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  1. Phone: (972) 721-5243. Email: eileen@udallas.edu. Eileen Gregory received her Ph.D. from the University of South Carolina. She has published numerous books and articles on lyric and contemporary poetry. B.A. University of Dallas (English) Ph.D. University of South Carolina (English) Literary Tradition I, II, III, IV.

  2. The Minnie Stevens Piper Foundation named the University of Dallas' own Eileen Gregory, Ph.D, professor of English, as one of this year's Piper Professors. The award, which honors 10 professors annually in Texas colleges and universities for their outs...

  3. Interview with Dr. Eileen Gregory 4 139 140 So, in terms of reading, I do understand that it may be some 141 students just haven’t had a lot of experience reading the kind of 142 books they read in the core that are really very dense and very 143 demanding. They’re reading Plato’s Republic the first semester,

  4. Mar 22, 2017 · Gregory, Eileen and Zhang, Wenxian, "Interview with Eileen Gregory" (2017). Oral Histories. 31. Eileen Gregory received her BS from Michigan State University, an MS & PhD in microbiology from The University of Washington, where her research focused on freshwater bacteria. As a young professor in Biology, Eileen Gregory came to Rollins College ...

    • Eileen Gregory, Wenxian Zhang
    • 2017
  5. Eileen Gregory: On the poems from H.D.’s First Volume, Sea Garden The figure of the poet, too, has distinct encounters, which take place in the "private space" of imagination, the cultivated garden or orchard.

  6. Eileen Gregory. H.D. and Hellenism: Classic Lines. London: Cambridge University Press, 1997. ] In this remarkably clear and gracious book, the H.D. scholar Eileen Gregory argues for a new understanding of H.D.'s hellenism, one that would place H.D.'s complex intertextuality of classical allusions and references within the context of competing "fictions of classicism" swirling around the literary

  7. Eileen Gregory explores at length H. D.'s intertextual engagement with specific classical writers: Sappho, Theocritus and the Greek Anthology, Homer and Euripides. The concluding chapter sketches chronologically H. D.'s career-long study and reinvention of Euripidean texts.

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