Madeleine Kelly '25
Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies Major, Peace Studies, and Spanish
Graduate Student at the University of Glasgow
"My achievements in graduate study are in no small part due to the years of dedication and support I received from my professors, who have shaped my growth as a researcher, writer, and as a person. I will always be grateful for my time with them at Goucher.”
Madeleine Kelly grew up playing traditional folk music from Scotland, Ireland, and Appalachia as a singer and fiddle player. She graduated summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, and with a 3.9 GPA. She also received the Dorothy Brody Prize for her research in women’s studies. She is now pursuing a master’s at the University of Glasgow in Scottish literature, writing her master’s thesis on the themes of queer identity found in Scottish traditional ballads.
Traditional ballads are songs that tell a story; like all stories they reflect the social environment they are created in. There is evidence within select Scottish ballads of explorations of queer identity and love. Madeleine’s research focuses on the ballads that tell stories of women crossdressing to enter the navy. These stories confront questions of gender identity and performance and sexuality that Scottish and English society were grappling with between the 17th and 19th centuries.
