 |
Ph.D. Yale (1965). Professor of Portuguese, Brazilian
and Lusophone African Literatures.
After earning a B.A. from the University of Connecticut, an
M.S. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and before
receiving a Ph.D. at Yale, I spent two years (1960-62) in
Brazil, where, as a Fulbright fellow, I studied at the
University of Bahia, in the city of Salvador. In 1964 I joined
the faculty of the University of Minnesota, where I spent
twenty years. Although I teach the range of
Portuguese-language literature, my research and publications
focus on Brazil and especially Lusophone Africa. Both my
teaching and writing combine textual analysis with a
socio-linguistic and socio-historical approach. After
publishing several articles on Brazilian subjects, including
Afro-Bahian cultural expression, and such authors as Jorge
Amado and Graciliano Ramos, I began to cultivate an interest
in Lusophone African literature. In 1970-71, during a
sabbatical year in Lisbon, I carried out research for a book
on the literature of the five then Portuguese colonies in
Africa. It was also during that year that I made the first of
my now many trips to Africa. With the help of the Gulbenkian
Foundation grant I visited, in August of 1971, Angola, Cape
Verde, and Mozambique, where I carried out research for my
book, titled Voices from an Empire: A History of
Afro-Portuguese Literature, published in 1975. A grant
from the Social Research Council allowed me to spend my
1978-79 sabbatical in four of the five, by then independent
countries of Lusophone Africa, where I did research for
Literatura Africana, Literatura Necessária, a
two-volume study published in Lisbon in 1981 (v.1) and 1983
(v.2). Throughout the sixteen years I served as Dean of
Vanderbilt's Graduate School I was able to teach an occasional
course and maintain a research agenda. Now that I am again a
full-time member of the faculty, my immediate plans include a
revised and updated edition of my two-volume book. I also plan
to write a book on my social, intellectual, and cultural
experiences in Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde,
Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, and São Tomé e
Príncipe.
|