Julie Singer, Assistant Professor of French at Washington University in St. Louis (and Duke alum, PhD '06) will be giving a lecture at Duke in February 20,2009 at 5:30 pm in 319 Social Sciences. Title - "Metonymy and Prosthesis."
For more information see: http://rll.wust1.edu/people/singer
Please click the links below to enjoy photos and summaries from some of our departmental events!!
East Campus "House-Warming" for the Spanish Language Program
Fall Reception
Retirement Party for Philip Stewart
Life is a Dream
Performance of Alejandra Juno's 21st century adaptation in English of Pedro Calderon de la Barca's La vida es sueño. Introduction by Luciano Garcia Lorenzo
8:00 pm on Thursday, November 6, 2008, 209 E. Duke Theater
For more information and to confirm your attendance, please contact David Baxter in the Department of Romance Studies at 919-660-3100
The Department of Romance Studies is proud to present a lecture by
Danny James
called
"Quemando el parquet": 'Cabecitas negras', urban legends and the construction of regional identity in an Argentine working class community
Monday, November 10, 2008
2:15 pm
201 Flowers
Reception to follow lecture. This lecture is free and open to the public.
http://www.romancestudies.aas.duke.edu/romancestudies/Danny_James_Lecture.html
Daniel James was educated at Oxford University and received his doctorate from the London School of Economics. He was a Research Fellow at Cambridge University and from 1979 to 1982 taught sociology at the University of Brasilia. Since coming to the United States he has taught Latin American history at Yale University and Duke University until coming to Indiana in 1999 to take up the Bernardo Mendel Chair in Latin American History.
His primary research interests have been in Argentina. Since first going to Argentina in 1972 he has spent frequent prolonged periods in Argentina. His principle interest has been in modern Argentine labor, social and cultural history. Much of the focus of his work has been on Peronism. His first book, Resistance and Integration: Peronism and the Argentine Working Class 1943 - 1976, was published by Cambridge University Press in 1988. Since the late 1980s he has been engaged in a long-term collaborative project with Professor Mirta Zaida Lobato of the University of Buenos Aires focused on the history of the meatpacking community of Berisso. A central part of this project has involved the collection of oral testimonies in the community.
For more information please contact Cathy Knoop at 919-660-3102 or cknoop@duke.edu
The Department of Romance Studies is proud to present a lecture by
Christopher Prendergast
USES AND ABUSES OF THE CLASSIC
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
4:45 pm
The Rare Book Room
Perkins Library, West Campus
Reception to Follow
Professor Prendergast is a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge and a Professor Emeritus of the University of Cambridge. He has taught at Pembroke College, Oxford, and at Downing College, Cambridge. has been Distinguished Professor in French and Comparative Literature at the Graduate School in the City University of New York, and was a Fellow at the Danish Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities. He has held the title of Visiting Professor at UCLA, SUNY-Albany, the University of Cape Town, and the University of Copenhagen. He has been Visiting Fellow at Princeton University and the Remarque Institute of New York University.
His numerous publications include Balzac: Fiction and Melodrama; The Order of Mimesis; Paris-Spectacle: Images de Paris dans la peinture au Musée d’Orsay; Writing the City: Paris and the Nineteenth Century; Napoleon and History Painting; The Triangle of Representation; and For the People, By the People? Eugène Sue’s ‘Les Mystères de Paris.’ Professor Prendergast has edited a number of important volumes on 19th and 20th century French literature, and was General Editor of the recent six-volume English translation of Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu [In Search of Lost Time] (Penguin, 2002).
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http://www.romancestudies.aas.duke.edu/ChristopherPrendergastlecture.html
http://www.romancestudies.aas.duke.edu/ElizabethRhodesLecture.html
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Elizabeth Rhodes will give a lecture entitled "Inquisitions: Spain in the Pre-Modern Age." The lecture will take place from 1:30 to 3:00 pm in the Breedlove Room of Perkins Library.
Elizabeth Rhodes, Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies and an award-winning teacher, adviser and mentor at Boston College, is a specialist in early modern Spanish literature, particularly the fields of theology and religious literature, and women's studies. She recently lectured on the arts and the Inquisition at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in conjunction with the "El Greco - Velázquez" exhibit.For more information, please contact Cathy Knoop at 660-3102 or cknoop@duke.ed. This event is co-sponsored by the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
http://www.romancestudies.aas.duke.edu/ImageIllusionConference.html
Thursday and Friday, October 2 and 3, 2008
Keynote Speakers:
William Egginton, Johns Hopkins U. “The Theater of Truth”
Frederick De Armas, U. of Chicago. “Framing Francisco Ribalta: From Lope’s La viuda valenciana to the Rimas del licenciado Tomé Burguillos.”
