Jennifer Harford Vargas
Associate Professor of Literatures in English on the Dorothy Nepper Marshall Professorship of Hispanic and Hispanic-American Studies
Co-Director of LAILS
Contact
Email
jharfordva@brynmawr.edu
Phone
610-526-5309
Location
English House
205
On Leave
2024-25
Department/Subdepartment
Education
Ph.D., Stanford University.
Areas of Focus
Latina/o literary and cultural productions; contemporary U.S. literatures; trans-national American studies
Biography
Jennifer Harford Vargas (PhD, Stanford University) researches and teaches on Latina/o cultural production, hemispheric American studies, race and ethnicity, theories of the novel, decolonial imaginaries, narratives of undocumented migration, and testimonio forms in the Americas.
She is the author of Forms of Dictatorship: Power, Narrative, and Authoritarianism in the Latina/o Novel (Oxford University Press, 2017).
She is also the co-editor of Junot D穩az and the Decolonial Imagination (Duke University Press, 2016).
Additional publications include:
- "The Undocumented Subjects of el Hueco: Theorizing a Colombian Metaphor for Migration.&紳莉莽梯;Symbolism: An International Annual of Critical Aesthetics. Special issue edited by Patricia M. Garc穩a and John Mor獺n Gonz獺lez. (forthcoming, Fall 2017)
- Transnational Forms. Co-authored with Monica Hanna. Latina/o Literature in the Classroom: 21stCentury Approaches to Teaching. Ed. Frederick Aladama. Routledge, 2015.
- Novel Testimony: Alternative Archives in Edwidge Danticats The Farming of Bones.&紳莉莽梯;Callaloo. 37.5 (Fall 2014): 1162-1180.
- Dictating a Zafa: The Power of Narrative Form in Junot D穩azs The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao. MELUS: Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States. 39.3 (Fall 2014): 8-30.
- Critical Realisms in the Global South: Narrative Transculturation in Senapatis Six Acres and a Third and Garc穩a M獺rquezs One Hundred Years of Solitude. Ed. Satya Mohanty. Colonialism, Modernity, and the Study of Literature: A View from India. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.
Courses Taught
- ESEM 008: Borders.
- ENGL 217: Narratives of Latinidad
- ENGL 236: "Latina/o Culture and the Art of Undocumented Migration"
- ENGL 237: The Dictator Novel in the Americas
- ENGL 250: Methods of Literary Study
- ENGL 276: Transnational American Literature
- ENGL 345: Theories of the Ethnic Novel