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Creative Writing workshop with Spanish writer Mar Gomez Gles
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Spanish Language Table
Join us for weekly language practice.
For information, contact Melanie Nicholson at [email protected].

Current Events

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Events Archive

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2025 Past Events

  • Thursday, May 8, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, May 1, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, April 24, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, April 17, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, April 10, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, April 3, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Monday, March 31, 2025 
    John Burns, Associate Professor of Spanish,
    Bard College

    Olin Humanities, Room 201  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    What challenges and opportunities does translating a play from Spanish into English present? This talk will focus on the case of Troya tropical by contemporary Cuban playwright Gleyvis Coro Montanet, a play written largely in rhyming octosyllabic verse, which I am translating for an anthology focusing on contemporary Cuban literature that draws on references to Ancient Greece and Rome. We will specifically look at the ways in which the piece, which is brimming with references to Cuban literature and history, playfully reimagines the Trojan War in the context of contemporary Cuba. 

  • Thursday, March 27, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Monday, March 24, 2025 
    Yafrainy Familia
    Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    In the Western imagination, the Caribbean has often been configured as a feminized landscape—its territories likened to a woman’s body that is sexually available for conquest and exploitation. Similarly, Black and Indigenous Caribbean women’s bodies have been historically configured as sites of extraction, subjected to colonial fantasies of production and reproduction. Focusing on the island of Hispaniola as a case study, this talk traces the role of Western travel narratives, illustrated maps, and nationalist cultural production in shaping these racialized and gendered spatial tropes. Through literary and visual analysis, Familia considers a genealogy of Western-masculine narratives that have shaped enduring colonial visions of the Caribbean, from the writings of Christopher Columbus and the cartographic work of Henry Popple to the literary texts of Francisco Javier Angulo Guridi. She then situates the work of contemporary Dominican visual artist Firelei Báez as a powerful counter-narrative, arguing that Báez’s series of map paintings strategically reckon with the violence of these historical archives, while illuminating the spatial strategies Caribbean women and femmes have employed to disrupt this colonial geographical imagination.

    Yafrainy Familia is a PhD candidate in Spanish and an Interdisciplinary Doctoral Fellow in Caribbean Literatures, Arts and Cultures at the University of Virginia. She holds a master’s degree in creative writing from Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona. She specializes in contemporary Caribbean literature and visual culture from a comparative perspective across the Spanish, French and English-speaking Caribbeans. Her research focuses on Caribbean women writers and artists and engages feminist, decolonial, and digital humanities methods. Her work has been supported by the Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA), Center for Global Inquiry and Innovation, and UVA’s Department of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, among others. She is also a Solidarity Fellow in the Mellon-funded digital humanities project Diaspora Solidarities Lab, which supports solidarity work in Black and ethnic studies. Her writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism; The Acentos Review; and the exhibition catalogue of Diasporic Collage: Puerto Rico and the Survival of a People. 

  • Thursday, March 20, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, March 13, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, March 6, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, February 27, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, February 20, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Monday, February 17, 2025 
    Dr. Ethel Barja Cuyutupa
    Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:30 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
    This presentation will discuss twenty-first century poetry by two Afro-Hispanophone Caribbean poets, Mayra Santos-Febres from Puerto Rico and Soleida Ríos from Cuba, to underline how their poetry imagines futures under threatening circumstances such as forced displacement and anti-blackness. How does the longue durée of Black resistance influence twenty-first-century poetics?

    Dr. Ethel Barja Cuyutupa will present her research, which takes place through an interdisciplinary approach in between history and poetics and in dialogue with scholars interested in how lyric language is historically inflicted and intertwined with social justice and Blackness. The intertwining of imagery of long-lasting Black resistance and the emotional and political dimensions of the posthuman lyric subject ensures the poetics of maroonage exposes transhistorical genealogies of hope.

