Laura Mattoon D’Amore, Ph.D.

Laura D'Amore
Laura Mattoon D’Amore, Ph.D. Professor of Cultural Studies

Contact Information

401-254-3171ldamore@rwu.edu GHH 212Curriculum Vitae

Areas of Expertise

ENGLISH LITERARY STUDIES: cultural studies; American culture; feminism, feminist theory, feminist activism; representations of girls and women in popular culture and literature, and comics

Education

Ph.D. - American and New England Studies from Boston University 

About Laura Mattoon D'Amore

Laura Mattoon D’Amore is Professor of Cultural Studies, and has taught at 鶹ɫƬ since 2009.  She received her Ph.D. in American and New England Studies from Boston University, with a dissertation titled “American Supermom: Feminism, Motherhood, and the Superheroine Since 1962.” Dr. D’Amore’s expertise is in the feminist theory and feminist activism, and the representation of women and girls in American popular and literary culture. 

Dr. D’Amore is deeply committed to social justice and equity and inclusion initiatives at 鶹ɫƬ. She co-founded the 鶹ɫƬ Diversity and Inclusion Fellows program, with Dr. Kamille Gentles-Peart, and the Gender and Sexuality Studies minor with Dr. Jason Jacobs.  She co-chaired the shepherding group for Education, Scholarship, and Service, under the University’s . Finally, she regularly partners through the Community Partnership Center to pair her courses and her students with organizations like Girls, Inc of Taunton, to do equity and advocacy work; and Providence Promise, to do anti-racist mentoring with underserved high school youth.

Research Overview

Her most recent book is a scholarly monograph titled Vigilante Feminists and Agents of Destiny: Violence, Empowerment, and the Teenage Super/heroine (Lexington Books, April 2021), which is part of the book series. This book tracks the vigilante feminist teenage super/heroine in comics and YA literature, a character who acts as a vigilante on behalf of the protection of girls and women. It traces the trajectory of super/heroines who experience violent trauma, and then through the use of violence are empowered to reclaim control over their lives and bodies. Her other books include (Rowman and Littlefield, 2014), (co-edited with Jeffrey Lee Meriwether, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012), and  (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009). Additionally, she is on topics such as fairy tale retellings, and superheroines, violence and feminism, historical memory, gender representation in film, television, and comics, and representations of motherhood in American culture. 

Dr. D’Amore was a featured expert on the representation of women in comics for the History Channel docuseries,

Recent Publications

“Representing Trauma: Empathy, Sexual Violence, and Secondary Trauma in Courtrooms and Classrooms” (鶹ɫƬ Law Review, April 2024)

Vigilante Feminists and Agents of Destiny: Violence, Empowerment, and the Teenage Super/heroine (Lexington Books, April 2021)

Smart Chicks on Screen: Representing Women’s Intellect in Film and Television (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016)