Spanish and laTIN-american women writers from the enlightenment
Transcripción
Spanish and laTIN-american women writers from the enlightenment
FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY Symposium: Spanish and laTIN-american women writers from the enlightenment to Hispanic modernismo March 29-30, 2013 Sponsored by the Department of Modern Languages of Florida International University, FIU MOL Graduate Students Association, FIU Latin American and Caribbean Center, FIU Women Studies, and with the participation of the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures from the University of Miami, Coral Gables Organizer: Dr. Joan Torres-Pou Assistants: Andrea Fanta, Nicola Gavioli and José Villar Friday March 29th 6:30 to 7:45 Opening Presentation: Dr. Joyce Tolliver, University of Illinois. “Writing Gender in the Modern Empire: Spain and the Philippines” (Graham Center Panther Suite) 7:45 to 9:30 Reception. Saturday, March 30th: 9:00 to 10:45 I. Panel: Approaches to Teaching Pardo Bazán’s Novels. GC. Panther Suite A Chair: Lisa Nalbone ([email protected] ) Jennifer Smith, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale: Race, Class and Gender in Insolación Erika M. Sutherland, Muhlenberg College: Yesterday’s Medicine Today: Teaching Naturalism with Un viaje de novios. Linda M. Willem, Butler University: From Page to Screen: Teaching Emilia Pardo Bazán’s Pazos de Ulloa and La madre naturaleza II. Panel:. Women Writers and Spanish Society. GC Room 305 Chair: Elena Grau-Lleveria ( [email protected] ) Ricardo Castells, Florida International University: La escuela de la mujer emancipada en Matrimonio bien avenido, la mujer junto al marido (1851) de Cecilia Böhl de Faber. Zachary Erwin, University of Texas, Austin: Regenerations: Masculinity and Politics in Emilia Pardo Bazán’s La madre naturaleza Efraín Garza, University of Northern Colorado: Las manifestaciones del amor: De afectos y sentimientos en los cuentos de Emilia Pardo Bazán. Daniela Raducanu, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign: Travelling for Spain: Modernity in the Travel Narratives of Carmen de Burgos. 10:45 to 11:00 Coffee Break 11:00 to 1:00 III. Panel: Teaching Pardo Bazán’s Short Fiction GC Panther Suite A Chair: Erika Sutherland ([email protected] ) Susan Walter, University of Denver: The Use of Creative Writing Activities in a Literature Course on Pardo Bazán. Leslie M. Kaiura, University of Alabama in Huntsville: Don Juan, Meet Doña Emilia: Teaching “El encaje roto” as Reversal of El conde Lucanor’s Exemplum XXXV. Francisca González Arias, The University of Massachusetts, Lowell: A Tour of Doña Emilia’s Galicia. IV. Panel: Rosalía de Castro. GC Room 305 Chair: María Aparicio ( [email protected] ) Lily Margarita Acajabón, University of Central Florida: Cuestionamiento existencialista en “Era apacible el día” de Rosalía de Castro. Michelle Geoffrion-Vinci, Lafayette College: In Defense of the (M)otherland: Gender and Resistance in Rosalía de Castro. Savannah Sullivan, Florida State University: Affective Ontology: Sticky Objects in Rosalía de Castro’s Cantares Gallegos (1863). 1:00 to 2:45 Buffet Lunch 2:45 to 4:45 V. Panel: Visualizing Pardo Bazán. GC Panther Suite A Chair: Susan Walter ([email protected] ) Anne Gilfoil, University of Virginia: Race, Gender, and Disease in Emilia Pardo Bazán’s Una Cristiana-La prueba. Christy Presson Shaughnessy, Washington and Jefferson College: Thoroughly Modern Mary: The Interplay of Text and Illustration in Pardo Bazán’s Edition of La vida de la Virgen María. Margot Versteeg, University of Kansas: Propuestas para (re)construir una nación: El teatro de Emilia Pardo Bazán. 2:45- 7:00 VI. Panel: Spanish-American Women Writers. GC Room 305 Chair: José Villar ([email protected]) Edwin Murillo, Penn State University-Berks: Specter of Malcontent in Latin American Poetry. Ian Althouse, Yale University: Electric Lighting and a New Perception of the Night in the Poetry of Delmira Agustini. Grazyna Walczak, Valdosta State University: La madre ausente en La hija del bandido o los subterráneos del Nevado (1887) de Refugio Barragán Toscano. Maida Watson, Florida International University: Carolina Freyle de Jaimes y el mundo cultural del periodismo escrito por mujeres en el siglo XIX peruano. Frank Otero, Florida International University: Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera y Blanca Sol (1888) apasionamiento, sífilis, locura y muerte social. 4:50 to 7:00 VII. Panel: Emilia’s Evolving Ethics and Aesthetics. Graham Center Panther Suite A Chair: Jennifer Smith ([email protected] ) Stacy Davis, Washington University in St. Louis: Antithesis as Rhetorical Device in the Social- Moral Critiques “La mendiga” and María Magdalena of Matilde Cherner. Leslie Anne Merced, Rockhurst University, Kansas City, Missouri: De Aficiones peligrosas a Porvenir de la literatura después de la Guerra: juventud, nación y mujer en Emilia Pardo Bazán. Lisa Nalbone, University of Central Florida: Mapping Gender and Class: Power and Truth in Pardo Bazán’s La Quimera.