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Faculty
Chair
Michael Armstrong Roche
Associate Professor of Romance Languages & LiteraturesShow Bio and Photo
Associate Professor of Romance Languages & Literatures
300 High Street 206
860-685-3128
Associate Professor, Medieval Studies
860-685-3128
Chair, Romance Languages & Literatures
860-685-3128
BA Harvard University
MA Harvard University
PHD Harvard University
SPAN236 - 01
Cervantes
SPAN231 - 01
Classic Spanish Plays
Office Hours: Fall 2013: Tuesdays and Thursdays 4-5pm or at other times by appointment, at 300 High Street (office #206, tel. 860-685-3128). The best way to reach me is by email at marmstrong@wesleyan.edu.
Research Interests: My recent scholarship has been focused primarily on what are often called Cervantes's "other works," the novels and plays that tend to get overlooked in the long shadow cast by Don Quijote. A book called Cervantes' Epic Novel: Empire, Religion, and the Dream Life of Heroes in 'Persiles' (U of Toronto P, 2009) explores how Cervantes's last novel transforms major literary, political, religious, and social debates of late 16th- and early 17th-century Spain into narrative art. It looks at the inventive ways Cervantes ironizes romance (especially Heliodorus's Greek novel) and the verse epic tradition (primarily, Homer, Vergil, and Tasso) by pitting them against each other and other genres. And it tracks the novel's insistence on finding both its pleasures and its lessons in moral complexity. Persiles is seen to be epic not only in the terms provided by the dominant early 17th-century reception of the Greek novel or in its allusions, encyclopedic scope and virtuoso patterning but also in its aspiration to embrace all of the author himself--including the overriding desire to entertain. For several years now I have been at work on a book provisionally entitled Cervantes Plays: Ironies of History on the Early Modern Stage. It takes a close look at Cervantes's full-length plays and their imaginative, often experimental, and still-compelling dramatic engagement with key historical debates about Habsburg political mythmaking, Algerian captivity, the gypsy community, the rise of the commercial stage, marriage choice, and women's work. This book has emerged from the Theater Without Borders research collaborative, a group committed to exploring the international and comparative impact of early modern drama, especially--but not exclusively--of England, Spain, Italy, and France (see our website at www.nyu.edu/projects/theaterwithoutborders/index.html). Earlier I was contributing author to the scholarly catalogue for an exhibition I helped organize called Goya and the Spirit of Enlightenment, which could be seen at the Prado, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and the Metropolitan Museum in NYC (1988-1989). Throughout, I have tried to practice a kind of scholarship that moves fluidly from text to context and back again (reading the text with and against the pressures of the moment and then reading that moment through the lens of the text); that draws on close reading in multiple disciplines (history of literature and art, comparative literature, genre theory, political, social, and economic history, history of ideas and philosophy, theology and religious history, and jurisprudence); and that is informed by textual, historical, and theoretical approaches to literature. Finally, I have looked for ways to bring my scholarly interests to a wider audience, serving--for instance--as general editor of three Let's Go travel guides (Let's Go France 1986, Let's Go California and the Pacific Northwest 1986, and Let's Go Spain & Portugal 1992).
Scholarly Keywords: Cervantes; Spanish (and European) classical theater; Spanish and Latin American poetry; medieval and early modern Spanish literature and history (including Latin American colonial, transatlantic, and global perspectives); comparative literature and history (classical, medieval, and early modern European primarily); Goya
Faculty
Robert Conn
Associate Professor of Romance Languages & LiteraturesShow Bio and Photo
Associate Professor of Romance Languages & Literatures
300 High Street 204
860-685-3109
Spanish Section Head
Associate Professor, Latin American Studies
860-685-3109
Director, Center for the Americas
BA Dartmouth College
PHD Princeton University
SPAN226 - 01
Spanish American Lit & Civil
SPAN288 - 01
Latin American Novels
SPAN226 - 01
Spanish American Lit & Civil
Office Hours: F12 Mondays and Wednesdays, 2:15-3:15 pm
Research Interests: Robert Conn is the author of The Politics of Philology: Alfonso Reyes and the Invention of the Latin American Literary Tradition (Bucknell University Press, 2002). At present, he is completing a book-length study of Simon Bolivar that focuses on the ways in which the liberator of South America has been used in different national contexts, with careful attention to the areas of politics, literature, and history. A section entitled "Vasconcelos as Screenwriter: Bolivar Remembered" was published as a book chapter in the collection Mexico Reading the United States (Vanderbilt University Press, 2009).
