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Faculty Advisory Committee

Program Co-Directors

lionnet.jpgProfessor Françoise Lionnet
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Teaching & Research Interests: Comparative and Francophone literatures, postcolonial studies, autobiography, and race and gender studies
* Ph.D. University of Michigan
* previously at Northwestern University where she held the Pearce Miller Professorship in Literary Studies until 1998
* Visiting Professor, Romance Studies, Duke University, 1996
* Special Professor, Department of French, University of Nottingham, UK, 2003-06
* Directeur d'études associé, EHESS, Paris, 2004

Professional Activities
* Advisory Board, ACLA 2003-06; Vice-President ACLA 2009-11; President 2011- 13.
* Director, Global Fellows Postdoctoral Program (2005-07).
* Co-Director, Mellon Postdoctoral Program (2005-14).
* Executive Council MLA( 1998-02).
* MLA representative to the ACLS (2003-06).
* Board of Governors, UCHRI (2004-09).

Selected Publications


Books

* Autobiographical Voices: Race, Gender, Self-Portraiture (Cornell, 1989).
* Postcolonial Representations: Women, Literature, Identity (Cornell, 1995).
* Minor Transnationalism, co-edited with Shu-mei Shih (Duke, 2005).
* The Creolization of Theory, co-edited with Shu-mei Shih, (under contract, Duke).
* Dissonant Echoes: World, Literature, Creolization (in preparation).

Edited Journals: Special Issues
* Special double issue of Yale French Studies "Post/Colonial Conditions: Exiles, Migrations, Nomadisms" (82 and 83, 1993), co-edited with Ronnie Scharfman.
* Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, "Postcolonial, Indigenous, and Emergent Feminisms" (1995), co-edited with O'Connell, Reyes, Berger, Chaney, Clark, and Sinha.
*Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, "Development Cultures" (2004), co-edited with Nnaemeka, Perry, and Schenck.
* L'Esprit créateur (Fall 2001) on "Cities, Modernity, and Cultural Memory in France and the Francophone World."
* Comparative Literary Studies, "Intra-National Comparisons" 40: 2 (Spring 2003), co-edited with Castillo and Lutzeler.
* MLN, "Francophone Studies: New Landscapes" 118: 4 (Oct. 2003), co-edited with Dominic Thomas.

Selected Recent articles

* "The Heart of the Matter: Critical Conventions, Literary Landscapes, and Postcolonial Ecocriticism" French Global; A New Approach to Literary History, ed. Christie MacDonald & Susan Suleiman, (Columbia UP, 2009), forthcoming.
* "Fictions of (Under)Development: Hunger Artists in the Global Economy," On the Edges of Development: Cultural Interventions, ed. Bhavnani, Foran, Kurian & Munshi (Routledge, 2009), forthcoming.
* "Ces voix au fil de soi(e): Assia Djebar et le détour du poétique," L'Esprit créateur (Winter 2009): 104-116.
* "Continents and Archipelagoes: From E Pluribus Unum to Creole Solidarities," PMLA 123.5 (October 2008): 1503-15.
* "Disease, Demography and the Debré Solution: Broken Promises and Stolen Children in Réunion Island (2006, 1966 1946)," International Journal of Francophone Studies 11/1+2 (2008): 211-27.
* Postcolonialism. Language and the Visual: By Way of Haiti," Journal of Postcolonial Writing 44.3 (September 2008): 227-239.
* " 'The Indies': Baudelaire's Colonial World," PMLA 123. 3 (May 2008): 723-36.
* Feminisms, Genders, Sexualities," Anne Donadey with F. Lionnet in Introduction to Scholarship 3rd Editionp, ed. David Nichols (MLA Publications, 2006): 225-44.
* Cultivating Mere Gardens? Comparative Francophonies, Postcolonial Studies, and Transnational Feminisms," ed, Haun Saussy, Comparative Literature in An Age of Globalization, (Johns Hopkins Press, 2006): 100-13.
* "Fanon," ed. Lawrence Kritzman, Columbia History of 20th Century French Thought (Columbia UP, 2006), 518-520.

