Sophia Beal [Last updated August 2015] University of Minnesota Department of Spanish & Portuguese Studies 214 Folwell Hall, 9 Pleasant St. SE | Minneapolis, MN 55455 (612) 625-2331 [email protected] EDUCATION Brown University, Providence, RI PhD in Portuguese and Brazilian Studies 2010 MA in Portuguese and Brazilian Studies 2008 Dissertation: Brazil under Construction: Literature, Public Works, and Progress Advisor: Nelson H. Vieira; readers: James Green and Anani Dzidzienyo Fulbright US Student Scholar, Maputo, Mozambique 2004-2005 Project: Empowered through Invention: Storytelling in the Fiction of Mia Couto Columbia University, Columbia College, New York, NY BA in Comparative Literature and Society 2004, Graduated Summa Cum Laude with departmental honors. Head Marshal of the senior class and Phi Beta Kappa member Thesis: Becoming a Character: An Analysis of Bernardo Carvalho’s Nove Noites Advisor: Ursula Heise ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN Assistant Professor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese Studies August 2012 – Present Harvard University, Cambridge, MA Affiliate of the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies January 2015 – May 2015 Tulane University, New Orleans, LA Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Humanities, School of Liberal Arts, Department of Spanish & Portuguese, jointly affiliated with the Program for African & African Diaspora Studies July 2010 – July 2012 PUBLICATIONS Single-Author Book Brazil under Construction: Fiction and Public Works New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. Print. 198 pages. Synopsis: Brazil under Construction explores how Brazil invested in ambitious construction throughout the 20th century, such as the creation of a new capital city, extensive networks of highways, and massive hydroelectric power plants. Beyond their Sophia Beal – CV practical purposes, these public works became significant symbols of Brazil’s modernity. While actual public works literally connected the nation, it was the government’s representations of these projects that sought to inspire in its citizenry a notion of connectedness and progress. However, Brazilian fiction exposes the tensions between infrastructure built for the common good and the underbelly of public works: displacement, environmental devastation, uneven access, exploitation, and blight. This book examines how writers successfully use fiction - with its mystery, contradiction, wordplay, and fantasy - to engage the unprecedented role of public works in shaping perceptions of Brazil's modernization. Reviews of Brazil under Construction: David William Foster, ellipsis 13 (2015): 251-253. Vanessa Valdés, Hispania 98.2 (2015): 357-359. Georg Wink, Brasiliana: Journal for Brazilian Studies 3.1 (2014): 521-525. Co-Editor of the Special Issue Infrastructuralism (61.4) for the journal Modern Fiction Studies Guest-edited with Bruce Robbins and Michael Rubenstein. In press as of July 2015. Forthcoming December 2015. Topic: The term infrastructuralism is a provocation to think about the relationship between material culture and literary form in new ways. It is an opportunity to think about how fiction approaches and relates to social and political questions of public goods, economic development, and government. Who should own energy resources and their distributive networks? Roads? Schools? Hospitals? What kinds of infrastructural development are desirable, and possible, in the 21st century, given the scientific certainty of human-made climate change and our planetary transition into what scientist Paul J. Crutzen calls the Anthropocene Era? The forms and themes of fiction reflect such historical shifts, meditate on them, and mutate in response to them. Peer-Reviewed Articles Making Space in Brasília: Cultural Texts from 2009 to 2014 ellipsis 13 (2015): 55-77. A arte de andar nas ruas de Brasília Estudos de Literatura Brasileira Contemporânea 45 (2015): 65-83. The Art of Brasília: Spaces, Tactics, and Walks in the Capital’s Cultural Texts Brasil/Brazil: A Journal of Brazilian Literature 47 (2013): 34-64. The Substance of Light: