Reves Center for International Studies Events
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Reves Center for International Studies
[PAST EVENT] Bellini Colloquium
October 25, 2011
3:30pm - 5pm
Our first Bellini colloquium for the Fall semester 2011 will take place tomorrow at 3:30 in Washington 315. Rachel DiNitto, John Riofrio, Ann-Marie Stock and Francie Cate-Arries will participate in a round table discussion on moving from article-length work to book manuscripts.
Ann Marie Stock. Professor of Hispanic Studies & Film Studies. She is a specialist in cultural studies and new media.
She is the author of "On Location in Cuba :Street Filmmaking during Times of
Transition" (UNC Press, 2009) and editor of "Framing Latin American Cinema:
Contemporary Critical Perspectives." (Univ. of MN Press, 1997. 2009).
Francie Cate- Arries, professor of Hispanic Studies, is a specialist in contemporary Spanish cultural studies.
She is the author of "Spanish Culture Behind Barbed-Wire: Memory and Representation of the French Concentration Camps, 1939-1945" (2004).
Rachel DiNitto is an Associate Professor of Japanese culture. She works on the
literary and cultural studies of Japan's prewar (1910s-1930s), and postbubble eras (1990- 2000s).
She is the author of "Uchida Hyakken: A Critique of Modernity and Militarism in Prewar Japan" (2008)
John RioFrio, Assistant Professor of Hispanic Studies. Rio is currently working on a book manuscript ?Continental Shifts: Latinos in the Public Imaginary.?
Ann Marie Stock. Professor of Hispanic Studies & Film Studies. She is a specialist in cultural studies and new media.
She is the author of "On Location in Cuba :Street Filmmaking during Times of
Transition" (UNC Press, 2009) and editor of "Framing Latin American Cinema:
Contemporary Critical Perspectives." (Univ. of MN Press, 1997. 2009).
Francie Cate- Arries, professor of Hispanic Studies, is a specialist in contemporary Spanish cultural studies.
She is the author of "Spanish Culture Behind Barbed-Wire: Memory and Representation of the French Concentration Camps, 1939-1945" (2004).
Rachel DiNitto is an Associate Professor of Japanese culture. She works on the
literary and cultural studies of Japan's prewar (1910s-1930s), and postbubble eras (1990- 2000s).
She is the author of "Uchida Hyakken: A Critique of Modernity and Militarism in Prewar Japan" (2008)
John RioFrio, Assistant Professor of Hispanic Studies. Rio is currently working on a book manuscript ?Continental Shifts: Latinos in the Public Imaginary.?