Mark Cladis


Mark S. Cladis is an author and the Brooke Russell Astor Professor of the Humanities at Brown University. Since arriving at Brown in 2004, he served as Chair for several 3-year terms. His teaching and scholarship are located at the various intersections of religious studies, philosophy, and environmental humanities. He has published five books. His newest book, Radical Romanticism: Democracy, Religion, and the Environmental Imagination, will appear in the fall of 2025. He has also published over seventy-five articles, essays, and chapters in edited books.
Raised in Stanford, California, Cladis attended the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he earned his BA in religious studies. After receiving his doctorate from Princeton University, where he studied philosophy and social theory as they relate to the field of religious studies, he taught at Stanford University and Vassar College, where he served as chair for six years. He arrived at Brown University in 2004 and has served as chair. He is a Brooke Russell Astor Professor of the Humanities, a founding member of Environmental Humanities at Brown, and is an active faculty member in Native American and Indigenous Studies at Brown. He has won several awards and fellowships from such organizations as: the Carnegie Foundation, the Fulbright Senior Research Award Program, The Cogut Center for the Humanities, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Franco-American Commission for Educational Exchange. He was a Fellow and visiting scholar at Oxford University as well as the Maison des Science de l'Homme at the Centre de Recherche en Epistémologie Appliquée, École Polytechnique.

Life, education, and career

Mark Cladis was raised in Stanford, California. He attended the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he studied religion and philosophy after switching out of a physics and math major. After graduating from UCSB, he continued his education in a doctoral program at Princeton University, where he studied philosophy and social theory as they relate to the field of religious studies. After studying for three years at Princeton, having completed his preliminary exams, he taught at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro for two years. Upon completing his doctorate from Princeton, Cladis taught at Stanford University with a joint appointment in Philosophy and Religious Studies, and then at Vassar College. He is now the Brooke Russell Astor Professor of Humanities at Brown University. He lives in Barrington, Rhode Island, with his wife and three children.

Authorship

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Cladis has also authored over seventy-five articles, journals, and chapters in edited books. His publications have appeared in such journals, books, and fields of study as:
Philosophy of Religion/Religious Ethics:
Environmental Humanities:
  • Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 
  • European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment
  • Resistance: A Journal of Radical Environmental Humanities
  • Cambridge Critical Concepts: Nature and Literary Studies
  • Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology
  • Ecokritike
  • Ecosustainable Narratives
  • Sustainability: Perspectives from the Humanities and Social Sciences
Religion, Philosophy, and Literature:
  • Philosophy and Literature
  • Religion and Literature
  • Journal of Religion and Literature
  • Philosophical Readings
Religion and Political and Social Theory:
Cladis was a fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford; a visiting scholar at Oxford's Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology; a visiting research fellow at Centre de Recherche en
Epistémologie Appliquée, Ecole Polytechnique; and a scholar in residence at Maison Suger: Maison des Science de l’Homme.

Awards

  • Pembroke Faculty Fellow
  • John Rowe Workman Award for Excellence in Teaching in the Humanities, Brown University
  • Cogut Center for the Humanities: Faculty Fellowship
  • National Endowments for the Humanities: Summer Fellowship
  • Carnegie Scholar
  • Rockefeller Foundation, Bellagio Study Center
  • Interfoundational Grant from the Franco-American Commission for Educational Exchange, University of Strasbourg: Religion and Ethics Lecture Series
  • Fulbright Senior Research Award
  • National Endowments for the Humanities Summer Stipend