Literature and Public Space in Belle Époque Rio de Janeiro (1894-1914) Luso-Brazilian Review 49.2 (2012): 5-27. Inhabiting Identities in Nelson de Oliveira’s Short Story “O irmão brasileiro” Céfiro 11.2 (2012): 7-13. Page 2 Sophia Beal – CV Obras públicas monumentais, ficção e o regime militar no Brasil (1964-1985) Revista Escritos 4 (2010): 259-280. The Real and Promised Brasília: An Asymmetrical Symbol in 1960s Brazilian Literature Hispania 93.1 (2010): 1-10. Becoming a Character: An Analysis of Bernardo Carvalho’s Nove Noites Luso-Brazilian Review 42.2 (2005): 134-149. Introduction and Book Chapters (Not Peer-Reviewed) Infrastructuralism: An Introduction Infrastructuralism. Ed. Sophia Beal, Bruce Robbins, and Michael Rubenstein. Spec. issue of Modern Fiction Studies. 61.4 (2015). (in press as of July 2015) Espaço e Invenção em Brasília: Textos Culturais de 2009 a 2014 Collection of Articles on Contemporary Brazilian Literature and Urbanism, edited by Regina Dalcastagnè and Ricardo Barberena. (forthcoming, accepted March 2015) [This is a Portuguese translation of an article I published in ellipsis in 2015.] Child Soldiers and a Civil War Made Murky: Language and Memory in Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa's Os Sobreviventes da Noite Emerging Perspectives on Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa. Ed. Niyi Afolabi. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, 2010. 297-306. Terra Sonâmbula: Mythmaking and the Naparama in the Work of Mia Couto Studies in Witchcraft, Magic, War and Peace in Africa: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Ed. Beatrice Nicolini. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 2006. 227-237. Interviews A Conversation with Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa ellipsis 9 (2011): 129-138. O jogo das reinvenções: uma entrevista com Mia Couto Storm Magazine 22 (2005): 111-114. Uma entrevista com Bernardo Carvalho Brasil/Brazil: A Journal of Brazilian Literature 32 (2004): 97-102. Published Translation Excerpts from Os Sobreviventes da Noite and a forward titled “Translating in Context: Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa’s Os Sobreviventes da Noite” in Emerging Perspectives on Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa, Ed. Niyi Afolabi. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, 2010. 419-429. Published Book Reviews Carvalho, Bruno. Porous City: A Cultural History of Rio de Janeiro. The Hispanic Review (forthcoming – submitted May 2014). Page 3 Sophia Beal – CV Gouveia, Saulo. The Triumph of Brazilian Modernism: The Metanarrative of Emancipation & Counter-Narratives. The Luso-Brazilian Review (forthcoming – submitted March 2014). Euclides da Cunha the Poet. Rev. of Euclides da Cunha: poesia reunida. Eds. Bernucci, Leopoldo M. and Francisco Foot Hardman. Brújula 10 (2015): 1-6. Uma cidade em camadas: ensaios sobre o romance Eles eram muitos cavalos de Luiz Ruffato. Ed. Marguerite Itamar Harrison. The Luso-Brazilian Review 45 (2008): 212-214. Willis, Bruce Dean. Aesthetics of Equilibrium: The Vanguard Poetics of Vicente Huidobro and Mário de Andrade. Brasil/Brazil: A Journal of Brazilian Literature 35 (2007): 109-111. TEACHING EXPERIENCE University of Minnesota (Assistant Professor, Fall 2012 – present) Graduate Port 5930: Topics in Brazilian Literature (Contemporary Brazilian Literature) Port5530: Brazilian Literary and Cultural Studies Port5520: Portuguese Literary and Cultural Studies Undergraduate Port1904: Brazilian Short Stories [A Freshman Seminar] Port3501w: Global Portuguese: 1300 - 1900 [A Multinational Literature Survey] Port3502w: Global Portuguese: 1900 - Present [A Multinational Literature Survey] Port3003: Portuguese Conversation and Composition Tulane University (Postdoctoral Fellow, 2010 - 2012) Graduate Port6910: Lusophone-African Literature and Film Port6920: The City and the Street in Brazilian Fiction Undergraduate Port3130: Introduction to Brazilian Literature Brown University (Instructor, 2006 - 2009) Pobs110: Elementary Portuguese Pobs111: Intensive Portuguese Pobs400: Writing and Speaking Portuguese Pobs610: Mapping Portuguese-Speaking