Fellowship / Fellows

Elizabeth Maddock Dillon

  • 2022–2023
  • Humanities
  • Evelyn Green Davis Fellow
  • Northeastern University
Elizabeth Dillon
Photo by Lou Jones

This information is accurate as of the fellowship year indicated for each fellow.

Elizabeth Maddock Dillon is a distinguished professor of English at Northeastern University and the founding codirector of the NULab for Maps, Texts, and Networks. She teaches in the fields of early American and Atlantic world literary studies, literature and social justice, theatre studies, gender studies, and digital humanities.  

At Harvard Radcliffe Institute, Dillon is completing a book titled “Gender and Racial Capitalism: Atlantic Geographies of Sexual and Social Reproduction.” This work explores the forms of racialized labor, property ownership, and inheritance that shaped plantation culture in the early Caribbean and laid the groundwork for structures of gender and race that inform Western modernity.  

Dillon has earned degrees from Brown University (AB), and the University of California, Berkeley (MA and PhD). She is the author of New World Drama: The Performative Commons in the Atlantic World, 1649–1849 (Duke University Press, 2014), which received the Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre History from the American Society of Theatre Research, and The Gender of Freedom: Fictions of Liberalism and the Literary Public Sphere (Stanford University Press, 2004), which won the Samuel and Ronnie Heyman Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Publication at Yale University. She has received fellowships and grants from the Advanced Research Collaborative at the CUNY Graduate Center, the American Antiquarian Society, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History, the Huntington Library, the John Carter Brown Library, and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Our 2023–2024 Fellows

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