Karen Kleinfelder

Dr. Kleinfelder teaches twentieth-century art, writing and methodologies, and critical theory. Her research interests range from gender studies to psychoanalytic theory, from hysteria to cyborgs. She was the first art historian to win the Distinguished Dissertation Award at the University of Michigan, and the first art historian—but probably not the last—to be Director of the School of Art (2014–2017). As a Professor Emerita, Dr. Kleinfelder is currently teaching half-time. Over the years she has taught seminars on censorship, mind/body/cyborg, the sublime and the abject, Bataille’s informe, Lacan’s discourse of the hysteric, art/fashion/anti-fashion, relational aesthetics, complexity theory, boundary crossing, and portraiture in the age of social distancing. She is currently working on a book titled Picasso becoming-woman: The Gender Debates. In her spare time, she competitively shows her two Arabian horses. A recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, the honor she is most proud of is ’s Distinguished Faculty Teaching Award.