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Alumni Page


Welcome to the Alumni Page. If you are an alumnus or alumna and would like to submit your contact information and current activities for this page, please send them along to the
               webmaster. This page is updated frequently.

   

 

Hamid Bahri (Ph.D. 2004)
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Arabic and French, City College, The City University of New York

 

Hamid Bahri is a recent Ph.D. in French and literature, with specialization on North Africa. HIs scholarly interests include: Arab women’s writings, exile, Diaspora, cultural studies, and translation theory in French and Arabic texts.
His most recent publication is: “Father-daughter relations in the Francophone Maghrebian novel: Assia Djebar’s Loin de Médine” in “Francographies,” the journal of the Société des Professeurs Français et Francophones d’Amérique (SPFFA), May 2005.
Recent conferences include “The Colonial Language and Modern Arab Writing: Ambivalence, Identity and Agency” at the Middle East Studies Association (MESA) 18-21, Boston Massachusetts 2006, and
“The Rise of the Arab Novel in English” at the MLA conference in Philadelphia, December, 2006.


 
Glenn Fetzer (Ph.D. 1988)
Professor of French at Calvin College, in Grand Rapids, Michigan

 

Glenn Fetzer's most recent publications include two books: Emmanuel Hocquard and the Poetics of Negative Modernity (Birmingham: Summa Publications, 2004) and  Palimpsests of the Real in Recent French Poetry (Amsterdam:  Rodopi [Chiasma Series], 2004); as well as several articles, including “L’Elégie en jeu chez Emmanuel Hocquard,” in an issue on  “Elégies ” Babel 12 (2005) 287-297 and “Claudel lecteur de Saint-John Perse,” in Paul Claudel Papers Vol. 3, July 2005 : 59-71.


 
Jeanne Fuchs (Ph.D. 1977)
Professor Emerita in the Department of Comparative Literatures and Languages, Hofstra University

 

Jeanne Fuchs has worked as a consultant to the Dean of Hofstra College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. She has presented a paper entitled, "Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Native Son," in Vevey, Switzerland at the 7th International F. Scott Fitzgerald Conference, June 27-July 3, 2004.  



 

Cara Gargano (Ph. D. 1995)
Chair, Department of Theatre, Film, and Dance, Long Island University
(C.W. Post Campus)

 

Cara Gargano has presented an paper entitled: “Les transports du deuil: silence et parole dans Pierre ou la consolation de Marie Laberge,” at the “Création et Réalité d’Expression Française” Colloquium at Fordham University, March 2002.
She is the president of the Congress on Research in Dance, and has chaired a panel on Reconciliation and Collaboration in Dance Education and Performance at the International CORD conference on Dance and Human Rights, Montreal, November 12-13, 2005.

 
Jarrod Hayes (Ph.D. 1996)
Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies, University of Michigan

 

Jarrod Hayes' recent publications include a book: Queer Nations: Marginal Sexualities in the Maghreb. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000) and numerous articles, including: “Créolité’s Queer Mangrove.” Music, Writing and Cultural Unity in the Caribbean. Ed. Timothy J. Reiss. (Trenton, New Jersey: Africa World Press, 2005) 307–322;  “Queer Resistance to (Neo-)colonialism in Algeria.” Postcolonial, Queer: Theoretical Intersections. Ed. John C. Hawley. (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2001) 79–97. 
His most recent invited lectures are: “Soyinka’s Queer Interpreters.” Comparative Postcolonialities Conference. University of Pittsburgh, 28 October 2005, and “Scandals and Lies: Sapho’s Un mensonge and the Truth about Roots.” Duke University, NC, Durham, February 13, 2004.

 
Donna Kuizenga (Ph.D. 1974)
Associate Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Vermont
Professor of Romance Languages at the University of Vermont

 

Donna Kuizenga's recent publications include a book: Madame de Villedieu (Marie-Catherine Desjardins), Memoirs of the Life of Henriette-Sylvie de Molière: A Novel. The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe, Margaret L. King and Albert Rabil Jr., Eds. (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2004).



 
Catherine Liu (Ph.D. 1994)
Associate Professor, Department of French and Italian, University of Minnesota

 

Catherine Liu's most recent publications include two books: Copying Machines: Taking Notes for the Automaton (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2000), and Copying Machines: Taking Notes for the Automaton (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2000).

She has published articles including, "To Catch a Falling Star: Political Ambiguity or Jacques Lacan Meets Andy Warhol" Cambridge Companion to Lacan (Cambridge University Press, 2002), and "Getting to the Photo-Finish:  Photography, Autobiography, Modernity" The Medium. ed. Andrew McNamara and Peter Krapp. special edition of South Atlantic Quarterly, 2002.



 
Alison Baird Lovell (Ph.D. 2005)
Postdoctoral Humanities Fellow, Stanford University

 

Alison is working on a book project, The Shadow of Dante in Maurice Scève’s Poetry, which stems from her dissertation.  She also contributed an article on Pierre Boaistuau’s Théâtre du monde (1558) to a forthcoming book on satire in the French Renaissance.  Alison’s interests include Renaissance French poetry; humanism; evolving views of women; literary imitation; intersections of literature and religion, literature and philosophy.
Since fall 2005, Alison has been teaching freshman humanities at Stanford University.
Prior to that, she was a Senior Communication Fellow at the
Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute of Baruch College, CUNY.
Alison’s teaching experience includes French and Italian, literature and
humanities, mythology, business, and writing.  She holds a BA in
Comparative Religion from Barnard College of Columbia University.



