Field-Of-Study: European and Latin American Literature
Lillian Guerra
Lillian Guerra is the author of many scholarly essays as well as three books: Popular Expression and National Identity in Puerto Rico (1998), The Myth of José Martí: Conflicting Nationalisms in Early Twentieth-Century Cuba (2005), and Visions of Power in Cuba: Revolution, Redemption and Resistance, 1959–1971 (2012). Her creative writings include contributions to the works
Alexandra Wettlaufer
Alexandra K. Wettlaufer is Professor of French and Comparative Literature at the University of Texas at Austin, where she is Trice Professor and Associate Director of the Plan II Honors Program and a core faculty affiliate in Women’s and Gender Studies. She received her A.B. from Princeton University in comparative literature (summa cum laude), followed
Maxim D. Shrayer
The author and scholar Maxim D. Shrayer was born in 1967 in Moscow, to a Jewish-Russian family, and spent nine years as a refusenik. He and his parents, the writer and doctor David Shrayer-Petrov and the translator Emilia Shrayer, left the USSR and immigrated to the United States in 1987, after spending a summer in
William Luis
William Luis is the Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Professor of Spanish at Vanderbilt University, where he has held a faculty appointment since 1991. He earned a B.A. from Binghamton University in 1971, an M.A. in Ibero-American Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1973, a second M.A. from Cornell University in 1979, and a Ph.D. from
Faith E. Beasley
I am a professor of French and Italian and Women’s and Gender Studies at Dartmouth College, where I have taught since 1986 after receiving my B.A. from Mount Holyoke College and my M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton. The focus of my work as a scholar and a teacher is resurrecting the works and voices of