Marcia England
Education
- B.A. Geography, University of Washington, Seattle (1998)
- M.A. Geography, University of Washington, Seattle (2002)
- Ph.D. Geography, University of Kentucky (2006)
Interests
As an urban, cultural and feminist geographer, my research interests are in two main areas: access to public spaces and media/pop culture geographies. I employ a feminist lens to examine social norms in real and reel spaces.
Teaching Responsibilities
- GEO 101: Global Forces, Local Diversity
- GEO 211: Global Change
- GEO 302: Geography and Gender
- GEO 491: Senior Seminar
- GEO 601: Seminar in Research Techniques
Selected Publications
- England, Marcia. 2018. Right Donor, Right Place: Spatialities in Artificial Insemination.
- England, Marcia (with Helen Hazen and Maria Fannin). 2018. Reproductive Geographies: Politics, Places, and Bodies. London and New York: Routledge.
- England, Marcia. 2018. Public Privates: Feminist Geographies of Mediated Spaces. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press.
- England, Marcia. 2016. Being Open in Academia: A Personal Narrative of Mental Illness and Disclosure. The Canadian Geographer 1-6.
- England, Marcia. 2013. Social Justice. Oxford Bibliographies in Geography. Ed. Barney Warf. New York: Oxford University Press.
- England, Marcia. 2011. Community. A Companion to Social Geography (Malden, MA: Blackwell).
- England, Marcia. 2011. SuicideGirls: Bodies, beauty and cyberspace. Aether: The Journal of Media Geography.
- England, Marcia with Stephanie Simon. 2010. Scary Cities: Urban Geographies of Fear, Difference, and Belonging. An Editorial in Social & Cultural Geography, 11(3)
- England, Marcia. 2008. "When “Good Neighbors” go bad: Territorial geographies of neighborhood associations. Environment and Planning A.
- England, Marcia. 2008. Stay Out of Drug Areas: Drugs, Othering and Regulation of Public Space in Seattle, Washington. Space and Polity 12(2):197-213.
- England, Marcia. 2006. Breached bodies and home invasions: Horrific representations of the feminized body and home. Gender, Place and Culture 13(4):353-363.