Blake Seana Locklin

 

 

Department of Modern Languages

telephone: (512) 245-1350

Southwest Texas State University

facsimile: (512) 245-8298

601 University Drive

email:

San Marcos, TX 78666-4616

LOCKLIN@modlang.swt.edu

 

 

 

EDUCATION

 

Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
Ph.D. in Comparative Literature, August 1998
M.A. in Comparative Literature, January 1996
Special Committee:  Debra Castillo (Chair), Walter Cohen, Jonathan Tittler

Dissertation:  “Orientalism and the Nation: Asian Women in Spanish American Literature”

 

Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
A.B. cum laude  in Comparative Literature, June 1988
Certificate in European Cultural Studies
Senior thesis on metafiction in Diderot, Cervantes, and Puig
Advisor:  Sandra Bermann

 

 

AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS

 

Southwest Texas State University Research Enhancement Program Grant, Summer 2000

Mellon Dissertation Completion Fellowship, 1997-98

John S. Knight Writing Program Certificate in Recognition of Achievement in Teaching, 1997

Mellon Post-A Exam Dissertation Research Fellowship, Spring 1996

John S. Knight Writing Program Assignment Sequence Award, Fall 1994

Sage Fellowship, 1991-92

 

 

RESEARCH AND TEACHING INTERESTS

 

Spanish American Literature

Postcolonial theory and Latin America

Literatures of the Americas

Orientalism in Spanish American literature

Mexican literature and cultural studies

Pacific Rim literatures

Hispanic women writers

U.S. Latino literature

Spanish Language

 

 

PUBLICATIONS

 

“‘Qué triste es ser mujer’:  The Chinese Microcosm of Reina Roffé’s Monte de Venus,”  Revista de Estudios Hispánicos 33 (Fall 1999): 473-94.

 

Rev. of The Lieutenant Nun:  Transgenderism, Lesbian Desire, and Catalina de Erauso, by Sherry Velasco.  Letras femeninas. 28.1 (Spring 2002).

 

 

CONFERENCE PAPERS

 

“A Seductive Country:  Japan as Paraguayan Paradise in Madama Sui,” South Central Modern Language Association Conference, Austin, TX, November 2002

 

“Citizens of the World:  The Dream of a Transnational Community,” Crossroads in Cultural Studies Fourth International Conference, Tampere, Finland, June 2002

 

“At Home in Japan?:  Travel, Migration, Identity,” Latin American Studies Association XXIII International Congress, Washington, D.C., September 2001

 

“Negotiating Technologies:  Peruvians in Japan,” Conference on Ibero-American Culture and Society: “Latin American Literature, Technology, Ideology,” University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, February 2001

 

“María Novaro's El jardín del Edén:  Local and Global Crossings in Tijuana,” Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica Conference: “Cruzando Fronteras,” Glendon College, York University, Toronto, Canada, September 2000

 

“Chinese Doll, Japanese Doll:  Views of the Orient from Spanish America,” Kentucky Foreign Languages Conference, Lexington, KY, April 2000

 

“Geishas and Factories:  Representations of Japan in Latin America,” Faculty Colloquium, Southwest Texas State University Department of Modern Languages, November 1999

 

Japón no da dos oportunidades:  Images of Japan in Peru,” American Comparative Literature Association Conference: “Transnationalisms:  Past and Future,” Montreal, Canada, April 1999

 

“A Woman in the Orient:  Sex, Politics, and Self-discovery in Luisa Futoransky’s Son cuentos chinos,” Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica Conference:  “Imaginarios Femeninos,” Arizona State University, Tempe, September 1998

 

“‘Qué triste es ser mujer’:  Language, Orientalism, and Identity in Reina Roffé’s Monte de Venus,” Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica Conference:  “(Des)articulaciones,” Emory University, Atlanta, October 1997

 

“Orientalism and Mexican Identity:  The China Poblana’s Asian Mother,” American Comparative Literature Association Conference:  “New Worlds for Old,” Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, April 1997

 

“Catarina de San Juan and the China Poblana:  The Myth of the Asian Woman in Mexico, 1688-1996,” “Mythology and Ethics” Conference, Cornell University, March 1997

