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职称:Professor of Spanish and Portuguese and Comparative Literature
所属学校:University of Southern California
所属院系:Department of Spanish and Portuguese
所属专业:Spanish Language and Literature
联系方式:(213) 740-7659
Biographical Sketch Erin Graff Zivin (Ph.D., New York University, 2004; M.A., UC Berkeley, 1998) has been faculty at USC since 2008. Her research and teaching interests focus on constructions of Jewishness and marranismo in the Luso-Hispanic Atlantic, aesthetic representations of torture and interrogation, the relationship between ethics, politics, and aesthetics (particularly in the context of Latin American literary and cultural studies), and the intersection of philosophy and critical theory more broadly. Prof. Graff Zivin is the author of Figurative Inquisitions: Conversion, Torture, and Truth in the Luso-Hispanic Atlantic (Northwestern University Press, 2014, winner of the 2015 Award for Best Book, Latin American Jewish Studies Association) and The Wandering Signifier: Rhetoric of Jewishness in the Latin American Imaginary (Duke University Press, 2008), and the editor of The Ethics of Latin American Literary Criticism: Reading Otherwise (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007). She has also published articles in Modern Language Notes (MLN), SubStance, CR: The New Centennial Review, Politica Comun: A Journal of Thought, the Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies, Variaciones Borges, the Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies, Chasqui, the Journal of Jewish Identities, and Modern Jewish Studies. Currently, she is completing a book-length manuscript tentatively entitled "Misunderstanding Literature: Aesthetics, Ethics and Politics in a Post-literary Latin America," and an edited volume on Derrida and Hispanism.
Biographical Sketch Erin Graff Zivin (Ph.D., New York University, 2004; M.A., UC Berkeley, 1998) has been faculty at USC since 2008. Her research and teaching interests focus on constructions of Jewishness and marranismo in the Luso-Hispanic Atlantic, aesthetic representations of torture and interrogation, the relationship between ethics, politics, and aesthetics (particularly in the context of Latin American literary and cultural studies), and the intersection of philosophy and critical theory more broadly. Prof. Graff Zivin is the author of Figurative Inquisitions: Conversion, Torture, and Truth in the Luso-Hispanic Atlantic (Northwestern University Press, 2014, winner of the 2015 Award for Best Book, Latin American Jewish Studies Association) and The Wandering Signifier: Rhetoric of Jewishness in the Latin American Imaginary (Duke University Press, 2008), and the editor of The Ethics of Latin American Literary Criticism: Reading Otherwise (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007). She has also published articles in Modern Language Notes (MLN), SubStance, CR: The New Centennial Review, Politica Comun: A Journal of Thought, the Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies, Variaciones Borges, the Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies, Chasqui, the Journal of Jewish Identities, and Modern Jewish Studies. Currently, she is completing a book-length manuscript tentatively entitled "Misunderstanding Literature: Aesthetics, Ethics and Politics in a Post-literary Latin America," and an edited volume on Derrida and Hispanism.