Dr. Öğr. Üyesi

Demet Karabulut Dede

+90 212 311 7622

Santralistanbul / E2-314

Eğitim

  • Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of English, Princeton University, 2024
  • Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of English, University of Exeter, 2021
  • PhD in English Language and Literature, Ankara University, 2017
  • MA in Comparative Literature, İstanbul Bilgi University, 2011
  • BA in English Language Teaching, İstanbul University, 2008
  • Verdiği Dersler

    ELL 102 - Literary Critical Practice

    ELL 225 - Survey of American Literature

    ELL 321 - The Rise of the English Novel

    ELL 322 - Modern Novel in English

    ELL 412 - New Trends in Literary Studies

    İlgi Alanları

    Overview

    Demet Karabulut Dede is a scholar who works at the intersection of modernist studies, empire, and geography, exploring how literary modernism engages with diverse imperial and transnational contexts. Her academic training includes a Fulbright Visiting Researcher Scholarship in the Department of English at Princeton University (2024), a TÜBİTAK postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Exeter (2021), a PhD from Ankara University (2017), and an MA from İstanbul Bilgi University (2011).

    She is the editor of Virginia Woolf’s Afterlife in Turkey, a collection currently under review with Bloomsbury Publishing, which brings together papers examining the reception and influence of Virginia Woolf among writers and intellectuals in Turkey. She is also completing her monograph, Imperial Encounters: The Ottoman and Byzantine Empires in Modernist Writing. In addition, she is co-editing two forthcoming special journal issues for Modernism/modernity and the Journal of Modern Literature.

    Main research interests:

    • Literary modernism in transnational and comparative contexts
    • Modernist networks, circulation, and cultural exchange
    • Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group
    • Ottoman modernities and alternative modernist formations
    • The Byzantine Empire and its afterlives in modernist writing
    • Sound studies and the auditory cultures of modernism
    • The modernist novel in Turkey
    • Literature, empire, and historiography
    • Time–space compression and modernity