Juliana Nalerio
Writer and teacher, Juliana Nalerio earned her BA in humanities from the New College of Florida, The Honors College in 2011; and is currently a PhD Candidate in Modern Thought and Literature at Stanford University. She has taught as an adjunct in the History Department of the City College of New York, a teaching assistant at Stanford University and its Bing Honors College, and as a lecturer at the University of Valladolid and Salamanca in Spain. She was a Zora Neale Hurston Writing Fellow at Bard College, a Scholar-in-Residence at the Carter/Johnson Library and Collection, an EDGE Doctoral Fellow at Stanford University, and the recipient of a research grant awarded by the Spanish Government (MINECO-FPI), a New York City Teaching Fellowship awarded by the City of New York, among other honors. She has given lectures and presentations in Spain, Romania, Turkey, Portugal, France, Italy, the Netherlands, UK, and US. Her publications include “Anti-Black Racism, From Cuba to Catalunya” coauthored with Martin Rodrigo y Alharilla in Cultural Legacies of Slavery in Modern Spain (SUNY Press, forthcoming) and a book project tentatively titled "Violence and Representation in The Américas Literary Response to Globalization" (Rodopi-BRILL, forthcoming). She was also a docent at Stanford University’s Cantor Arts Center and Anderson Collection, an editor at The Journal of Transnational American Studies, andThe Creative Process. Juliana holds a MA with honors in American Studies from a shared program of the Universities of Salamanca and Valladolid.
Researching and teaching on the subjects of American Studies, visual culture, embodiment, narrative, and critical theory in historical perspective. Areas of Specialisation: Indigenous and Latinx Literature, Latin American Literature, Gender Studies, Spanish to English Translation, Atlantic History (19th Cent.) and Race and Ethnic American Literature.
Supervisors: José David Saldívar, Ana Manzanas Calvo, and Jesús Benito Sánchez
Researching and teaching on the subjects of American Studies, visual culture, embodiment, narrative, and critical theory in historical perspective. Areas of Specialisation: Indigenous and Latinx Literature, Latin American Literature, Gender Studies, Spanish to English Translation, Atlantic History (19th Cent.) and Race and Ethnic American Literature.
Supervisors: José David Saldívar, Ana Manzanas Calvo, and Jesús Benito Sánchez
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Papers by Juliana Nalerio
RESUMEN
En este trabajo se analiza la relación entre el la alternancia de lenguas en las narraciones de Junot Díaz y ciertos recursos formales empleados por artistas del graffiti. Estos elementos revelan una batalla por el estilo discursivo que se libra en las tierras fronterizas de América del Norte, y globalmente en zonas de contacto cultural.
Book Reviews by Juliana Nalerio
Conference Presentations by Juliana Nalerio
RESUMEN
En este trabajo se analiza la relación entre el la alternancia de lenguas en las narraciones de Junot Díaz y ciertos recursos formales empleados por artistas del graffiti. Estos elementos revelan una batalla por el estilo discursivo que se libra en las tierras fronterizas de América del Norte, y globalmente en zonas de contacto cultural.