 

“Where in the World is Gran Mogor?  Mapping Latin American Orientalism,” “Offroad Disciplines:  ‘Who’s Got the Map?’” Conference, Cornell University, February 1997

 

“Bridges and Borders:  Powerful Spaces in Olga Nolla’s ‘La única ventana,’” “Cultural Cartographies in the Romance Languages and Literatures” Conference, Cornell University, February 1995

 

“Reconstructing Fertility:  Reproducing the Family in María Luisa Mendoza’s El perro de la escribana,” “Theorizing a Material World:  Objects in the Romance Languages and Literatures” Conference, Cornell University, February 1993

 

 

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

 

Southwest Texas State University

Assistant Professor, Department of Modern Languages, 1999-present

 

Honors 3303G:  Visions of Travel in Literature and Film, Spring 2001

Spanish 4330:  The Spanish American Novel, Fall 1999, Fall 2002

Spanish 3306:  Survey of Spanish American Literature, 1880-present, Spring 2000, Fall 2001

Spanish 3305:  Survey of Spanish-American Literature, conquest-1880, Fall 2000, Spring 2002

Spanish 2320:  Spanish IV, Fall 1999, Spring 2002

Spanish 2310:  Spanish III, Spring 2000, Fall 2000, Fall 2001

Spanish 1420:  Spanish II, Spring 2001

 

Cornell University

Facilitator, John S. Knight Writing Program, Fall 1998

Teaching Associate, Department of Modern Languages, 1998-99

Teaching Assistant, Department of Modern Languages, 1996-97

Teaching Assistant, Department of Comparative Literature, 1992, 1994-95

 

Writing 700:  Teaching Writing, Fall 1998

Spanish 123:  Continuing Spanish Language, 1998-99

Spanish 121-122:  Introduction to Spanish Language, 1996-97, Fall 1998

Comparative Literature 108.2: Language and Politics: Public Words, Private Wars, Fall 1995

Comparative Literature 108.1: Language and Politics:  Identity and Decolonization, 1994-95

Comparative Literature 103.2: Inner Worlds, Outer Worlds, Other Worlds:  Negotiating Worlds, Fall 1992

 

University of East Asia  (now the University of Macau)

Lecturer,  Junior College and Polytechnic Institute, 1988-91

 

English as a Foreign Language:  beginning through advanced classes

Introduction to English Literature

 

Ka Ho Vietnamese Refugee Camp,  Macau

English Teacher (volunteer), 1988-91

 

Conversation and culture classes: to prepare refugees for resettlement

 

 

RESEARCH AND STUDY ABROAD       

 

Lima and Cuzco, Peru

Research Enhancement Program Grant, Summer 2000

 

Puebla, Mexico and Mexico City

Dissertation research, Spring 1996

 

San José, Costa Rica
Travel grant, Summer 1995

 

Inter-University Program for Chinese Language Studies in Taipei
Full-time intensive study of Mandarin
Courses on Taiwanese short story and on Chinese film, 1993-94

 

 

RECENT PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

 

Executive Council member, Latin America and the Pacific Rim Section, Latin American Studies Association, elected Fall 2001.

 

Participant in NEH Faculty Seminar, Southwest Texas State University, Fall 1999-Fall 2001

 

Department of Modern Languages committee on literature in translation, 2000; Spanish section MA/MAT revisions committee, Spring 2001; organizer for Faculty Research Colloquium, 2001-2; Reading Room committee, 2001-02

 

SWT workshops attended: Creating a Web Page (Fall 2002), 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (Spring 2002), Communication to Maximize Student Learning (Spring 2002) Diversity (Fall 2001), Micrograde, Powerpoint (2000)

 

Editorial consultant, K.T.D. Press, Woodstock, NY, Mountain Dharma Retreat Manual (forthcoming)

 

 

LANGUAGES

 

English (native), Spanish (near-native), Chinese (intermediate), French (reading)

 

 

PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS

 

American Comparative Literature Association

American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese

Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica

Latin American Studies Association

Modern Language Association

South Central Modern Language Association

 

 

CREDENTIALS

 

            Available on request.