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Slideshow

Latin American, Iberian & Latinx Studies

Image:
Vasconcelos library Mexico

Latin American, Iberian, and Latinx Studies examine the cultural, political, and written traditions and movements of the Americas, the Caribbean, Europe, and Africa which have in common the Spanish language and the legacy of Spanish imperial expansion. Research in the department spans from the early modern and colonial periods to modernisms, postmodernism, and present day trends, including focuses on book history, embodiment, environmental ethics, human rights, memory, migration, print, digital, and visual culture.

Photo source: José Vasconcelos Library taken from https://imgur.com/gallery/Axudi

Italian Literary & Cultural Studies

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Milano bookstore

Italian studies are central to the development of European cultures, written traditions, and artistic movements, beginning with the significance of Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio and their legacies in the Mediterranean world.  Research expertise in the department spans Italian literary genres, periods, art, and cinema to the present day with focuses on contemporary Italy, aesthetics and poetics, women writers, pedagogy, embodiment, and the philosophy of education.

Photo source: Libreria Bocca in Milan taken from https://www.iviaggididante.com/2018/08/le-librerie-di-milano-da-visitare.html

Francophone Studies

Image:
Bibliothèque nationale de France

Francophone Studies examines the cultures and literatures of the French-speaking countries and regions of Europe, the Caribbean, Africa, and the Americas.  Research in the department includes study of the Medieval and Renaissance periods of France and the Mediterranean world through the cultural movements of the 17th-19th centuries, to modern and contemporary literature, film, and performance, with focuses on philology, poetics, translation, visual culture, Islam, and French, Caribbean, and West African cultural production. 

Photo source: National Library of France taken from www.artnet.com/artists/ahmet-ertug/the-oval-room-reading-room-of-the-national

 

Brazilian & Lusophone Studies

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Brazillian National Library

Brazilian and Lusophone Studies examine the cultures and literatures of Portuguese-speaking peoples from regions that include the countries of Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, and São Tomé and Príncipe.  Research in the department interprets narratives, poetry, theater, and film of the Lusophone world with focuses on national and social identities, Indigenous cultural production, immigrant experiences, cross-cultural dialogues, gender, and memory studies. 

Photo source: National Library of Brazil taken from https://bluesyemre.com/the-national-library-of-brazil-rio-de-janeiro/

Gendering the Medieval Mediterranean

Michelle Armstrong-Partida, Associate Professor of History, Emory University

Sponsored by the Early Modern Studies Research Cluster of the Mellon Global Georgia Project and the Willson Center for Humanities & Arts

[Image: Miniature from the illuminated manuscripts of the treatise by Giovanni Boccaccio, “The famous women”. MS Fr. 598, f. 70v, Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris. France, 15th century.]

Diogo Cosme, "L3 Acquisition of the Portuguese Present Perfect by English-Spanish Bilinguals"

All are invited to attend Diogo Cosme's dissertation defense on Friday, November 19th at 10am via Zoom. 

"L3 Acquisition of the Portuguese Present Perfect by English-Spanish Bilinguals"

Major Professor: Dr. Tim Gupton (contact Dr. Gupton for link)

Commitee Members: Dr. Margaret Quesada, Dr. Chad Howe, Dr. Michael Iverson

Gender and Race in Europe - Vénus Noire

On November 8th, UGA's Gender History Workshop and the Wilson Center for Humanities and the Arts will be hosting Dr. Robin Mitchell. Dr. Mitchell will give a brief presentation on her research on black women and colonial fantasies in nineteenth century France, followed by a Q & A session.  Please see the attached flier for more information, and a link to register for the event. Any graduate students interested in obtaining a copy of Dr.

The Atlantic Metropolis: Ships and Seafarers in Lope de Vega's El Arenal de Sevilla, lecture by Dr. Carl Wise, College of Charleston

Wise's lecture will be hosted by the Early Modern Studies Research Group, an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant-funded research project in the Global Georgia Initiative of the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts. Matching funds are provided by Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, and the departments of English, History, Romance Languages, and Theatre and Film Studies.

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Student Contacts

• Undergraduate Advising | rladv@uga.edu

• Graduate Inquiries | erin.cribbs@uga.edu

• TCAF, SPAN Study Abroad Advising | dgl@uga.edu

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