Jody Lisberger

Biography

Jody Lisberger, Associate Professor, has a Ph.D. in English with a specialty in feminist narrative theory, problems of sacrifice, and alternative notions of narrative desire. She was originally trained as an anthropologist.

Her recent presentations have been on “Plutonium: The toxic silences and illusions behind patriarchal notions of safety and remediation in The Cassandra” and “Ecology, Gender, and Nuclear Waste: The Perils of Not Knowing About Hanford, the Largest Nuclear Waste Site in the U.S.” She’s also authored “The Politics of Data: Gender Bias and Border Mentality in the EEOC, “DES and Diflucan: Pharmaceutical Marketing Choices—Why Women Should Take Heed,” “The University as Nation-State: Transnational remedies,” “Challenging the Myth of Disposable Women,” and “Disposable Women, Border Mentalities, and Militarization in Academia.”

In addition, Jody has an M.F.A. in fiction writing. She has several published stories and a 2008 short story collection, Remember Love, which was nominated for a National Book Award. She recently completed a novel called You Don’t Know the Half Of It. In the past, Jody has worked as an editor, grant writer, and journalist, including for Sojourner, the feminist newspaper that in its day went to 40,000 readers worldwide.

Research

Creative writing, fiction and nonfiction; Institutionalized gendered division of labor and needed strategies to create gender equality and social justice; Transnationalism and border crossings; Plutonium and atomic bomb development and the exploitation of women and workers in the process; Environmental toxicity as generated by corporate hegemony and neoliberalism

Education

  • M.F.A., Writing, Vermont College, 1999
  • Ph.D., English, Boston University, 1991
  • M.A., English, Boston College, 1978
  • B.A., Anthropology, Smith College, 1975

Selected Publications

“Animal Teeth,” Jabberwock Review, F, Summer/Fall 2019

“Two Halves,” Six Hens, December 2016

“No Telling,” Timberline Review, Summer/Fall 2016

“The Politics of Data: Gender Bias and Border Mentality in the EEOC Job Category Compliance Chart and How Transnational Gender Mainstreaming Can Offer Best Practices for Change,” Wagadu, Journal of Transnational Women’s and Gender Studies, Fall 2011

“DES and Diflucan: Pharmaceutical Marketing Choices—Why Women Should Take Heed,” in (Re)Interpretations: The Shapes of Justice in Women’s Experience, Cambridge Scholar Press, 2009

Remember Love, short stories, Fleur-de-lis Press, May 2008

See full Curriculum Vitae (PDF)