Carolyn Nadeau
Brief Curriculum Vitae
Education
Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University, 1989-94. Dissertation: "Women of the Prologue: Writing the Female in Don Quijote I" Director: Frederick A. de Armas.
M.A., New York University in Madrid, 1987-88. Thesis: "Alfonso el Sabio y la creación de la literatura castellana" Director: Francisco Bustos.
B.A., University of Virginia, 1981-85. Attended University of Madrid via Marquette University, 1983-84.
Employment
Professor, Illinois Wesleyan University, Golden Age and Medieval literature and culture, all levels of Spanish language courses, various across-the-curriculum courses.
Assistant Professor, 1994-2000; Associate Professor, 2000-05.
Inaugural Director, Illinois Wesleyan's Madrid Program, spring, 2005.
Inaugural Director, Illinois Wesleyan's London Program, fall, 2000.
Instructor, basic and advanced Spanish language courses, Intensive Spanish Language Summer program, Penn State, 1989-94.
Recent Publications
1. El buscón, critical edition. Cervantes & Co. Spanish Classics. Newark, DE: European Masterpieces, 2007.
2. Women of the Prologue: Imitation, Myth, and Magic in Don Quijote I. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press, 2002.
Review: Cervantes XXII.2 (Fall 2002): 201-05 (pdf)
3. “Maritornes: algo más que la prostituta de la venta,” Actas de El Quijote en clave de Mujer/es, Valdepeñas, Spain, 2005. Ed. Fanny Rubio. Empresa Pública Don Quijote de la Mancha (in press; 13 pp.).
4. “Critiquing the Elite in the Barataria and 'Ricote' Food Episodes in Don Quijote II” Hispanófila (2006): 59-75.
5. “Spanish Culinary History in Cervantes’ ‘Bodas de Camacho,” Revista canadiense de estudios hispánicos 29.2 (Winter 2005): 347-61.
6. “Authorizing the Wife/Mother in Sixteenth-century Advice Manuals,” Women in the Discourse of Early Modern Spain, ed. Joan Cammarata, Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2003. 19-34.
7. Women of the Prologue: Imitation, Myth, and Magic in Don Quijote I. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press, 2002.
8. "Blood Mother/Milk Mother: Breastfeeding, the Family, and the State in Antonio de Guevara's Relox de Príncipes (Dial of Princes)," Hispanic Review 69.2 (Spring 2001): 153-74.
Work in Progress
Feeding Between the Lines: the Social Significance of Food in Early Modern Spanish Literature