Professor Jay Prosser
- Position: Professor in Humanities
- Areas of expertise: Creative nonfiction. Jewish studies. Gender studies. Histories and theories of photography.
- Email: J.D.Prosser@leeds.ac.uk
- Location: 201 5 Cavendish Road
- Website: Jay Prosser.com |
Profile
I received my BA in English from the University of London, where I was awarded the prize for the highest 1st class honours in my college. I then went to New York as a Fulbright Scholar and received my MA and PhD from the City University of New York Graduate School, where my thesis was also recognised with prizes. I have taught and researched at a number of institutions around the world. I have been at Leeds since 1999. My area, humanities, reflects my diverse interests in research and writing. Briefly and broadly, I am interested in what it means to be human and how this is variously represented, and both of these in the past tense. I began as a cultural theorist. Increasingly I reach for creative modes that speak beyond the academy, all the while based on research.
Responsibilities
- Co-chair, Jewish Staff Network
- Antisemitism working group
Research interests
My early work focused on gender and narrative. My book Second Skins: The Body Narratives of Transsexuality (Columbia University Press, 1998), the first book-length analysis of transsexual narratives, is considered foundational in transgender studies. I co-edited a collection of essays, Palatable Poison: Critical Perspectives on The Well of Loneliness (Columbia University Press, 2002), on this celebrated, censured novel by Radclyffe Hall. I have published many essays in gender studies. Reflecting my early specialism in American literature, I also wrote essays on John Updike and edited a collection of critical essays, American Fiction of the 1990s (Routledge, 2008).
An abiding interest is photography. My book Light in the Dark Room: Photography and Loss (Minnesota University Press, 2004) explores how photography allows writers and photographers to grapple with loss. From 2005-2010 I led an international collaboration of academics, photographers, journalists, NGOs, curators, and artists, examining photographs of atrocity. This resulted in the co-edited collection, Picturing Atrocity: Photography in Crisis (Reaktion Books, 2012), which was published in support of the work of Amnesty International. I have published many essays on individual photographers, including Nan Goldin, Gillian Wearing, Susan Meiselas, and Del LaGrace Volcano.
I then moved into Jewish and transcultural studies. From 2013-14 I led an AHRC research network called Ottoman Pasts, Present Cities: Cosmopolitanism and Transcultural Memories, a collaboration this time between academics, artists, photographers, musicians, gastronomists, and poets. We investigated memories of cultural exchange in the former Ottoman Empire as one way to counter current conflicts in the region. Our research findings were published in a special issue of Memory Studies and led to an exhibition and some outreach community work with schools, charities, musicians, and oral history archives. My own contributions focused on the writings of Elif Shafak.
My latest book is family memoir as cultural history. Loving Strangers: A Camphorwood Chest, a Legacy, a Son Returns tells the story of my mother’s lineages: of the Baghdadi Jewish diaspora meeting and marrying the Chinese women who worked for them in Southeast Asia. It’s a tale of love and spice (my grandfather’s family were for generations spice traders); of refugees and prejudice. It’s also an exploration of how empire enables and thwarts intimacies between far-flung strangers. Loving Strangers was winner of the 2020 Hazel Rowley Prize and shortlisted for the 2019 Tony Lothian Prize, both for the best unpublished biography. I published a number of short personal essays, a number of which were shortlisted/recieved honourable mentions for various creative nonfiction prizes.
Most recently I have been working to redeem Cecil Roth, the most popular Jewish historian of the C20th who is yet sidelined from modern Jewish studies. The University of Leeds is the depository for Roth’s books and manuscripts. In collaboration with a number of colleagues across the University, I was granted awards which allowed me to begin investigating both Roth and his collection. I have written about how Roth’s visit to post-Holocaust Salonica radically revises an understanding of Holocaust memory, And I have researched a compelling, haunting object that Roth collected on this trip to Greece, a shoe sole cut from a Sefer Torah. My research was subsequently taken up by the Jewish Chronicle. I am pursuing the leads associated with this shoe sole, including Salonica Jewish heritage, and Holocaust Torah scrolls. I am running a related project on the latter which are held in Yorkshire.
As I worked on the object, I realised that it demanded more of me: more time, but, more crucially, a creative engagement. How to address the questions that academic research alone can’t answer? Hence my current book project, a work of creative nonfiction: the story of a shoe sole, of an object that is at once sacred and sacrilegious, Jewish and not Jewish, evidence and yet silent.
<h4>Research projects</h4> <p>Any research projects I'm currently working on will be listed below. Our list of all <a href="https://ahc.leeds.ac.uk/dir/research-projects">research projects</a> allows you to view and search the full list of projects in the faculty.</p>Qualifications
- PhD English, City University of New York, Graduate School, October 1996
- MA, English, City University of New York, Graduate School, 1992
- BA, English, 1st Class, University of London, Westfield College, 1988
Professional memberships
- Modern Languages Assocation
- British and Irish Association of Jewish Studies
- International Association of Auto/Biography
- Jewish Historical Society of England
Student education
I teach creative nonfiction (memoir) and critical theory. Current modules include (BA) Telling Lives: Reading and Writing Family Memoir and (MA) So where do you come from? Selves, families, stories. I am interested in supervising PhDs in any of the following areas: memoir, Jewish studies, trans representation, diaspora writing. My current PhD quota is full and, with rare exceptions, I am not taking new students.
Research groups and institutes
- Centre for Jewish Studies
- Critical Life Research Group
- Creative Writing at Leeds