Honors and Awards
* 2002 Best Mentor Award from Women in French (WIF)
* Professor Lionnet has held fellowships and grants from the Cornell Society for the Humanities, the American Philosophical Society, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Fulbright Foundation, the SSRC, the United Nations Fund (UNFPA), the UCHRI, the Humanities Research Institute at the University of California-Irvine, the Center for Advanced Feminist Studies at the University of Minnesota, and the NEH. She directed the NEH/Northwestern Summer Institute in French Cultural Stdudies in 1995.
* In June 2003, she held a residency fellowship at the Rockefeller Foundation, Bellagio Center.
shih.jpgProfessor Shu-mei Shih
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Shu-mei Shih is a scholar of comparative literature with expertise and interest in Chinese, Sinophone, Asian American, and world literature. Her research focus also includes transnational feminism, comparative minority discourse, modernism, (post)humanism, and (post)colonialism. Her first book was a comprehensive study of Chinese literary modernism from the early twentieth century that integrated theoretical, historical, and textual approaches. The book, The Lure of the Modern: Writing Modernism in Semicolonial China, 1917-1937 (University of California Press, 2001), also engaged deeply with theories of colonialism and postcolonialism and has been translated into Chinese (2007). Her second book, Visuality and Identity: Sinophone Articulations across the Pacific (University of California Press, 2007), theorizes and substantiates the new category of the Sinophone as the culture and literature of peoples speaking and writing different Chinese languages outside China, especially Taiwan, pre-1997 Hong Kong, Southeast Asia, and Chinese America. She edited a special issue of Postcolonial Studies on the topic of "Globalization and Taiwan's (In)significance"; co-edited (with Françoise Lionnet) Minor Transnationalism (Duke 2005); and also co-edited (with Ying-ying Chien) a special issue of Chung-Wai Literary Monthly on the topic of "Third World and Transnational Feminism." She publishes widely in various scholarly journals in the U.S., and writes regularly for journals and anthologies in Taiwan and China. Her current projects include two editing projects, one for PMLA (Publication of Modern Language Association) on the topic of "Comparative Racialization" (October 2008) and the other a co-edited collection of essays entitled Creolization of Theory. Otherwise, she is either busy trying to invent a new term for a new monograph, called Trialectics with which she hopes to move cross-cultural and transnational studies beyond dialectical models, or exploring the conditions of possibility for the postsocialist human in contemporary China.

Faculty Advisory Committee

Professor Ali Behdad
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Ali Behdad is Professor of English and Comparative Literature and Chair of Comparative Literature Department at UCLA. He is the author of Belated Travelers: Orientalism in the Age of Colonial Dissolution (Duke University Press, 1994), and A Forgetful Nation: On Immigration and Cultural Identity in the United States (Duke University Press, 2005). He has published numerous articles on Postcolonial Theory, immigration and nationalism, travel literature, and photography. He is currently working on a book on the history of photography in the Middle East tentatively titled Contact Vision: On Modernity and Photography in the Middle East.

 

 

Professor Felicity Nussbaum
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Felicity Nussbaum is a specialist in British literature (1660-1800), postcolonial and Anglophone studies, and gender studies. Before joining the faculty at UCLA, Prof. Nussbaum taught at Syracuse University and Indiana University, South Bend. Her current projects include a book on the women, performance, and material practices in the eighteenth-century British theatre; and a collection of essays on The Arabian Nights in historical context. She has recently authored two essays on abolition, slavery, and the "Orient."

