Ben. Sifuentes-Jáuregui our new Comp Lit chair!

We are very pleased to announce that Prof. Ben. Sifuentes-Jáuregui has agreed to chair the Program in Comparative Literature. His research interests include Latino/a Literature and Culture, XXth-Century Latin American Literature and Cultural Studies, gender theory and sexuality studies, and psychoanalysis. He is author of Transvestism, Masculinity, and Latin American Literature (Palgrave, 2002), and The Avowal of Difference: Queer Latino American Narratives (SUNY Press, 2014). He has also publis...

Prof. Ousseina Alidou named Faculty Director of CWGL

 We are delighted to share the news that our distinguished colleague Ousseina Alidou, Professor in the Department of African, Middle Eastern, and South Asian Languages and Literature and in Comparative Literature, has been appointed Faculty Director of the Rutgers Center for Women's Global Leadership. A Core member of the Comp Lit faculty, she is a theoretical linguist and cultural critic whose research focuses on women’s agency in African Muslim societies in the Sahel and East Africa (Kenya). She...

Prof. Steven F. Walker retires

We congratulate our colleague Prof. Steven F. Walker on his retirement from Rutgers after decades of service to Comparative Literature, Asian Languages and Cultures, and the SAS Honors program. Prof. Walker introduced generations of Rutgers students to the study of myth, ancient and modern. He is the author of many books and articles on classical Greek and South Asian writing and on Jungian criticism, among them Jung and the Jungians on Myth (2002), Midlife Transformation in Literature and Film:...

Prof. Martha Helfer wins SAS Teaching Award

Congratulations to our colleague MARTHA HELFER, winner of the 2019 SAS Award for Distinguished Contributions to Undergraduate Teaching (Professor Category). Martha is a Professor of German and core member of the Comparative Literature faculty. Her interests include literature of the Age of Goethe, Romantic aesthetic and philosophical theories, German intellectual history (18th-20th century), gender and subjectivity, philosophical approaches to literature, and German Jewish Studies. Among her man...

Professor van Buskirk wins the AATSEEL Best Book Prize

Congratulations to our colleague Emily van Buskirk, whose Lydia Ginzburg's Prose: Reality in Search of Literature (Princeton UP 2016) has won the 2018 prize for the best book in literary studies from the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and Eastern European Languages. Professor Van Buskirk specializes in Russian prose of the Soviet period. Much of her research focuses on questions of self-writing, genre, and concepts of the self. She is interested in diaries, autobiographies, memoir, d...