource]

“Science Fiction Paradox and the Transgender Look: How Time Travel Queers Spectatorship in Predestination.” Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media, vol. 60, 2021 [peer reviewed]

Co-editor, The Culture of Science: A Casebook for Writers, 2nd edition, UO Composition Program, 2019 [Oregon Open Education Resource]

“Gay, Queer or Dimensional? Modes of Reading Bisexuality on Torchwood,” Journal of Bisexuality, vol. 15, no. 3, 2015, pp. 414-434 [peer reviewed]

“Dimensional Sexuality: Exploring New Frameworks for Bisexual Desires,” Sexual and Relationship Therapy, vol. 29, no. 3, August 2014, pp. 320-38 [peer reviewed]

“Queer Matters in The Dark Night Returns, Or Why We Insist on a Sexual Identity for Batman,” in Riddle Me This Batman! Essays from the Universe of the Dark Knight, edited by Kevin K. Durand and Mary K. Leigh, McFarland, 2011, pp. 104-123

“Speculative Fictions, Bisexual Lives: Changing Frameworks of Sexual Desire.” Diss. University of Oregon, 2015.

Teaching

Upper-division Courses:

          WR 423 Advanced Composition: Experimental Critical Writing

 ENG 407 St. Louis Seminar: Experimental Critical Writing

          ENG 395 20th C. Literature: Science Fiction and Gender

          ENG 380 Film, Media, and History: The New Hollywood Blockbuster

          ENG 381 Film, Media, and Culture: “Otherness” in Speculative Film, TV, Comics

          WGS 361 Gender in Film and TV

Lower-division Courses:    

         ENG 142 Introduction to Science Fiction

            ENG 104 Introduction to Literature: Fiction

            WR 123 College Composition III

            WR 122z College Composition II

            WR 121z College Composition I

Statement

As a faculty member, I am dedicated to fostering equity and inclusion for our diverse students, faculty, and staff at the University of Oregon. As a queer-identified person with a disability, I recognize the importance of being a positive role model and providing accommodations and personalized support for disadvantaged students to succeed. Like many in the UO community, I face daily personal and professional challenges negotiating a wide variety of social and workplace environments on campus, and I have used these experiences to become a better mentor to and advocate for my students. By being open with my non-binary queer identity and challenges with disability and access, I hope that my students feel more comfortable coming to me about their own struggles, so I can provide better support and guidance to ensure their success in my classes as well as in their academic studies more broadly. I am deeply committed to accessible and inclusive course design and classrooms for our students and to DEI advocacy for our campus community.

 

Updated

Member for

9 years 6 months