Recent Essays
Theoretical Essays
1. “Literature as a Human Universal,” in Grenzen
der Literatur: Zu Begriff und Phänomen des Literarischen, edited by Fotis
Jannidis, Gerhard Lauer, and Simone Winko (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2009): 142-60.
2. “Three Scenarios for Literary Darwinism,” New Literary History 41 (2010): 53-67.
(Reprinted in Reading Human Nature, with expurgated passages restored. )
3. "Imagining Human Nature," in Evolution,
Literature, and Film: A Reader, edited by Brian Boyd, Joseph Carroll,
and Jonathan Gottschall (New York: Columbia University Press, 2010): 211-18.
4. “The Adaptive Function of the Arts: Alternative Evolutionary Hypotheses,” in Literature und Evolution, edited by Carsten Gansel and Dirk Vanderbeke (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2012): 50-63.
5. “The Truth about Fiction: Biological Reality and Imaginary Lives,” Style 46.2 (2012): 129-60.
6. “Teaching Literary
Darwinism,” Style 47.2 (2013): 206-38.
Interpretive
Essays
1. “Aestheticism, Homoeroticism, and Christian Guilt
in The Picture of Dorian Gray: A Darwinian Critique,” Philosophy and
Literature 29 (2005): 286-304. (Reprinted in Reading Human Nature and in Twentieth-Century
Literary Criticism, vol. 272, Gale Group.)
2. “The Cuckoo’s History: Human Nature in Wuthering
Heights,” Philosophy and Literature 32 (2008): 241-57. (Reprinted in
Reading Human Nature)
3. “Intentional
Meaning in Hamlet: An Evolutionary
Perspective,” Style 44 (2010):
230-60. (Reprinted in Reading Human
Nature)
4. “The Extremes of Conflict in Literature: Violence, Homicide, and War,”
in The Oxford Handbook of Violence,
Homicide, and War, edited by Todd Shackelford (New York: Oxford University
Press, 2012): 413-34.
5. “An Evolutionary Perspective on King Lear,” in Critical Insights: Family, edited by John Knapp (Ipswich, MA: EBSCO, 2012): 83-103.
6. "Meaning and Effect in Fiction: A Model of Interpretation Illustrated with a Reading of ‘Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge,’” Style 46.3 (2012): 297-316.
7. “Correcting for The Corrections: A Darwinian Critique of a Foucauldian Novel,” Style 47.1 (2013): 87-118.
8. “Violence in Literature: An
Evolutionary Perspective,” in Evolution
of Violence, edited by Todd K. Shackelford and Ranald D. Hansen (New York: Springer,
2013) 33-52.
Essay Reviews
1. “Human Life History and Gene-Culture Co-Evolution: An Emerging Paradigm,” a review of Nicholas Wade’s Before the Dawn: Recovering the Lost History of Our Ancestors, Richard Wrangham’s Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human, and Gregory Cochran’s and Henry Harpending’s The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution, in The Evolutionary Review: Art, Science, Culture 2 (2011): 23-37.
2. “Dutton, Davies,
and Imaginative Virtual Worlds: The Current State of Evolutionary Aesthetics,”
a review of Denis Dutton’s The Art
Instinct: Beauty, Pleasure, and Human Evolution and Stephen Davies’s The
Artful Species: Aesthetics, Art, and Evolution, in Aisthesis 6.2 (2013): 81-93.
Historical Essays
1. “The Historical Position of Literary Darwinism,” Forbes,
February 5, 2009.
2. “The Science Wars in a Long View: Putting the
Human in Its Place,” in Interdisciplinary Essays on Darwinism in Hispanic
Literature and Film: The Intersection of Science and the Humanities, edited
by Jerry Hoeg and Kevin S. Larsen (Lewiston, NY: Edward Mellen Press, 2009):
3. “A Darwinian Revolution in the Humanities,” Politics and Culture 2010, issue 1: http://www.politicsandculture.org/2010/04/28/contents-2/ .
Personal Essays
1. Interview with David DiSalvo, Neuronarrative,
http://neuronarrative.wordpress.com/, posted February 27, 2009.
2. “Denis
Dutton, Universal Connoisseur.” Chronicle
of Higher Education, January 24, 2011, B 20.