非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
验证码:
职称:Associate Professor
所属学校:Wake Forest University
所属院系:Wake Forest University, German and Russian
所属专业:German Language and Literature
联系方式:758-5867
Alyssa Howards received her Ph.D. from Washington University in St. Louis in 2003 and joined the German and Russian Department at Wake Forest that same year. She has spent several years living in Germany and Austria, in every possible guise: a surly eighth-grader living with her family in Saarbruecken, a junior-year abroad student in Braunschweig, a Fulbright teaching assistant in Bremen, a DAAD scholarship recipient in Muenster, and most recently as faculty resident director of WFU’s Flow House in Vienna in the Fall of 2010. Her research interests focus on the last half of the nineteenth century, particularly on the intersections between folklore, historiography, and realist literature. Related to this interest, she has presented and published papers on Gustav Freytag and Adalbert Stifter. Further afield from Europe, she is interested in the representations of the American frontier in both German and American literature. For information about her recent First Year Seminar on this topic, click the following link: www.wfu.edu/magazine/2008.03/fys/part5.html She is also an active member of the North Carolina chapter of the American Association of Teachers of German, and regularly presents papers at teaching conferences.
Alyssa Howards received her Ph.D. from Washington University in St. Louis in 2003 and joined the German and Russian Department at Wake Forest that same year. She has spent several years living in Germany and Austria, in every possible guise: a surly eighth-grader living with her family in Saarbruecken, a junior-year abroad student in Braunschweig, a Fulbright teaching assistant in Bremen, a DAAD scholarship recipient in Muenster, and most recently as faculty resident director of WFU’s Flow House in Vienna in the Fall of 2010. Her research interests focus on the last half of the nineteenth century, particularly on the intersections between folklore, historiography, and realist literature. Related to this interest, she has presented and published papers on Gustav Freytag and Adalbert Stifter. Further afield from Europe, she is interested in the representations of the American frontier in both German and American literature. For information about her recent First Year Seminar on this topic, click the following link: www.wfu.edu/magazine/2008.03/fys/part5.html She is also an active member of the North Carolina chapter of the American Association of Teachers of German, and regularly presents papers at teaching conferences.