Margaret Greer, Duke University. “Honra es aquélla que consiste en otro: the reflected subject in Lope's Los comendadores de Cordoba.”
This event is free and open to the public.
Sponsored by the Department of Romance Studies, the Nasher Museum of Art and Duke in Madrid and the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. For more information, please contact Cathy Knoop (cknoop@duke.edu, 660-3102)
A Colloquium will close the event on Saturday, October 4, 2008 from 10:00 am to 12:00 noon in the Breedlove Room at Perkins Library. The colloquium will be led by Prof. Frederick de Armas. Breakfast will be provided.Mark your calendars!
The Annual Romance Studies Graduate Student Conference is coming up next weekend, Friday and Saturday, Sept. 12-13 in the Women's Studies Parlors on East Campus. This year's conference is entitled "Masking and Unmasking."
We are pleased to announce our keynote speaker, Trevor Burnard, 2008-2009 Fellow at the National Humanities Center and professor at the University of Warwick. His talk is entitled:
"Intimate Strangers: The Multiple Masks of Slavery in Jamaica and Berbice, 1750-1823."
We welcome all undergraduates, graduate students and faculty who wish to attend.
For more information, please go to
http://www.duke.edu/web/romance08/schedule.html
[more]The Department of Romance Studies is proud to present a lecture by
Justin Crumbaugh
entitled The Power of Inauthenticity and the Rise of Spanish Neoconservatism:
The “Spain Is Different” Tourism Campaign of 1964
Friday, November 21, 2008
4:00 pm
305 Languages Building
Reception to follow lecture
http://www.romancestudies.aas.duke.edu/romancestudies/JustinCrumbaughLecture.html
Since Justin Crumbaugh received his doctorate from Emory University, he has taught at the University of
Pennsylvania and at Mount Holyoke College, where he is Assistant Professor of Spanish and Film
Studies. His research focuses on Spanish public discourse of recent decades with a particular emphasis
on tourism, political conflict and the tensions associated with Spain’s transition to a postindustrial
society. His book, Destination Dictatorship: The Spectacle of Spain’s Tourist Boom and the Reinvention
of Difference (SUNY Press 2009), examines the media frenzy surrounding the rise of mass tourism
during the1960s as it relates to the Franco regime’s attempts to shore up power through modernization
and “economic government.” Professor Crumbaugh’s most recent work connects the so-called Basque
problem and the symbolization of the “victims of terrorism” to debates about historical memory of the
Franco dictatorship.
For more information, please contact the Department of Romance Studies at 919-660-3100
http://www.romancestudies.aas.duke.edu/MichaelNooneLecture.html
Monday, October 6, 2008
Michael Noone will give a lecture entitled Newly-discovered musical masterpieces from El Greco’s Toledo: from 16th-century illuminated manuscripts to 21st-century CD’s. The lecture will take place in Room 104, Biddle Music Building (East Campus) at 4:00 pm. Reception to follow.
Musicologist and choral director at Boston College, Michael Noone has held teaching, research and performance posts at universities on four continents. His research focuses on early modern sacred music. He is the author of Music and Musicians in the Escorial Liturgy under theHabsburgs and El Códice 25 de la catedral de Toledo. Prof. Noone has recorded more than a dozen CDs, including award-winning recordings by the Ensemble Plus Ultra, which he co-founded specifically to perform Spanish music.
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Department of Music, the Department of Romance Studies, and the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies in relation to the Nasher Museum of Art’s exhibit, “El Greco to Velázquez: Art During the Reign of Philip III.” For more information, please contact Cathy Knoop (cknoop@duke.edu, 660-3102).
On May 19, 2008, the Spanish Language Program moved from their existing headquarters in the Language Building to the Bell Tower site on East Campus. The move had been carefully planned throughout the 2007—2008 school year with the intent of providing more office space to all the Language Program, which had been crammed into the basements of Perkins and the Language Building up to this point.
All of the Spanish Language instructors, Liliana Paredes, the Program Director, Pat McPherson, the Administrative Secretary, and Bonnie McManus, the Service Learning Coordinator, now occupy offices in the Bell Tower site.
A “house-warming” party is planned for late August at the Bell Tower offices.
We'd like to extend a warm welcome to all of our new and returning students & faculty as we begin the 2008 - 2009 academic year.
Stay tuned for our department newsletter, coming soon!
For photos and more information about our
2008 Commencement
ceremony, please visit:
http://www.romancestudies.aas.duke.edu/romancestudies/2008Commencement.html [more]
Brian Alberto Ovalle is the 2008 recipient of the Guido Mazzoni Award in Italian for excellence in the major. He will receive the award and gift at our commencement luncheon and diploma presentation on Sunday, May 11th.
