Nathan Henne
Rev. Guy Lemieux, S.J., SAK Distinguished Professor, LAS and Spanish
Education
Ph.D., University of California Santa Barbara, 2007
M.A., San Diego State University, 2001
B.A., University of Texas, 1991
Departments
- College of Arts and Sciences
- Languages and Cultures
Expertise
- Latin America Studies
Bio
Dr. Nathan Henne, from the department of Quezaltenango in Guatemala, is Associate Professor of Latin American Studies and Spanish at 黑料社区. He earned his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 2007. His latest publications include: his translation of Luis de Li贸n鈥檚 novel Time Commences in Xibalb谩 (University of Arizona Press 2012), to which he provides a critical translator鈥檚 introduction. This Guatemalan novel, the pioneer of a movement called 鈥淣ew Maya Literature,鈥 innovatively handles the complexities of indigenous identity in a country that embraces the outward symbols of its Maya past but often fails to connect that past meaningfully to modern realities. His article 鈥淯ntranslation: The Popol Wuj and Comparative Methodology鈥 (in CR: The New Centennial Review2012/12:2) performs translation comparisons of the many versions of the Popol Wuj, the 鈥渙ldest book in the Americas,鈥 in order to expose philosophical and epistemological complications in translating Maya and other indigenous American literatures. He is working on a book-length extension of this project entitled More than Translation: Using the Popol Wuj as a Guide to Indigenous Poetics in American Literatures. Nathan鈥檚 current projects explore alternative theoretical approaches to syncretism, mestizaje, and ecology that reflect both pre-Contact and current Maya philosophies and perspectives. He has also begun work on a book-length project on nagualismo. Nathan鈥檚 teaching focuses include: Central American literature, literature of the Americas, Latin American magic realism, pre-Contact Indigenous literatures, translation theory, language theory, revolution literature, and Spanish language instruction.
Classes Taught
- Revolution! A Comparison of Guatemalan and Iranian Civil Wars in Literature and Film
- Latin American Novels of the 20th Century
- Spanish American Literature I & II
- Intensive Conversation
- Borderlands Literature
- Spanish Language Classes
- Composition and Syntax
- Indigenous Lit in Translation
- Literature and Film of Central American Revolutions
- Latin American Culture through Film
Areas of Expertise
- Central American Literature
- Literature of the Americas
- Latin American Magic Realism
- Pre-Contact Indigenous Literatures
- Translation Theory
- Language Theory
- Spanish Language Instruction