
William Egginton
Author · 6 books
William Egginton is a literary critic and philosopher. He has written extensively on a broad range of subjects, including theatricality, fictionality, literary criticism, psychoanalysis and ethics, religious moderation, and theories of mediation. William Egginton was born in Syracuse, New York in 1969. He received his PhD in Comparative Literature from Stanford University in 1999. His doctoral thesis, "Theatricality and Presence: a Phenomenology of Space and Spectacle in Early Modern France and Spain," was written under the direction of Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht. He currently resides with his wife, Bernadette Wegenstein, and their three children, in Baltimore, Maryland. William Egginton is the Decker Professor in the Humanities and Director of the Alexander Grass Humanities Institute at the Johns Hopkins University, where he teaches on Spanish and Latin American literature, literary theory, and the relation between literature and philosophy.
Series
Books

Thinking With Borges
2009

The Man Who Invented Fiction
How Cervantes Ushered in the Modern World
2016

In Defense of Religious Moderation
2011

The Rigor of Angels
Borges, Heisenberg, Kant, and the Ultimate Nature of Reality
2023

Medialogies
Reading Reality in the Age of Inflationary Media
2016

The Splintering of the American Mind
Identity Politics, Inequality, and Community on Today's College Campuses
2018