Professor Nussbaum is the author most recently of The Limits of the Human: Fictions of Anomaly, Race, and Gender in the Long Eighteenth Century (Cambridge University Press 2003), and editor of The Global Eighteenth Century (Johns Hopkins University Press 2003). In addition, she has published Torrid Zones: Maternity, Sexuality, and Empire in Eighteenth-Century Narratives (Johns Hopkins University Press 1995); The Autobiographical Subject: Gender and Ideology in Eighteenth-Century England (Johns Hopkins University Press), co-recipient of the Gottschalk Prize for the best book in its field for 1989; and The Brink of all We Hate: Satires on Women, 1660-1750 (University Press of Kentucky 1984). As co-editor of The New Eighteenth Century: Theory/Politics/English Literature ( Methuen 1987) with Laura Brown, she was instrumental in integrating theoretical work into eighteenth-century studies. With Helen Deutsch she has edited Defects: Engendering the Modern Body, an anthology of essays in the Corporealities series from the University of Michigan Press (2000).

She has been awarded numerous academic honors, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Andrew Mellon Fellowship at the Huntington Library, and an NEH Fellowship. She has also held a Marta Sutton Weeks Fellowship at the Stanford Humanities Center, and a Rockefeller Humanist-in-Residence Fellow at the Institute for Research on Women, Rutgers University. She is president of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies.

Assistant Professor Olivia Bloechl
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For biography, click here.

 

 

Associate Professor Miwon Kwon
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Miwon Kwon trained in architecture as an undergraduate then received a M.A. in photography (both at UC Berkeley), before completing her Ph.D. in Architectural History and Theory at Princeton University in 1998. She joined the faculty at UCLA to teach contemporary art history (post-1945) in the same year. Along the way, she helped to curate several exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art, was a founding editor and publisher of Documents, a journal of art, culture, and criticism (1992-2004), and defined her area of research and writings to encompass several disciplines including contemporary art, architecture, public art, and urban studies. She is the author of One Place After Another: Site-Specific Art and Locational Identity (MIT Press, 2002) as well as numerous essays on the practices of Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Christian Marclay, Ana Mendieta, Do-Ho Suh, Mark Dion, Gabriel Orozco, Jimmie Durham, Christian Philipp Müller, Josiah McElheny, among others. She received a Scholars Fellowship at the Getty Research Institute in 2003-04 and is currently at work on two new book-length projects, one on the art and the city, and the other on the problems of exchange. She is Graduate Advisor for 2005-07.

 

Professor Sue-Ellen Case
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A past editor of Theatre Journal, Professor Case has published widely in the fields of German theatre, feminism and theatre, performance theory, and lesbian critical theory. She has published over thirty articles in journals such as Theatre Journal, Modern Drama, differences, and Theatre Research International and in many anthologies of critical works. Her books include Feminism and Theatre and The Domain-Matrix: Performing Lesbian at the End of Print Culture. She has edited several anthologies of critical works and play texts, including The Divided Home/Land: Contemporary German Women's Plays; Split Britches: Lesbian Practice/Feminist Performance; Performing Feminisms, and many others. Along with Philip Brett and Susan Leigh Foster, she edits a book series with Indiana University Press entitled Unnatural Acts. Professor Case has been an invited professor in residence at Swarthmore College, Stockholm University, and the National University of Singapore. Her work has received several national awards.

 

 

zubiaurre.jpgAssistant Professor Maite Zubiaurre
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Linked biography


Maite Zubiaurre (Ph. D. Comparative Literature, Columbia University) is Assistant Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at UCLA. She is the author of El espacio en la novela realista. Paisajes, miniaturas, perspectivas [Space and Setting in the Realist Novel. Landscapes, Miniatures, Perspectives] (Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2000), a book on the dialectics of space and gender in European and Latin American realist fiction. She has published extensively on modern Spanish and Latin American women’s narrative, transatlantic feminism, and literary representations of female exile and diaspora. She is currently working on a book on textual and visual representations of the erotic in Spanish popular culture provisionally titled Cultures of the Erotic in Spain 1898-1939.

Professor Sanjay Subrahmanyam
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Linked biography

 
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