Scholarly Keywords: Latin America, Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela
Fernando Degiovanni
Associate Professor of Romance Languages & LiteraturesShow BioAssociate Professor of Romance Languages & Literatures
300 High Street
860-685-3108
Associate Professor, Latin American Studies
860-685-3108
BA National University of Cordoba
MA University Maryland College Pk
PHD University Maryland College Pk
Office Hours:
Fall 12: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Research Interests:
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures Fernando Degiovanni specializes in issues of nationalism, cultural politics and canon formation in Argentina. By focusing on the first popular series of national "classic" authors in early 20th century, his research explores the way in which opposing intellectual projects attempted to build and impose contrasting versions of the Argentine cultural tradition in times of massive immigration and democratic institutionalization. His work has been published in major scholarly journals, including Revista Iberoamericana, Hispam?rica, and Revista de cr?tica literaria latinoamericana.
Octavio Flores-Cuadra
Adjunct Professor of Romance Languages & LiteraturesShow Bio and Photo
Adjunct Professor of Romance Languages & Literatures
300 High Street 211
860-685-3122
BA Universidad Americas
MA Universidad Americas
PHD University of Pittsburgh
SPAN103 - 01
Spanish for High Beginners
SPAN111 - 03
Intermediate Spanish I
SPAN111 - 04
Intermediate Spanish I
SPAN110 - 01
Spanish for High Beginners
SPAN112 - 02
Intermediate Spanish II
Office Hours:
Monday & Wednesday from 1:30 to 3:00 pm or by appointment
Bernardo Gonzalez
Professor of Romance Languages & LiteraturesShow Bio and PhotoBA University Calif Berkeley
MA University Calif Berkeley
MAA Wesleyan University
PHD University Calif Berkeley
SPAN221 - 01
Introduction to Hispanic Lits.
SPAN254 - 01
The World of Garca Lorca
SPAN251 - 01
Urban Fantasies
SPAN258 - 01
The Intercultural Stage
Office Hours: Tu: 1:15p - 2:00p; Th 9:00am - 10:00am
Research Interests: Theater, ideology, and public institutions during the Spanish Second Republic Contemporary Spanish Theater
Scholarly Keywords: Modern Spanish literature Modern Spanish theater
Academic Associations: MLA Asociacin International de Hispanistas Editorial board, ESTRENO
Louise Neary
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and LiteraturesShow BioAdjunct Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures
Downey House 120
860-685-3098
BA Boston College
MA Boston College
PHD University of Illinois Urbana
SPAN101 - 01
Elementary Spanish I
SPAN113 - 01
Intermediate-Advanced Spanish
SPAN113 - 02
Intermediate-Advanced Spanish
SPAN102 - 01
Elementary Spanish II
SPAN112 - 03
Intermediate Spanish II
Office Hours: Spring 2013: M, W: 1-2:30 & by appointment
Scholarly Keywords: The Bilingual Lexicon Second Language Pedagogy
Academic Associations: American Association of Applied Linguists ACTFL
Maria Ospina
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages & LiteraturesShow Bio and Photo
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages & Literatures
300 High Street 209
860-685-3105
Assistant Professor, Latin American Studies
BA Brown University
MA Harvard University
PHD Harvard University
SPAN221 - 02
Introduction to Hispanic Lits.
SPAN282 - 01
Narratives of Crisis
Office Hours: Wednesdays 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm ; Fridays 10:00 am - 11:00 am
Research Interests: Violence, Drug trafficking and War in Latin America ; Contemporary topographies of jungle : Narratives of youth ; Neoliberalism and its critiques ; Psychoanalysis, sexuality and memory ; Latin American film and visual culture
Scholarly Keywords: Contemporary Latin American culture Colombian literature, film and cultural production Violence, history and cultural memory in contemporary Latin America Political economies of drug trafficking and cultural production Latin American film
Ana Perez-Girones
Adjunct Professor of Romance Languages & LiteraturesShow Bio and Photo
Adjunct Professor of Romance Languages & Literatures
Downey House 127
860-685-3095
BA University of Seville
MA Cornell University
Office Hours:
Fall 2012: Mondays 11 -12 p.m., Wednesdays 1:30-3:00, and by appointment


