Home page of Anthony Cuda

subglobal1 link | subglobal1 link | subglobal1 link | subglobal1 link | subglobal1 link | subglobal1 link | subglobal1 link
subglobal2 link | subglobal2 link | subglobal2 link | subglobal2 link | subglobal2 link | subglobal2 link | subglobal2 link
subglobal3 link | subglobal3 link | subglobal3 link | subglobal3 link | subglobal3 link | subglobal3 link | subglobal3 link
subglobal4 link | subglobal4 link | subglobal4 link | subglobal4 link | subglobal4 link | subglobal4 link | subglobal4 link
subglobal5 link | subglobal5 link | subglobal5 link | subglobal5 link | subglobal5 link | subglobal5 link | subglobal5 link
subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link
subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link
subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link

 

small logo

Dr. Anthony Cuda
Assistant Professor of English
University of North Carolina at Greensboro
3311 Humanities and Research Administration Building
Greensboro, NC 27402-617


Tony Cuda teaches classes on transatlantic modernism and twentieth-century international poetry. His research focuses on modern and post-war transatlantic poetry and poetics. He is finishing a manuscript, tentatively titled “The Passions of Modernism,” that addresses modernism’s fascination with powerlessness and vulnerability and its effects on theories of emotion, creativity, and inspiration in early twentieth-century writers including W. B. Yeats, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, and Thomas Mann. His reviews of contemporary poetry appear regularly in The New Criterion, FIELD: Contemporary Poetry and Poetics, The International Poetry Review, and the American Book Review.

Professor Cuda holds a B.A. in English from Duquesne University in Pittsburgh and a Ph.D. from Emory University in Atlanta. He joined the English faculty at UNCG in the Fall of 2006.