Gabriela Nouzeilles, Associate Professor; Spanish

Please note: Gabriela has left the "Romance Studies" group at Duke University; some info here might not be up to date.

Office Location:  
Office Phone:  (919) 660-3100
Email Address: send me a message

Office Hours:

Sabbatical 2003-2004
Education:

PhDThe University of Michigan (Ann Arbor)1994
MA (Summa Cum Laude)The University of Michigan (Ann Arbor)1990
Profesora en Letras (Summa Cum Laude)Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina1984
Specialties:

Spanish
Areas of Interest:

19th and 20th-Century Latin American Literatures and Cultures
Scientific fictions
Nature and the politics of space
Cultural and literary theory

Recent Publications

  1. El umbral de la cultura. Cuerpo, paisaje y sexualidad (forthcoming 2003), Buenos Aires: Editorial Paidós
  2. G. Nouzeilles, Graciela Montaldo, The Argentina Reader: Culture, Politics and Society (2002), Durham (NC) and London: Duke University Press
  3. Tourist Nomadism and Modern Malaise, in Images of Power, edited by William Rowe and Jens Andermann, Images of Poewr (forthcoming 2003), London (UK): Latin American Studies Institute
  4. La dislocacion de la cultura: minesis, autenticidad y diaspora, in (In)migracion, exilio y diaspora en la cultura latinoamericana, vol. (in)migracion, exilio y diaspora en la c (forthcoming 2003), Buenos Aires: Allianza
  5. La naturaleza en disputa. Retoricas del cuerpo y el paisaje en America latina (2002), Buenos ires: Editorial Paidos

Professor Nouzeilles has taught at the Universidad de Buenos Aires, Trinity College (CT), and the University of Nottimgham (UK). Her professional publications include several essays on scientific and literary fictions of pathology, hysteria and iconography, and narrative and modernity in Latin America. Her book Ficciones Somaticas: Naturalismo, Nacionalism y Politicas Medicas del Cuerpo (Beatriz Viterbo Editora, 2000) studies the interplay of medical and literary discourses of disease and its disciplinary fictions in fin-de-siècle Argentina. She is co-editor of The Argentina Reader: History, Culture and Politics (Duke University Press, 2002) and Editor of El Umbral de la Cultura: Naturaleza, Cuerpo y Paisaje (Editorial Paidos, 2002). Her new project, The Uttermost End of the World: Patagonia Nature in Global Perspective, focuses on the production of space and the geographical imagination in scientific, military, touristic and literary materials about Patagonia, covering from travel logs and maps to novels, photographs, and film. Since 1998, she has been executive co-editor of the interdisciplinary journal Nepantla. Views from South.