    Ethel Barja is a scholar, educator, and award-winning poet originally from the Andes, Peru. She holds a PhD in Hispanic Studies from Brown University and an MA in Hispanic literary Studies from the University of Illinois at Chicago. She is an Assistant Professor in the Modern Languages and Intercultural Studies Department at Salisbury University. Her research focuses on transnational and interdisciplinary approaches to Hispanophone Caribbean, Andean, and Latinx literature, integrating critical Indigenous studies, Afro-poetics, gender, and posthuman studies. She is the author of the monograph titled Poesía e insurrección: La Revolución cubana en el imaginario latinoamericano. Her poetry collections include Insomnio Vocal, Hope is Tanning on a Nudist Beach, and La Muda.
  • Thursday, February 13, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Wednesday, February 12, 2025 
    Dr. Juan Diego Mariátegui
    Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:30 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
    Puerto Rico emerged from the 1950s transformed. By 1952, governor Luis Muñoz Marín inaugurated the Free Associated State, a new legal status that ostensibly ended Puerto Rico’s colonial subordination as a “non-incorporated territory” of the United States. Another key development in these heady years was the Korean War (1950-1953), in which 61,000 Puerto Rican soldiers participated. This conflict was crucial because it allowed Muñoz Marín to present Puerto Rico as an exemplary defender of capitalist democracy and thereby discursively support its colonial relationship with the United States. But there is a parallel war that occurred in this period: the armed insurrection known as the Jayuya Uprising that Pedro Albizu Campos and the pro-independence Nationalist Party launched as a response to the Free Associated State. This talk centers on two opposed visions of war, a nationalist one and a neo-imperialist one. Through the speeches of governor Luis Muñoz Marín, poems by the Nationalist mystic Francisco Matos Paoli, and a short story by pro-independence author José Luis González, I explore how literary representations of these armed conflicts formed different anti-colonialist cultural and political subjectivities at a time when the island’s commitment to the U.S. was enshrined.

    Juan Diego Mariátegui is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures at Lehigh University. Prior to that he received a PhD in Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian Studies from the University of Chicago as well as a B.A. in Comparative Literature and Hispanic Studies from Brown University. His teaching and research focus on modern Puerto Rican and Cuban literature, particularly the way literary representations of space explore the relationship between man and the natural world, the cultural dimensions of colonialism, and the tensions between citizenship and diaspora. 

  • Thursday, February 6, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Monday, February 3, 2025 
    Gisabel Leonardo
    Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:30 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
    In Junot Diaz’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, Lola explores her contentious relationship with her mother, childhood trauma, and racial identity through hair. Similarly, Shenny De Los Angeles’ autobiographical documentary short “The Ritual to Beauty” explores themes of race, gender, and haircare through intimate interviews with Shenny’s mother and grandmother. These women turn to haircare as a site of expression to address the trauma they and the women before them have endured. In critical moments of release, both Lola and Shenny shave their heads in complete refusal of the Dominican aesthetics of race that promote hair straightening. In a Dominican context, the “Big Chop”—as this is often referred to in anglophone cultures—conjures a negative affect that mirrors the traumatic memory of El Corte, or The Parsley Massacre (1937), when tens of thousands of Haitians were slaughtered at the hands of Dominican armed forces. The works explored here confront the racial terror of the corte to heal generational trauma rooted in an anti-Black aesthetic imaginary. Through literature and visual media, this talk explores the nuances and consequences of the “chop” as an act of aesthetic refusal and an affirmation of Dominican Blackness.

    Gisabel Leonardo is a PhD candidate in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese with a graduate minor in Latina/o Studies. Her interdisciplinary work centers expressions of gender, race, and sexuality through performance in contemporary Dominican and diasporic Dominican literary, artistic, and musical cultures. While at Illinois, she had the pleasure of designing and facilitating language, literature, culture, and media studies courses at several levels of instruction while also serving as a Graduate College Fellow and a Humanities Research Institute Predoctoral Fellow. Her teaching and research interests aim to center the cultural and literary production of marginalized voices across the Hispanophone Caribbean and its US diaspora. Her current work Melenas Malcriadas: The Black Aesthetics of Hair and Dominicanidad examines the conflicting affects of the Dominican hair salon and how Dominican hair culture is reproduced and reimagined in music, literature, and art.
  • Thursday, January 30, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

2015 (2014–15 academic year)


A Student Conference (11 December)

Is the Author Dead? Haunted by the Ghost of Cervantes
Sponsored by Division of Languages and Literature; Experimental Humanities Program; LAIS Program; Spanish Studies

Miguel de Cervantes’s first modern novel, Don Quixote, is a work intratextually attributed to a fictional Moorish author, at a time when the Moors were being expelled from Spain. Authors trapped in fiction are sometimes persecuted, and then killed by their characters; others feel terrified, and become invisible as they hide behind the lines they write. Lastly, some authors are dead (or said to be dead), and speak to us from their tombs. What are the changing ways in which the ghostly figure of the author returns to fiction? What does it mean to be an author? With an emphasis on Spanish literature put in conversation with Latin American and Portuguese literatures, this conference invites to reflect on the notion of authorship as it was originally redefined with the birth of modern novel in Golden Age Spain, and reshaped during Romanticism and contemporary times. All panel discussions will be in English. Open to the Bard community.

