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David Kazanjian received his Ph.D from the University of California, Berkeley, his M.A. from the University of Sussex, and his B.A. from Stanford University. His area of specialization is transnational American literary and historical studies through the nineteenth century. His additional fields of research are political philosophy, continental philosophy, colonial discourse studies, and Armenian diaspora studies. His book "The Colonizing Trick: National Culture and Imperial Citizenship in Early America" (Minnesota, 2003) offers a comparative study of colonial and antebellum, racial and national formations, and a critique of the formal egalitarianism that animated early U.S. citizenship. He has co-edited (with David L. Eng) "Loss: The Politics of Mourning" (California, 2003), as well as (with Shay Brawn, Bonnie Dow, Lisa Maria Hogeland, Mary Klages, Deb Meem, and Rhonda Pettit) "The Aunt Lute Anthology of U.S. Women Writers, Volume One: Seventeenth through Nineteenth Centuries" (Aunt Lute Books, 2004). He has also published widely (with Anahid Kassabian) on the cultural politics of the North American-Armenian diaspora. He is currently working on "The Brink of Freedom," a study of social movements at the edges of the early U.S. empire.
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