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(Re)Imagining Spaces: Migration, Identity and Memory

April 23-24, 2010

Invited Speakers


Jean Franco

"Professor Jean Franco was the first Professor of Latin American Literature in England. She was appointed Professor by the University of Essex in l968 having previously taught at Queen Mary College and Kings College, London University. In l972 she took up a position at Stanford University where she was later appointed to the Olive H. Palmer chair of Humanities. She has been at Columbia University since l982, first in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and later in the Department of English and Comparative Literature. She is now Professor Emerita. Professor Franco is one of the editors of the Cultural Studies of the Americas series published by Minnesota University Press and is General Editor of the Library of Latin America series, published by Oxford University Press.

Professor Franco has been writing on Latin American literature since the early sixties. She has published The Modern Culture of Latin America (l967), C‚sar Vallejo. The Dialectics of Poetry and Silence.(l976) An Introduction to Latin American Literature, (l969)Plotting Women. Gender and Representation in Mexico. (1989).Marcando diferencias. Cruzando Fronteras (l996) A selection of essays Critical Passions,edited by Mary Louise Pratt and Kathleen Newman was published in October l999 by Duke University Press. Her book, The Decline and Fall of the Lettered City. Latin America and the Cold War was published by Harvard University Press in 2001 and was translated into Spanish as Decadencia y ca¡da de la ciudad letrada in the collection, Debates. The book was awarded the Bolton-Johnson Prize by the Conference of Latin American Historians for the best work in English on the History of Latin America published in 2003. Plotting Women , Marcando Diferencias, and several chapters of Critical Passions and The Decline and Fall specifically focus on gender and the essays, Killing Priests, Nuns, Women, Children and Gender, Death and Resistance have been reprinted on numerous occasions. She is at present working on a book with the title cruel modernity.

Professor Franco has been decorated by the governments of Mexico,Chile and Venezuela for her work on Latin American literature and has received awards from PEN and from the Latin American Studies Association for lifetime achievement. She has served as President of the Latin American Studies Association in Great Britain and of the Latin American Studies Association in the U.S."



Katherine Borland

"Dr. Borland is Assistant Dean of the Newark Campus responsible for Outreach, Honors, and Study Abroad and Associate Professor of Comparative Studies in the Humanities. She has published on Latino and Latin American Dance, Nicaraguan Performance Arts, Oral Narrative and Feminist Methodology. Currently, she is working on a critical ethnography of short-term international volunteering in Latin America and the Caribbean and a self-study of team teaching pedagogy. She is also working to facilitate student action research projects in Masaya, Nicaragua."



This event is made possible with the generous support of The Department of Spanish and Portuguese, The College of Humanities, The Center for Latin American Studies, The Center for Folklore Studies, The Department of Comparative Studies, and The Department of Linguistics.