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Kimberly Kay Lamm CV

Associate Professor in the Program of Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies
Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies
Box 90760, Durham, NC 27708-0760
112 East Duke Bldg, Durham, NC 27708
CV

Overview


My scholarship brings together Anglophone literature, contemporary art, visual culture, and feminist theory. I have a particular interest in the feminist engagement with psychoanalysis, the various ways language figures into feminism, and aesthetic practices such as fashion that challenge the devaluation of femininity. I enjoy teaching interdisciplinary courses that work with literature, art, and film to illuminate the feminist imagination. 

My first book, Addressing the Other Woman: Textual Correspondences in Feminist Art and Writing (Manchester University Press, 2018) demonstrates the significance of visual and textual manifestations of language to feminist art practices of the late 1960s and 1970s. It focuses on the work of three artists –Adrian Piper, Nancy Spero, and Mary Kelly—and shows that their work expressed a shared desire to transform how women in western culture are perceived. I argue that language (as system, text, and speech) was crucial to bringing viewers into that collective project. At the heart of this book is the ‘other woman,’ a figure who encapsulates the utopian wish to reach other women and correspond with them across similarities and differences. To reveal this address, I pair the artwork of Piper, Spero, and Kelly with the writings of Angela Davis, Valerie Solanas, and Laura Mulvey. By tracing the correspondences between these artists and writers, I argue we can better appreciate how together they created the imaginary conditions in which feminism could take hold as a collective practiceand a shared idiom.

I recently published Riddles of the Sphinx, a BFI Classics book devoted to Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen’s avant-garde feminist film from 1977. I read Riddles as an essay film and explore how it utilizes voice, sound, and writing to challenge Hollywood's dominant images of women and to portray maternal care as a legitimate form of work, rich in aesthetic pleasures and feminist possibilities.

In early 2026, my book Writing in the Kitchen with Martha Rosler and Carrie Mae Weems: From Reproductive Labor to the Affective Labor of the Image will come out with Punctum Books. Along with Anna Backman Rogers, I am editing Laura Mulvey: Feminist Legacies, which will be published in 2026by BFI/Bloomsbury. I have published my research in Australian Feminist Studies, Callaloo, Cultural Critique, Feminist Theory, Oxford Art Journal, Public Art Dialogue, Psychoanalysis, Culture, and Society, Women's Studies Quarterly, and Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory.

Current Appointments & Affiliations


Associate Professor in the Program of Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies · 2017 - Present Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies, Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Associate Professor of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies · 2024 - Present Art, Art History & Visual Studies, Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

In the News


Published December 1, 2025
Books for When There’s a Chill in the Air
Published April 15, 2024
Today’s Faculty Reflect on a Century of Scholars

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Recent Publications


Caring sideways: Sedgwick's queer siblings and feminism's generational time

Journal Article Feminist Theory · August 1, 2025 This article aims to show how the dominant figures for imagining feminist generations—sisterhood, and its ‘parent,’ the mother–daughter relationship—limit feminism to the white heterosexual family and the exclusionary violence wielded in its name. While th ... Full text Cite
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Recent Grants


"Fabricating Truths: Sartorial Self Fashioning and the Legacies of Slavery"

ResearchPrincipal Investigator · Awarded by Cornell University · 2020 - 2021

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Education, Training & Certifications


University of Washington · 2007 Ph.D.