Laura L. Runge
Professor of English
CONTACT
Office: CPR 358-C
Phone: 813-974-9496
Email
EDUCATION
- Ph.D., Emory University, English with certificate in Womenâs Studies
- MA Emory University, English
- BA University of Rochester, English and Womenâs Studies
BIO
For over 30 years I have been feminist scholar of Restoration and Eighteenth-Century British Literature focusing on women writers, gender and language. I have been involved in literature and technology from the beginning of my work, and recently I published Digital Literary Analysis of the Works of Aphra Behn. My earlier research involved a span of writers from mid-seventeenth century through early nineteenth century. More recently I have focused on Aphra Behn and use the data I created for the book. I am working on Behn and Music, with several smaller essays moving toward a book. My December 2023 article ââBut First Letâs Have a Danceââ Music in Aphra Behnâs Plays,â Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Theatre Research, Volume 35 (Nov/Dec 2023): 27-51 won Honorable Mention for Annibel Jenkins Award in Theatre and Performance Studies 2025 (SEASECS).
I believe in open-access scholarship and try to make my research accessible through the ±«Óătv Libraries Digital Commons â Faculty Publications and other research sites.
I am also founding editor and continuing editor-in-chief for the online open-access journal . It publishes twice a year in scholarship, pedagogy, digital humanities, reviews and conversations.
I have directed nine dissertations to completion. My students have written dissertations mostly, but not exclusively, on eighteenth-century subjects including ecocritical readings of womenâs poetry, Behnâs The Rover in contemporary productions directed by women, food and womenâs travel writing, the animal-human continuum, animal speech in eighteenth-century literature, and animals in Florida literature. I have served on over thirty PhD committees and twenty-five masters degree committees.
REcent PUBLICATIONS
- Open Accss with data hosted by the ±«Óătv Scholar Commons: DOI: https://doi.org/10.5038/qla.data
- ââEłŸ and the Apostrophe of Elision in Aphra Behnâs Prose.â In Elizabeth Bonapfel; Mark Faulkner; John Lennard; Jeffrey Gutierrez (eds.) A History of Punctuation in English Literature. Cambridge: CUP, forthcoming.
- ââBut First Letâs Have a Danceââ Music in Aphra Behnâs Plays,â Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Theatre Research, Volume 35 (Nov/Dec 2023): 27-51. Honorable Mention for Annibel Jenkins Award in Theatre and Performance Studies 2025 (SEASECS)
- , co-edited with Jessica L. Cook, University of Delaware Press, 2019
- âAusten and Computation 2.0,â Texas Studies in Literature and Language, special issue: Whatâs Next for Jane Austen, ed. Janine Barchas and Devoney Looser, December 2019: 397-415.