Office Location: | 212 Language Center |
Office Phone: | (919) 660-3100, (919) 660-3112 |
Email Address: |
Teaching (Fall 2024):
Ph.D. | Stanford University | 2001 |
M.A. | Stanford University | 1997 |
B.A. | University of Pennsylvania | 1993 |
Current projects: "Non-Literary Fictions: Inventions and Interventions in Contemporary Latin American Art"
Esther Gabara received her PhD from Stanford University in 2001. Her main area of specialization is the relationship between literature and visual culture in modern and contemporary Latin America. Her research has examined photography in the Americas in terms of its impact on theories of ethics and aesthetics, the formulation of non-mainstream modernisms, and questions of race and gender. Her book, Errant Modernism: The Ethos of Photography in Mexico and Brazil, was published by Duke University Press in 2008. Her teaching in the departments of Romance Studies and Art, Art History & Visual Studies at Duke University covers topics of Mexican visual culture and politics, Latin American modernisms, and contemporary urban cultural production in the Americas. She is currently working on a new book project on theories of fiction in contemporary artistic and popular visual culture, entitled "Non-Literary Fictions: Invention and Interventions in Contemporary Latin American Visual Culture."