Department of Romance Studies
Boston University
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James Iffland
Email: iffland@bu.edu
Office: 403
Phone: 353-6216
Fax: 353-6246
Office
Hours:

Fall 2009

TBA

James Iffland

Professor of Spanish

Head of Spanish Section


Education

  • BA, Vanderbilt University
  • PhD, Brown University

Research

Professor Iffland is the author of Quevedo and the Grotesque (2 volumes, 1978 and 1982), Ensayos sobre la poesía revolucionaria de Centroamérica (1994), and De fiestas y aguafiestas: risa, locura e ideología en Cervantes y Avellaneda (1999). He is also editor of Fransisco de Quevedo's picaresque novel El buscón (1988) and Quevedo in Perspective: Eleven Essays for the Quadricentennial (1982), and co-editor of El “Quijote” desde América (2006).

Professor Iffland has written on a wide variety of topics related to the Spanish Golden Age, centering mainly on Cervantes and Quevedo. Work in progress in this area includes a book-length study of the social genesis of Don Quijote. A secondary field of interest is contemporary Central American literature, particularly as it relates to sociopolitical conditions in the region. He is currently at work on a book on Roque Dalton, the Salvadorean writer and revolutionary. Among the courses he teaches are those on Cervantes's Don Quijote, Golden Age prose fiction, poetry, and drama, and literature and social change in Central America. He is also a faculty member in the Latin American Studies Program at Boston University.

Professor Iffland has been a Woodrow Wilson fellow, the recipient of a Fulbright scholarship (to Argentina), and a Woodrow Wilson Independent Study Award (to Mexico). He was named the Central American Visiting Scholar at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American of Harvard University during the 2005-2006 academic year and was a Senior Research Fellow at the Humanities Foundation of Boston University in the spring of 2006. He has held visiting appointments at Boston College, Brandeis University, Brown University, Harvard University, and M.I.T.

 
   
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