Department of Languages

New faculty, Fall 2018

The Department of Languages welcomed the following new faculty members at the beginning of the Fall 2018 semester.

Jody CrippsJody H. Cripps, Assistant Professor of American Sign Language

Jody holds a Ph.D. in Second Language Acquisition and Teaching from the University of Arizona. His research interests include but are not limited to: language acquisition and literacy, signed music, and signed language pathology. Jody is also a co-founder of two non-profit organizations and is the Editor-in-Chief for Society of American Sign Language Journal. Prior to joining the department, Jody worked at Towson University, where he expanded the Deaf Studies program within and outside of the classroom setting. At Clemson, he currently teaches elementary ASL and will teach Linguistics of American Sign Language (ASL 4010) next semester. Outside of academia, he is a surfer bum at heart and spends his spare time enjoying recreational sports, often with his wife and their two deaf dogs.

Liliana HernándezLiliana Hernández, Lecturer of Spanish

Lili, a native of Medellín, Colombia, holds an MFA from the Universidad de Antioquia. She worked as the director of the Plecto Espacio de Arte Contemporáneo, a contemporary art gallery in Medellín, and has curated many art shows and festivals. Lili previously taught at Clemson from 2004 to 2010, during which time she coordinated a Latin American art show and film festival on campus. Currently she teaches intermediate Spanish courses and serves as a departmental advisor.

Andrea NaranjoAndrea Naranjo, Lecturer of Spanish

Andrea was born and raised in Cali, Colombia. She earned a Law Degree from the Universidad San Buenaventura and worked as a lawyer in the private sector in Cali, acquiring experience in contracts, labor law and commercial law. She later earned a Master’s Degree in Spanish from Middlebury College. Prior to coming to Clemson, she taught for several years at James Madison University. Andrea is a poet and her work has been published and awarded in Colombia, Spain, Mexico, Argentina and the United States. Recently she published her second book of poetry in Mexico City and she earned the Hayek International Production Award for her contribution to Mexican letters and literature. Among her interests are business and society in Latin America and creative writing. Currently she teaches Intermediate Spanish, Spanish for Business Composition, and Spanish for International Trade and serves as a departmental advisor.

Mercedes TejeraMercedes Tejera, Lecturer of Spanish

Mercedes is a Ph.D. candidate in Ibero-American Literature at the University of Florida. She holds a B.A. in Spanish Literature with a second major in Latin American and Latino Studies and an M.A. in Spanish and Latin American Literatures, both from the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. Her research interests are 20th- and 21st-century science fiction novels from Brazil, Chile, Peru, and Spain (focusing on gender, politics, and mass media culture). Mercedes teaches intermediate Spanish.

 

 

Newly promoted faculty celebrated at reception

Johannes Schmidt and Eric Touya were among seven newly promoted professors to be recognized by President James P. Clements and Provost Robert H. Jones at a reception on September 4 at the Brooks Center for the Performing Arts. Richard E. Goodstein, dean of the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, also hosted a dinner in their honor last month.

Johannes Schmidt received a promotion to full professor in the Department of Languages. Schmidt’s research interests range from 18th- and 19th-century German literature and philosophy to German drama and music.

He has taught a variety of courses including German drama, 18th- and 19th-century German literature, the culture and literature of exile, humanities seminars on drama, World War II, the Shoah, and German language and culture courses at all levels.

With Rainer Godel, Schmidt is the co-editor of the International Herder Yearbook, a bi-annual, peer-reviewed professional journal of the International Herder Society.

Schmidt earned his bachelor’s degree in Germanistics, Linguistics and Economics at the University of Konstanz in Germany, his master’s degree in Germanic Languages and Literatures at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and his Ph.D. in German Literature at the University of Hamburg in Germany.

In 2006, Schmidt was elected treasurer-secretary (North America) of the International Herder Society. He also served as the president of the South Carolina Chapter of the American Association of Teachers of German from 2003-06.

Eric Touya received a promotion to full professor in the Department of Languages. His research and teaching interests include 19th– to 21st-century French and Francophone literature and culture, and interdisciplinary approaches to literature, art, media, theory, culture, economics, ethics and society.

Touya also is the academic advisor for the French and International Trade program and the study abroad program in Paris and Normandy.

“I am happy to hear the news and to serve as teacher, mentor and scholar for this great university,” Touya said. “I am grateful to all the students and colleagues and to my wife and daughter for their support.”

Touya is a recipient of the prestigious Chevalier des Palmes Academiques, awarded by the French government.

Touya received his diplôme d’etudes approfondies in comparative literature at the Universite de Paris IV, Sorbonne, and his Ph.D. in Romance languages and literatures at the University of Chicago.

He is the author of “Musique et poétique à l’âge du symbolism” (L’Harmattan, 2005), “French-American Relations: Remembering D-Day after September 11” (University Press of America, 2008), “Francophone Women Writers: Feminisms, Postcolonialisms, Cross-Cultures” (Lexington Books Publishing, 2011) and “The Case for the Humanities: Pedagogy, Polity, Interdisciplinarity” (Rowman & Littlefield, 2016).