Sandra Barriales-Bouche

Sandra Barriales-Bouche

Assistant Professor of Humanities and Spanish

office:  Fenton 550

email:  sbarrial@suffolk.edu

personal webpage

voicemail:  (617) 573-8287

Professor Barriales-Bouche holds a B.A. in Hispanic Philology from the University of Oviedo, Spain (1997), and an M.A. (2002) and a Ph.D. (2003) in Hispanic Literatures and Linguistics from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Before coming to Suffolk, she taught a variety of courses in Spanish language and culture at Mount Holyoke College and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. She teaches a range of courses in Spanish language, civilization, literature, and cinema. Her interests include exile literature, Spanish film studies, and the cultural manifestations of democratic Spain. Professor Barriales-Bouche has co-edited the collection of essays Zoom in, Zoom out: Crossing Borders in Contemporary European Cinema (Newcastle, UK: CSP, 2007) and edited the collective volume on the culture of Spanish exiles, ¿España: laberinto de exilios? (Newark, NJ: Juan de la Cuesta-Hispanic Monographs, 2005). Other publications include: “La dimensión ética de la poesía en el exilio: Primavera en Eaton Hastings de Pedro Garfias,” Hispanic Review (Spring 2008);  “Los límites de la representación del yo: el Diario de Frida Kahlo” in La ansiedad autorial. Formación de la autoría femenina en América Latina: los textos autobiográficos (Ed. Márgara Russotto. Caracas, Venezuela: Equinoccio, 2006); “Exilio y post-exilio en Luis Cernuda," Revista Hispánica Moderna LIX (2006); “The Ethical Challenge of Autobiography in Exile: The Case of Federica Montseny," Revista de Estudios Hispánicos 38 (October 2004); and "Patria de destino versus patria de origen: la visión de los exiliados españoles en Cuadernos Americanos," in Historias: The Journal of the National Institute of Anthropology and History, México, 48 (January-April 2001): 55-65. She is currently working on a book-length project that examines the effect of post-exile in the literary works by Spanish Republican exiles.

Visit the Spanish webzine Entérate