Please join us in congratulating Brian!!
We are happy to announce Kathryn Husted Wooten is the 2008 recipient of the Richard L. Predmore Award in Spanish for excellence in the major. She will receive the award and gift at our commencement luncheon and diploma presentation on Sunday, May 11th.
Please join us in congratulating Kathryn!!
We are happy to announce Annalies Heinrichs has won the Robert J. Niess/Alexander Hull Award in French for excellence in the major. She recently defended her Honors Thesis, directed by Paol Keineg, “Kay Koule Tronpe soley, min li pa tronpé la pli En route vers l’assurance des soins de santé en Haïti” and received Highest Distinction.
Please join us in congratulating Annalies!
The Department of Romance Studies and Atlantic Studies Present??
Christopher Miller discussing his new book
The French Atlantic Triangle: Literature and Culture of the Slave Trade
March 17-19, 2008
Miller’s visit will involve three events:
LECTURE
Tuesday March 18th at 6:00 p.m.
Breedlove Room, Perkins Library
SEMINAR
Monday, March 17th, 4:25-7:25 in 305 Languages
Wednesday, March 19th, 4:25-7:25 in Breedlove Room, Perkins Library
PLEASE NOTE: Participants in the seminar are expected to have read the book in advance. Copies are available at the Gothic Bookstore. Please register for the seminar by writing to Laurent Dubois at ld48@duke.edu
The Department of Romance Studies along with the Center for French and Francophone Studies, John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute, Center for European Studies, Duke Interdisciplinary Studies, Center for International Studies, Department of History, Program in Literature are proud to present??
Jacques Revel
Jacques Revel is a directeur d’études at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in ??
French Studies at New York University.* He is known for his significant contributions to the Annales school and also, more recently, for the promotion of microhistory, Revel’s work focuses on social history, cultural forms and practices, and the Ancien Régime. In 2006, he published Un Parcours Critique
(Galaade Editions). He is currently at work at on a project that examines the link between religious practices, political and philosophical critiques of religion, and historical thought.
LECTURE: Religions, History and Society: A Debate around 1720
Thursday, March 27
5:30 pm (refreshments begin at 5:00 pm)
Room 240,
BROWN BAG LUNCH DISCUSSION: Friday, March 28
11:00 am—1:00 pm
Location TBA
Lunch provided, please RSVP to ham5@duke.edu by March 17
These events are free and open to the public
For more information, please email
*We are grateful to NYU for extending the conditions of Professor Revel’s visa to permit him to participate in these events at Duke.
The job talks for our modern French search will be taking place during the month of February.
If you would like to be added to the announcement listserv, please contact Cathy Knoop at cknoop@duke.edu.
The Department of Romance Studies is proud to present a lecture by Emilie Picherot entitled A page of tolerance in a world in chaos: the moriscos' voice in its historical and literary context
The lecture will take place at 1:00 pm Thursday, February 7, 2008 (329 Soc Psych). Lunch will be provided. Please RSVP to cknoop@duke.edu
Emilie Picherot is an advanced PhD student at the University of Paris IV (Sorbonne) studying comparative literature (Spanish, Arabic and French) about Moriscos' participation to the elaboration of their stereotyped image in Spanish and French literature (16th-17th centuries). Her thesis, “The Arab heritage of lovesongs viejos” in progress under the direction of Mr. Lecercle.
Picherot entered the "Ecole Normale Supérieure" (Ulm, classique) in 1998 with classic Spanish literature as a specialty. She holds a Bachelor of French literature (licence de lettres modernes) (1999); Spanish literature, language and civilization (licence d'espagnol) (1999); and classic Arabic literature, language and civilization (licence d'arabe classique) (2006). She currently teaches comparative literature at Paris-Sorbonne and is working on a "francophone" literature program.
The Department of Romance Studies presents a lecture by Priska Degras Maître de Conférences, Langue et Littérature françaises Université Paul Cézanne (Aix-Marseille III)
Noms d’esclaves, noms de citoyens : le patronyme comme métaphore de l’Histoire dans le «Roman des Amériques»
Noon, Tuesday, February 19th, 305 Languages Building, (A light lunch will be served), Contact ld48@duke.edu for more details
The Department of Romance Studies is proud to co-sponser, along with the Duke Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, a lecture by Daniel Heller-Roazen Professor of Comparative Literature, Princeton University, Before the Disciplines Formations of Knowledge before Modernity Along Liquid Paths A Genealogy of Piracy
The lecture will take place Thursday, February 21, 2008, 3:30 p.m. Old Trinity Room, West Union Building