Cultures: Brazil Pobs1080: Performing Brazil Medical Portuguese (at Brown Medical School) Page 4 Sophia Beal – CV HONORS University of Minnesota ▪ UMN Office of the Vice President for Research’s Grant-in-Aid of Research, Artistry and Scholarship, January 1, 2014 to June 30, 2016 ▪ College of Liberal Arts Single Semester Leave Award for Spring 2015 Semester ▪ Imagine Fund Annual Award, 2014-2015 ▪ Imagine Fund Annual Award, 2013-2014 Tulane University: ▪ Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Humanities, School of Liberal Arts, 2010-12 ▪ The School of Liberal Arts Center for Scholars Grant for Visiting Scholars, 2011 Brown University: ▪ Office of International Affairs Graduate Colloquia Grant, 2009-10 ▪ Cogut Center for the Humanities Graduate Fellowship, 2009-10 ▪ Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies Belda Family Research Fellowship, 2009 ▪ Creative Arts Council Student Grant, 2009 ▪ Joukowsky Presidential Fellowship, funding 1st and 5th years and 3 summers of graduate study ▪ From 2005 to 2009, I received 10 travel grants (for conferences and research) RECENT PRESENTATIONS & INVITED TALKS 2016 Scale Change in Brasília’s Art Congress of the Brazilian Studies Association (BRASA), Brown U., 1 April 2016 [Scheduled] 2015 Floating Cities in the Fiction of Milton Hatoum Department of Spanish and Portuguese Colloquium, U. of Illinois, 3 March 2016 [Scheduled]. Facing the City: Brazilian Urban Fiction (1990 to Present) Brazil Studies Series at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, Harvard U., 23 Apr. 2015. “Nenhum lugar é um lugar qualquer”: Manaus in Milton Hatoum’s Cinzas do Norte Brown U., 17 Mar. 2015. 2014 Espaços personalizados na literatura de Brasília VI Simpósio Internacional sobre Literatura Brasileira Contemporânea: lugares e disputas, University of Brasília, 4 Nov. 2014 Brazilian Escape Artists American Portuguese Studies Association (APSA) Congress, U. of New Mexico, 25 Oct. 2014 A arte de andar nas ruas de Brasília Page 5 Sophia Beal – CV III Colóquio Internacional sobre Literatura Brasileira Contemporânea: percursos, cruzamentos e interseções, Georgetown U., 15 Apr. 2014. Fiction & Infrastructure 2014 International Conference on Narrative, MIT, Mar. 29 2014 Panel organizer and discussant 2013 Uma pesquisa em andamento: Brasília em prosa e música Colóquio Crítica, Antagonismo e Catástrofe, University of São Paulo. 12 June 2013. Brasília: Literally Central, Literarily Marginal Modern Language Association (MLA) Annual Convention, Boston, MA. 5 Jan. 2013. 2011 AND 2012 The Discourse and Discord of Legacy in the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympics APSA Congress, U. of Iowa, 5 Oct. 2012. I Dreamed the City Stopped: Luiz Ruffato’s São Paulo BRASA, U. of Illinois, 7 Sept. 2012. Lisbon Stinks: A Reading of José Saramago’s O Ano da Morte de Ricardo Reis MLA Annual Convention, Seattle, WA. 6 Jan. 2012. Aging Skin: Reflections on Petra Costa’s Film Olhos de Ressaca Mulheres da Retomada: Conference on Brazilian Female Filmmakers, Tulane U., 17 Feb. 2011. Themes and Aesthetics in the Work of Bernardo Carvalho MLA Annual Convention, Los Angeles, CA. 9 Jan. 2011. Special session organizer and respondent 2009 AND 2010 Feeling Connected: Nelson de Oliveira’s “O irmão brasileiro” APSA Congress, Brown U., 8 Oct. 2010. Light and Literature in Brazil Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies Graduate Student Forum Series, Brown U., 18 Feb. 2010. Performing Politics in Dias Gomes’s O Túnel MLA Annual Convention, Philadelphia, PA, 28 Dec. 2009. Introducing Brazilian Literature: Survey Courses as Literary History MLA Annual Convention, Philadelphia, PA, 29 Dec. 2009. Infrastructural Literacy: A Position Paper for the Infrastructuralism Seminar Modernist Studies Association, Montreal , QC, 7 Nov. 2009. Some Thoughts on Vulnerability in the Fiction of Bernardo Carvalho Guest speaker in a mini-symposium with Writer-in-Residence Bernardo Carvalho, U. of Wisconsin, Madison, 2 Oct. 2009. Rudyard Kipling’s Electric Paradise LASA Annual Convention, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 11 July 2009. Page 6