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This version of NSU News has been archived as of February 28, 2019. To search through archived articles, visit nova.edu/search. To access the new version of NSU News, visit news.nova.edu.

This version of SharkBytes has been archived as of February 28, 2019. To search through archived articles, visit nova.edu/search. To access the new version of SharkBytes, visit sharkbytes.nova.edu.

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Division of Public Relations and Marketing Communications
Nova Southeastern University
3301 College Avenue
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33314-7796

nova.edu/prmc

SharkBytes Archives

Contact

Division of Public Relations and Marketing Communications
Nova Southeastern University
3301 College Avenue
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33314-7796

communications@nova.edu

CAHSS Invites you to Intellectual Conversations on Sept. 28

Yvette Fuentes, Ph.D.NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS) will again host the CAHSS Intellectual Conversations beginning September 28, 2017. The series topic this academic year is “Resistance.”  The opening conversation will feature Yvette Fuentes, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Literature and Modern Languages in CAHSS. Her conversation is entitled, “Writing as an Act of Resistance: The Narrative of Wendy Guerra.”

Daughter of the well-known poet, Albis Torres, Wendy Guerra (Havana 1970) is one of Cuba’s most celebrated contemporary writers. A graduate of the Instituto Superior del Arte (ISA) with a degree in Film, Radio and Television Direction, and a former student of the late Colombian novelist Gabriel García Márquez, Guerra has been the recipient of several international literary prizes, including the Bruguera Prize in 2006 for her debut novel, Todos se van (Everyone leaves). In this novel, and subsequent ones, including Nunca fui primera dama (2008), Posar desnuda en la Havana (2011), Negra (2014), and her most recent, Domingo de Revolución (2016, Guerra presents readers with women living across various periods of Cuban history, and relies on first-person narrations, in particular epistolary fiction and in particular the diary form, as a way of inserting women into the nation. Her novels explore topics once considered taboo in revolutionary Cuba, including alcoholism, censorship, drug addiction, homosexuality, domestic violence and racism. In this talk, I will discuss Guerra’s work and illustrate the ways in which her female protagonists resist and challenge official patriarchal discourses through the act of writing in order to forge a space of their own.

The event will take place from 12:00-1:00pm on Thursday, September 28, 2017 in DeSantis, Room #5026. It is free and open to the public.