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David Pike Professor Literature

Contact
David Pike
(202) 885-2996 (Office)
CAS | Literature
Main Campus
By email appointment via Zoom only for Spring 2024.
Degrees
PhD, Comparative Literature, Columbia University
MA, French & Romance Philology, Columbia University
BA, Film, Literature & Critical Theory, Swarthmore College

Languages Spoken
French, Spanish, German, Italian (reading), Latin (reading)
Favorite Spot on Campus
My office and the tree and campus quad outside the window
Book Currently Reading
Mariana Enriquez, Our Share of Night; David Keplinger, Ice; Karen Pinkus, Subsurface; Perhat Tursun, The Backstreets
Bio
Professor Pike has taught in the Department of Literature since 1995. His most recent book is After the End: Cold War Culture and Apocalyptic Imaginations in the 21st Century, forthcoming from Manchester UP. He is the author of (Oxford UP, 2021), (U of Toronto P, 2012); (Cornell UP, 2007); (Cornell UP), shortlisted for the 2006 Modernist Studies Association book prize; (Cornell UP), recipient of the 1997 Gustave O. Arlt Award in the Humanities from the Council of Graduate Schools and a Choice Outstanding Academic Book for 1997; and articles on medieval literature, modernism, film, neo-Victorianism, subterranea, urban fantasy, global urban culture, slum imaginaries, and Paris and London. He is co-author of ; co-general editor of the ; and co-author, with Malini Ranganathan (SIS, AU) and Sapana Doshi (UC-Merced) of (Cornell UP, 2023).

In addition to urban culture and the underground, he teaches courses on European and Canadian cinema, film noir, the western, modernism, Dante, Roman literature, and the novel. From 1993 to 1995, Professor Pike was Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Society of Fellows in the Humanities at Columbia University. Among his awards and fellowships are NEH Fellowships for College Teachers in 1999 and 2021, an ACLS Fellowship for Junior Scholars, an ACLS Collaborative Research Fellowship for "Corruption Plots," and the Â鶹´«Ã½ Faculty Award for Outstanding Scholarship, Research, and Other Professional Contributions. Current projects include "Slum Lore," a cultural history of modern urban poverty.

For a not-so-recent-now profile, visit .

For articles, book chapters, reviews, and talks (for individual research only), visit . The Cornell books are all also available through JSTOR.
See Also
For the Media
To request an interview for a news story, call AU Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.

Teaching

Fall 2024

  • LIT-146 Critical Appr to Cinema

  • LIT-481 Advanced Studies in Culture: Critical Worldbuilding

Spring 2025

  • LIT-121 Rethinking Literature: Megacities of the Global South

  • LIT-656 Advanced Studies in Form: Cinema