Mario Macaluso (Ph.D. 1976)
Director, Student Teaching Program of World Languages, SUNY at Stony Brook

Mario Macaluso has published a book, Prickly Pears and Oleanders (Authorhouse, 2002).

 
Binita Mehta (Ph.D. 1997)
Assistant Professor and Chair, Department of French, Manhattanville College

 

Binita Mehta has published Widows, Pariahs, and ‘Bayadères’: India as Spectacle (Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press; London: Associated University Presses, 2002).
Her recent talks include: “Names, Places, Identities: Monica Ali’s Brick Lane and Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake," Faculty Lecture Series, Manhattanville College, Purchase, NY, on April 6, 2005.
She also
Co-organized the joint Manhattanville College-SUNY Purchase Interdisciplinary Conference on the 200th anniversary of Haitian independence, at   Manhattanville College, Purchase, NY, on October 29, 2004.
Binita Mehta was invited to the Graduate Center French Department to give a lecture on French pedagogy, as part of our Colloquium Series on Pedagogy, in December 2006.



 
Pamela Park (Ph.D. 1979)


 

 

 
Animesh Rai (Ph.D. 2007)


 

 

 
Amalia Rechtman (Ph.D. 2005)

Amalia Rechtman is currently in Paris, where she teaches courses at the Institut Universitaire d'Etudes Juives Elie Weisel.
Her publications include: Child Survivors of the Holocaust : Literature, Trauma, Memory. Ed. Insitute for Holocaust Studies Series (2006), and American Writers, Child Holocaust Survivors and the representation of the War Experience and its impact on their Lives and Work. Ed. Université Paris X - Nanterre (October 2006).
In October of 2006 she presented at a colloquium organised by the University of Paris X-Nanterre's Anglo-American Studies program. Her presentation was entitled, "Reflet des difficultés des survivants de la Shoah en Israel dans leurs oeuvres littéraires."


 

 


Maria-Luisa Ruiz (Ph.D. 2005)
Assistant Professor of French and Spanish, Medgar Evers College

Maria-Luisa's research focuses on literature and cultural connections between France and its colonies at the beginning of the 20th century, and contemporary Francophone women writers. She is the author of two books: Parole d’Alberta (2001, poetry) and Là où elle devient Méla (2004, novella).
She is the cofounder of Rivarticollection (see web site at www.rivarticollection.com), the publishing branch of a nonprofit organization that promotes Francophone books and writers in the US.
Maria-Luisa's recent professional activities include co-authoring a play that was presented at the Avignon Theater Festival in July 2006.
Her most recent publications include "La Proclamation d’indépendance haïtienne : fiction et matrice littéraire", forthcoming in the next issue of La Revue de recherche haïtiano-Antillaise, Paris, l’Harmattan, and
“Redefining the Concept of God : A Review of Yván Silén’s La Muerte de Mamá" in Calabash, A Journal of Caribbean Arts and Letters, 3:2 (Fall-Winter 2005).
Her most recent conference presentations include a paper given at the March 2007 NEMLA Conference in Baltimore, Maryland, entitled "La maison, la voiture et l’enfant: mondes de Duras, Duras de tous les mondes."
She participated in a panel entitled "Difficult subjects: Caribbean Women Writers on Power and Abuse" at the CUNY Conference on the African Presence and Influence on the Cultures of the Americas, hosted by Hostos College, in November of 2006.
In May of 2005, she was the invited presenter of Yván Silén’s novel La Muerte de mamá at Lectorum, a Spanish language bookstore in Manhattan. Also in May of 2005, Maria-Luisa participated in the round table on Haitian literature at the Haitian book fair at York College, where she read some excerpts from her book Là où elle devient Méla.








 

 

Charline Sacks (Ph.D. 1984)
Professor Emerita of French,
Department of Foreign Languages,
Nassau Community College

 

Charline Sacks has presented a paper entitled, "Focus on Strategies for Adult Learners" at the Northeast Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (Washington, April 2003).
She is now professor Emerita at Nassau Community College.

 
Frances Santiago (Ph.D. 1998)
Chair, Department of Humanities,
University of Puerto Rico-Mayaguez

 

Frances Santiago has published an article, "Cinéma Antillais: Cine en las Antillas Francesas-Guadeloupe y Martinique." Sargasso, 2 (2003-2004) 89-105.

 
Adelia Williams (Ph.D. 1989)
Associate Dean, Dyson College of Arts and Sciences, Pace University
Professor of Modern Languages and Cultures, Pace University

 

Adelia Williams has been at Pace University since 1989, serving as Chairperson of the Department of Modern Languages and Cultures for eight years, before becoming Associate Dean in the College of Arts and Sciences. As Associate Dean, she directs the implementation and assessment of the Core Curriculum, and oversees seven academic departments in the Humanities and Mathematics.  Her responsibilities also include directing the Pace NEH Challenge Grant and the Straus Center for Interdisciplinary Studies.
Two of her recent papers include, "Poetics of Space/Poetics of Place: Claude Esteban on Edward Hopper," Urban Ecology Conference, Pace University, April 2004; and “How Presidential Assessment Grants Foster the Learning Objectives of a New Core Curriculum,” Co-presenter, AAC&U conference on General Education and Assessment, Long Beach, March 2004.

Dean Wilson (Ph.D. 2007)

 


 
Page last updated December 4, 2007 by Chong Wojtkowski.