Noelia Diaz
Assistant Professor of English
718 631 6302 [email protected]
Department of English
Humanities Bldg, Rm. H328
222-05 56th Ave. Bayside, NY 11364
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Education
Ph.D: Comparative Literature, Graduate Center, CUNY
Masters of Philosophy: Comparative Literature, Graduate Center, CUNY
Masters of Arts: Comparative Literature, Graduate Center, CUNY
Bachelor of Arts: Comparative Literature, Anthropology, Thomas Hunter Honors Program, Summa Cum Laude, Hunter College, CUNY
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Classes I teach: English 101, BE 112 ALP and the Immigrant Experience.
Originally from Madrid, Spain, I came to New York City in 1994 and began my studies at Hunter college in 1998, where I fell in love with CUNY and all it has to offer its students. I continued pursuing my studies at the Graduate Center of CUNY where I received my Phd in Comparative Literature while working as an adjunct at John Jay College and the Fashion Institute of Technology. I also worked as a Writing Across the Curriculum fellow at Kingsborough Community College for two years. I joined the Queensborough College in the fall of 2015. My research and teaching interests include contemporary theater, primarily Irish, Argentine and Latinx theater; experiential learning facilitated by field trips across New York City and writing pedagogy.
Publications
“Resisting Neoliberalism and Patriarchy: On Raftery’s Hill (2000) by Marina Carr and La escuálida familia (2001) by Lola Arias” Comparative Drama Journal, 2017
“Happenstance” Global Grafitti Magazine, 2012
“Angelina Muñiz-Huberman’s A Mystical Journey” Global Grafitti Magazine, 2012
“Tulips” Global Grafitti Magazine, 2011
Selected Conferences
"Mocking Truths/Reclaiming Fictions in Javier Daulte’s Martha Stutz." Comparative Drama Conference, April 2018, Rollins College, Orlando.
“Neoliberal Desaparecidos in Luis Cano’s Buenos Aires.” Northeastern Modern Language Association, March 2017, John Hopkins University, Baltimore.
"Reclaiming the Liminal Space: Marina Carr's By the Bog of Cats...(1998) and Lucía Laragione's Cocinando con Elisa (1993)." Society for Irish and Latin American Studies, February 2017, University of Havana, Havana.
“Invisible Maids: Reclaiming Agency in Lola Arias’ Mucamas/Maid.”” American Comparative Literature Association, March 2016, Harvard University, Boston.
“Traumatized Bodies and Collapsed Masculinities in Socavón (1999) by Luis Cano.” American Comparative Literature Association, March 2015, Washington University, Seattle.
"Reclaiming the liminal space: ‘Cabecitas Negras’ in Cocinando con Elisa by Lucía Laragione.” American Comparative Literature Association, March 2014, New York University, New York.
"At the End of The World: Apocalyptic Visions and Incest in On Raftery’s Hill (2000) by Marina Carr and La escuálida familia (2001) by Lola Arias.” American Comparative Literature Association, March 2012, Brown University, Providence