A Student Conference (2, 4, 9 December)

Is the Author Dead? Haunted by the Ghost of Cervantes
Sponsored by the Division of Languages and Literature; Experimental Humanities Program; LAIS Program; Spanish Studies

Miguel de Cervantes’s first modern novel, Don Quixote, is a work intratextually attributed to a fictional Moorish author, at a time when the Moors were being expelled from Spain. Authors trapped in fiction are sometimes persecuted, and then killed by their characters; others feel terrified, and become invisible as they hide behind the lines they write. Lastly, some authors are dead (or said to be dead), and speak to us from their tombs. What are the changing ways in which the ghostly figure of the author returns to fiction? What does it mean to be an author? With an emphasis on Spanish literature put in conversation with Latin American and Portuguese literatures, this conference invites to reflect on the notion of authorship as it was originally redefined with the birth of modern novel in Golden Age Spain, and reshaped during Romanticism and contemporary times. All panel discussions will be in English. Open to the Bard Community. For further information, please contact Prof. López-Gay ([email protected]), or student conference committee members Hilda Puig ([email protected]), Benjamin Newman ([email protected]), or Daniel Schutrum-Boward ([email protected]).

Reading Sor Juana (20 October)

Sponsored by the Division of Languages and Literature; Spanish Studies
Join us in welcoming translator Edith Grossman for a fascinating lecture.

Alejandra Pizarnik (22 September)

The Poetics of Self-Translation
Sponsored by Division of Languages and Literature; Spanish Studies

Join us in welcoming Patricio Ferrari of Brown University for a fascinating lecture.

2014 (2013–14 academic year)

The Translation Symposium at Bard College (4 April)

Sponsored by Spanish Studies; Russian/Eurasian Studies Program; Literature Program; German Studies Program; Division of Languages and Literature; Dean of the College; Asian Studies Program

9:00 am – 1:00 pm. Student Workshop in Aspinwall 302.   Panelists include: Eugene Bata * Daniel Krakovski * Robert Isaf * Melanie Mignucci * Courtney Morris * Yuko Okamura * Christopher Shea * Alissa Rubin * Melissa Weaver

2:00 pm – 6:00 pm. Faculty Workshop in RKC 103. Panelists include: Thomas Bartshcerer * Jonathan Brent * Peter Filkins * Susan Gillespie * Wyatt Mason * Justus Rosenberg * Olga Voronina

Meet the Filmmakers! The Guernica Variations and City of Signs (18 March)

On Art, War, and the Avatars of Filmmaking
Sponsored by Art History Program; Division of Languages and Literature; Hannah Arendt Center; Human Rights Program; Italian Studies Program; LAIS Program; Middle Eastern Studies Program; Spanish Studies

Both films are in Spanish with English subtitles.   

The Guernica Variations (Guillermo Peydró, 2012, 26 min): Picasso’s Guernica is the image of a disproportionate attack on unarmed civilians to demoralize and subjugate a whole population, it encapsulates a turning point that ushered in today’s use of terror against civilians. This film received the 2013 Best Documentary Award from Uruguay’s International Short Film Festival, among other awards, and has been widely screened at museums, including the Reina Sofia National Museum.    

City of Signs (Samuel Alarcón, 2009, 62 min): When César Alarcón travels to Pompeii to collect “psychophonies”—electronic voice phenomena—from Vesuvius’s great eruption, he finds that none contain sounds from the year 79 AD. Eloquent voices from the recent past will nonetheless lead him to the exploration of Roberto Rossellini’s mysterious life and film production. This film received the 2011 Román Gubern Essay-Film Award, among other awards.

César Vallejo's Trilce (18 February)
The Necessity and Uses of Translation
Sponsored by Spanish Studies; Division of Languages and Literature; Dean of the College

Essayist, poet, and translator William Rowe is Professor of Poetics at Birkbeck College, University of London, and author of several books on Latin American Poetry.

William Rowe is founder of the Contemporary Poetics Research Center, University of London, Birkbeck, where he is Anniversary Professor Emeritus of Iberian and Latin American Studies. Professor Rowe is the author of 10 books on Latin American literature and culture, including Poets of Contemporary Latin America (Oxford University Press, 2000). His many translations of Latin American authors, with special interest in the poetics of sociopolitical change, include Raul Zurita’s INRI (Marick Press, 2009) and his recently completed Trilce by César Vallejo. Rowe is a founding editor of the Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies, Travesia; he has taught at the Universities of Lambayeque (Peru), Liverpool, Kings College London, where he was given a chair in Latin American cultural studies; San Marcos (Peru), Universidad Católica (Peru), Universidad Iberoamericana (Mexico), and Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona.

