
Professor of English
E-mail: tcousineau2@washcoll.edu
Phone: (800) 422-1782, ext. 7770
Office: Daly 201
B.A., Boston College, 1966; M.A., University of California, Davis, 1968; Ph.D., University of California, Davis, 1971.
TTH 2:30-3:30
Professor Thomas Cousineau, who has taught at Washington College since 1978, began his teaching career at the University of Paris as well as at other French universities. Along with the contact with French culture that living in Paris for many years afforded him, French thinkers of the day, such as Jacques Lacan, Gilles Deleuze, and Paul Ricoeur, strongly influenced the direction of his research. Along with publishing books on Samuel Beckett's novels and his play, Waiting for Godot, Cousineau has for several years been the editor of the newsletter of the Samuel Beckett Society.
More recently, Professor Cousineau's teaching and research has been influenced by René Girard's theories of mimetic desire and sacred violence, which he has incorporated into his latest books. Cousineau is also fascinated by the Austrian writer Thomas Bernhard, whose novels are the subject of his forthcoming book, Three Part Inventions. He is currently working on a new book, to be entitled The Séance of Reading, which explores uncanny authorial presences in classic literary texts.
300 Washington Avenue, Chestertown, Maryland 21620 | 410-778-2800 | 800-422-1782