Elizabeth Scarlett

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Elizabeth A. Scarlett (Brooklyn, April 11, 1961) is an American academic and author. She is a Spanish professor in the Department of Romance Languages & Literatures at the University at Buffalo of the State University of New York. She completed her undergraduate degree in Comparative Literature at Washington University in St. Louis, and her graduate degrees at Harvard University.[1][2] She was a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant in 1983-84 in Carcassonne, France, and was an exchange student in 1988-89 at the University of Seville, Spain.[3]

Her first book, Under Construction: The Body in Spanish Novels (University Press of Virginia, 1994) was selected for the 1995 Outstanding Academic Books List by Choice magazine.[4] Her second sole-authored book is Religion and Spanish Film: Luis Buñuel, the Franco Era, and Contemporary Directors (University of Michigan Press, 2014). She also co-edited (with Howard B. Wescott) the collection Convergencias Hispánicas: Selected Proceedings and Other Essays on Spanish and Latin American Literature, Film, and Linguistics (Juan de la Cuesta Hispanic Monographs, 2001).[5] She has published various articles in refereed journals and peer-edited volumes in North America and in Europe.[6] Her literary criticism is based on narrative theory and feminism.[7] Her work on film "combines auteurist study with genre analysis" and accentuates the persistence of Catholic imagery and themes in Spanish cinema.[8]

References[]

  1. ^ Vincent M. Mallozzi. "Elizabeth Scarlett and Andrew Klingle." New York Times 28 March 2010: ST15.
  2. ^ "Spanish A." The Confidential Guide: Courses at Harvard-Radcliffe 1990-91. 65th ed. Ed. Stephen J. Newman. Cambridge: The Harvard Crimson, 1990, p. 149.
  3. ^ "Scarlett, Elizabeth." Contemporary Authors. Vol. 150. Detroit: Gale Research, 1996. 393-94.
  4. ^ "Outstanding Academic Books, 1995." Choice 33 (January 1996): 6.
  5. ^ "Contributors." Generation X Rocks: Contemporary Peninsular Fiction, Film, and Rock Culture." Ed. Christine Henseler and Randolph D. Pope. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 2007, p. 250.
  6. ^ "Colaboradores." El hispanismo en los Estados Unidos: Discursos críticos/prácticas textuales. Ed. José M. del Pino and Francisco La Rubia Prado. Madrid: Visor, 1999, p. 279.
  7. ^ Samuel Amell. The Contemporary Spanish Novel: An Annotated, Critical Bibliography, 1936-1994. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1996, p. 55.
  8. ^ Dennis West. "Scarlett, Elizabeth. Religion and Spanish Film: Luis Buñuel, the Franco Era, and Contemporary Directors (review)." Hispania 99.2 (June 2016): 354.

External links[]

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