Movement for Justice in El Barrio (11 March)

El Barrio No Se Vende! Se Ama y Se Defiende!National Speaking Tour - Fall 2012
Sponsored by Difference and Media Project; Human Rights Project; LAIS Program; La Voz; Latin American Students Association; Spanish Studies

“BEST POWER TO THE PEOPLE MOVEMENT IN NYC” —VILLAGE VOICE

“IT IS REAL GRASS-ROOTS DEMOCRACY, AND IT IS BEING PRACTICED BY THE IMMIGRANTS WHO LIVE IN EAST HARLEM” —NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Movement for Justice in El Barrio was founded in 2004 by immigrants and low-income people of color of East Harlem to fight for dignity and against neoliberal displacement. A majority-women of color organization, Movement operates on a commitment to self-determination, autonomy, and participatory democracy.

Driven by multinational corporations and profit-seeking landlords, and facilitated by city officials, gentrification has swept through New York City, causing the wholesale displacement of low-income people of color and immigrants from their communities. East Harlem is experiencing a wave of harassment, abuse, and intimidation as greedy landlords attempt to evict community members from their homes in order to raise rents and increase profits. With over 850 members, Movement has gone building to building to organize with their fellow neighbors to build a neighborhood-wide movement for dignity and justice—from below and to the left.
 
A Conversation with Juan González (2 October)

Author of Harvest of Empire: The Untold Story of Latinos in America
Sponsored by the Difference and Media Project; Human Rights Project; LAIS Program; La Voz, LASO, and ISO; Spanish Studies

“We are all Americans of the New World, and our most dangerous enemies are not each other, but the great wall of ignorance between us.” —Juan González, Harvest of Empire

NYU Study Abroad Tabling in Campus Center (26 September)

Sponsored by the Institute for International Liberal Education

A rep from NYU is on campus today with information about the university's study abroad programs worldwide. Drop by to see if one of their programs might be for you! Thinking about Study Abroad but don't know how it works at Bard? It's never too early to start planning where/when/how. Contact Study Abroad Adviser Trish Fleming at 845-758-7080 or [email protected] to make an appointment.

“Rights and Obligations”: Public Conversation on Citizenship and Society (26 September)

A Discussion Led by Roger Berkowitz Based Upon Hunger of Memory by Richard Rodriguez
Sponsored by the Hannah Arendt Center

Join us for an active-learning program of community conversation that uses Richard Rodriguez’s autobiography Hunger of Memory as a jumping-off point for discussion.“I became a man by becoming a public man.” —Richard Rodriguez

The evening’s discussion will address the tensions between cultural identity and US citizenship, the responsibilities inherent in citizenship, and what it means to live a “public life.” Free copies of Hunger of Memory are available but supplies are limited. Email [email protected] for your copy. Made possible by the New York Council for the Humanities

Racist Killings, Mourning Songs, and a 13-Year-Old Girl (19 September)

Reading and Discussion (in English) With Eminent German-Jewish Writer Esther Dischereit
Sponsored by the Center for Civic Engagement; German Studies Program; Human Rights Project; Jewish Studies Program

Esther Dischereit is one of the most exciting writers and thought-provoking public intellectuals in Germany today. Her poems, novels, essays, and plays, including radio plays; her opera libretti; and her sound installations offer unique insights into the Jewish life of contemporary Europe. She collaborates with composers and musicians and founded the avant-garde project WordMusicSpace/Sound-Concepts. Coming from a survivors’ family, commemoration (of the Holocaust) has been a constant reference point in her work. Dischereit’s writings also reflect on what it means to be a woman and an intellectual. The Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia on Jewish Women calls her an “outstanding writer” among Jewish artists in the twenty-first century.

Recently, a series of racist killings, committed by the so-called National Socialist Underground (NSU) organization, has shocked the German public. Dischereit can be regarded as the most important independent voice covering the legal and political investigations of this unprecedented crime in postwar Germany. While the media focused predominantly on the killers, Dischereit writes on the victims, their families, and friends, and started initiatives on their behalf. She addresses society’s responsibility—that is, our common task not to look away. She challenges widespread racism and xenophobia wherever it arises, including the high ranks of the police and secret service. Dischereit has commented on the topic on television and radio, and in prominent newspapers. As an artist she responded with an amazing collection of “Mourning Songs,” which eventually will evolve into an opera—songs of lament, and songs of accusation.

