Faculty

The quality of a University's curriculum is in the hands of its faculty. The Maritime Studies faculty were formally organized in 2006 to further the mission of the program. The faculty listed below teach the core courses in the MAST curriculum. Nearly every student who passes through our program will take one or more courses from these faculty.

Frederic Pearl, PhD (Anthropology)

Dr. Pearl is an Associate Professor and the Director of the Maritime Studies Program at Texas A&M University in Galveston. He has has graduate faculty appointments with the Department of Marine Sciences in Galveston and the Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M University in College Station. He received his B.A. from San Diego State University, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Texas A&M University. He joined the faculty of Texas A&M Galveston in 2001. He teaches Archaeology of the Old World, Archaeology of the Pacific, Social and Cultural Anthropology, International Maritime Culture, and Introduction to Museums and Conservation. His current field projects are in American Samoa. He recently wrapped up a field project funded by the National Geographic Society, with ongoing research taking place here in Texas. In 2008 he will be returning to the Pacific for field projects in Samoa and Fiji. He is also working with local foundations to develop an archaeological research program on Galveston Island.

Samuel Mark, PhD (Anthropology)

Dr. Mark is an Associate Professor in the Maritime Studies Program at Texas A&M University in Galveston. He received his Ph.D. from Texas A&M University in College Station in 2000, and joined the faculty of Texas A&M University at Galveston in 2001. His research includes ancient seafaring and paleopathology. His books include From Egypt to Mesopotamia, in which he proposes possible trade routes, connecting Egypt to Mesopotamia before the pharaohs; and Homeric Seafaring, in which he interprets the seafaring culture described in the Iliad and the Odyssey based on ancient documents, archaeological discoveries, ancient iconography, and ethnographies.  At present he is studying ancient Mediterranean ships built primarily for carrying bulk cargoes of marble. He also conduct active research in the field of paleopathology, with recent publications in the Journal of the History of Medicine and the International Journal of Osteoarchaeology.

Tom Oertling, MA (Anthropology)

Tom Oertling is a lecturer in the Maritime Studies Program at Texas A&M University at Galveston. He received a BS from Tulane University in Anthropology in 1977, his MA from the Nautical Archaeology program at Texas A&M University in College Station in 1984, and has 30 years of experience in the field.  He has partnered with the A&M's Institute of Nautical Archaeology on numerous projects, most recently in the excavation of the Denbigh, a Civil War blockade runner at the entrance to Galveston Bay, and has extensive experience throughout participated on projects in the U.S., the Caribbean, Canada, Spain and Turkey. Mr. Oertling oversees all aspects of archaeological conservation in the Galveston Archaeological Laboratory (GARL) and he teaches Introduction to Archaeology, Nautical Archaeology of the Americas, Texas Maritime Cultural History and the Elissa Sail Training Course.

John Carhart, MA (Political Science)

John Carhart is a Senior Lecturer and Assistant Department Head of the Department of General Academics at Texas A&M University at Galveston. A faculty member since 1989, Mr. Carhart has extensive experience working for election campaigns and elected officials in both the Democratic and Republican parties. His resume includes experience at the local,  state, and national levels. Mr. Carhart teaches State and Local Government, American Government, Political Conflicts of the Middle East, World Politics, and Politics of Energy and the Environment.

Daniel Traber, PhD (English)

Daniel Traber is an Associate Professor in the Maritime Studies Program at Texas A&M University. Dr. Traber specializes in American Literature, Post-Modernism, and Cultural Studies (pop-culture, film, and media studies). He has been a member of the faculty since 2001. He teaches Introduction to Literature, American Literature, Introduction to Cultural Studies, and Melville.

Darren Domsky, PhD (Philosophy)

Darren Domsky is an Assistant Professor in the Maritime Studies Program, with a BA (honors) and MA from the University of Alberta and a PhD from York University.  He teaches environmental ethics, ethical theory, and formal logic.  His recent and forthcoming publications include “Why Callicott’s Communitarian Environmental Ethic is not Holistic,” The Journal of Value Inquiry; “The Inadequacy of Ecological Communitarianism,” Environmental Ethics; “Tossing the Rotten Thing Out: Eliminating Bad Reasons not to Solve the Problem of Moral Luck,” Philosophy; “Keeping a Place for Meta-Ethics: Assessing Elliot’s Dismissal of the Subjectivism/Objectivism Debate in Environmental Ethics,” Metaphilosophy; “There Is No Door: Finally Solving the Problem of Moral Luck,” The Journal of Philosophy; and “Evaluating Callicott’s Attack on Stone’s Moral Pluralism,” Environmental Values.

Carol Bunch-Davis, PhD (English)

Carol Bunch Davis joined the General Academics faculty as a lecturer in English in the Fall of 2003.  She received a B.A. in Communication from Trinity University, an M.A. in Literature from the University of Houston-Clear Lake and a Ph.D. in English (Film, Literature and Culture) from the University of Southern California. Dr. Bunch-Davis teaches Rhetoric and Composition, Introduction to Literature, African American Literature, and Research Writing in Maritime Studies.

Stephen Curley, PhD (English)

Stephen Curley received a B.A. in English from Fordham University in New York and a Ph.D. in English from Rice University in Houston. Since 1973, he has taught writing, literature, and film at Texas A&M University at Galveston. He received the two highest awards given by the Galveston campus, one for teaching, the other for overall achievement. He is also the first person from the Galveston campus to have won the highest teaching award given by the College Station campus, and the first to be named Regents Professor by the Texas A&M University System. His books include Aggies by the Sea; Living on the Edge: Collected Essays on Coastal Texas; Celluloid Wars: A Research Guide to American War Film; and Invisible Texans: Women and Minorities in Texas History. He has been the recipient of numerous grants for public programs in Galveston on such subjects as the Texas coast, the U.S. Bill of Rights, popular culture, the American Civil War, and the Great Depression. He has released an audiocassette of sea chanteys and often is invited to make presentations about movies and sea-related topics.

Don Willett, PhD (History)

Dr. Donald Willett is an Associate Professor in the Maritime Studies Program at Texas A&M University at Galveston. He received his BA in History from St. Edwards University in 1972, his MA in history from Stephen F. Austin State University in 1976 and his PhD in American history from Texas A&M University in 1985.  His areas of research include United States maritime history and Texas history. He is a past-president of the East Texas Historical Association and is on the Board of Directors of the Gulf South Historical Association. His area of research focuses on United States maritime labor history, so he would like to contact Mexican scholars who focus on Mexican maritime labor and share research. Dr. Donald Willett teaches American History, American History, American Civil War and Reconstruction, Texas History, and History of American Seapower.