2013 (2012–13 academic year)

Almodóvar's The Skin I Live In (2011) (9 May)

Stitches in Time
Sponsored by Spanish Studies

This lecture begins by placing Almodóvar's 18th feature in the context of the audiovisual scene in Spain on its release, calling attention to Almodóvar's exceptionalism in his own country. It goes on to offer a close formal analysis of the film and to identify its connections with the rest of the director's corpus. These echoes persist in spite of the fact The Skin I Live In is new for the director in its overt identification with the horror genre and in its status as adaptation of a preexisting novel. Finally, the talk suggests that The Skin I Live In constitutes a series of metaphors for the filmmaking process, not the least of which are the sewing of fabric and the suturing of skin, analogous to the editing of the celluloid that Almodóvar employs here for the last time.

Paul Julian Smith is Distinguished Professor of Spanish at The Graduate Center, CUNY. He is an internationally recognized critic in Hispanic cultural studies. Author of Desire Unlimited: The Cinema of Pedro Almodóvar (Verso, 1994 and 2000) and Laws of Desire: Questions of Homosexuality in Spanish Writing and Film 1960–1990 (Oxford University Press, 1992). Smith's research also focuses on Mexico, including a book on the groundbreaking film Amores Perros (BFI, 2003). He was a juror at the Morelia Film Festival in Mexico in 2009, and is a regular contributor to Film Quarterly and Sight and Sound. 

Candidate for the Position in Spanish (7 February)

Patricia López-Gay
Sponsored by the Dean of the College

Rewriting the Lives of Spain’s “Stolen Children”: The Biographical Impulse and Social Media 

Only in the past few years has it become widely known that one of the largest networks of child trafficking in contemporary Europe was created in Francoist Spain and remained operative until the late '90s. This talk will analyze the biographical and autobiographical narratives that take shape in Facebook groups created by the victims, archival spaces where individuals share information and seek to complete and rewrite their life stories. The new technology changes not simply the archiving process, but what is archivable in a narrative form. Through the formation of collective digital archives, families and individuals become their own archivists—they create and add content in many different forms and media, such as written official documents, oral testimony, familial and personal records, photographs, and audiovisual recordings. Is there a distinctive cultural role for such web-based archives in witnessing history and memorializing our lives, both individually and collectively, in contemporary Spain?

Autobiographical narratives are generally constructed upon the impression of an individual’s past life experiences in the present time: what “might” or “will have been.” As part of a permanently updatable intertext of narratives, the life stories of the stolen children are also marked by the shared loss of what “could have been (and will never be).” From such absence there arises a collective desire to rewrite the lives of entire generations of people. Could we maybe speak of a collective “biographical impulse” that would surpass and frame the autobiographical in the collective archives created for, and by, the “stolen children”?

Candidate for the Position in Spanish (5 February)

Òscar O. Santos-Sopena
Sponsored by Dean of the College

Literary Dreamers: A Visual Journey from Bernat Metge to Francisco de Quevedo

My research study analyzes the work of several Catalan and Castilian authors, who use the motif of the dream as a specific humanist perspective, a literary genre, and a philosophical classical discourse. Thus, this presentation explores the intersection of culture, religion, and literary theory in the work of two Iberian Peninsular authors: Lo somni (1399) by the Catalan writer Bernat Metge (1350–1413) and Los sueños (1627) by the Castilian Francisco de Quevedo y Villegas (1580–1645). Both works represent excellent examples of the use of dreams as a cultural and historical narrative of two epochs: Catalan Humanism and Castilian-Spanish Baroque. I suggest that both texts should be explored in relation to the notion of Christian Humanism, where the use of the dream emerges as a literary genre and artistic philosophical device. I argue that this cross-pollination of humanisms from the Mediterranean world served as a bridge between the different civilizations and cultures. Moreover, as my multidisciplinary research indicates, I include exhaustive visual representations of dreams from the Medieval to Contemporary periods. Through this visual journey, I demonstrate that the introduction of dreams in these narratives is instrumental in separating reality and fiction.

Candidate for the Position in Spanish (4 February)

Francisca Gonzales-Flores
Sponsored by Dean of the College

Spain and America in Antonio Machado's Early Prose

Traditionally, the work of Spanish poet Antonio Machado (Sevilla, 1875 – Collioure, 1939) has been seen as an evolutionary process, from his more introspective first texts to his socially and politically engaged later works. However, Machado’s social and political concerns can already be found in his very first publications, that is, in the articles that appeared in the newspaper “La Caricatura” (The Caricature) in 1893. These rich, but rarely studied, satirical articles will be the subject of my presentation, which will focus on the author’s reflection on the development of Spain as a modern nation and its relationship to the American colonies in the aftermath of the celebrations of the four hundredth anniversary of Columbus’ arrival in the Americas.

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