Skip to Content

Event Listings

Inaugural Lecture: Professor Sarah Bowskill

graphic showing south america, open book and the word context
Date(s)
March 6, 2025
Location
Council Chamber, Lanyon Building, Queen's University Belfast
Time
17:30 - 18:30
Price
Free

This lecture makes the case for the importance of context for understanding Latin American literature. Much of my research has been motivated by a single underlying question: Why do some Latin American texts become classics while others, often those written by women authors, are overlooked or undervalued? It has been argued that ‘classics’ are simply better-quality texts, but I maintain that the context in which literature is produced, circulated and received is fundamental to explaining these differing fortunes. In stressing the importance of context, it may be said that I am suggesting a kind of conspiracy that works in favour of some authors and against others. This lecture, however, considers context not as conspiracy but as opportunity because contexts can be changed.

Sarah Bowskill is Professor of Latin American Studies at Queen’s University Belfast. Having studied for a BA in French and Spanish at Durham University, she went on to complete an MA in Latin American Cultural Studies and a PhD in Spanish at the University of Manchester. Her first academic post was at Swansea University where she worked until being appointed as a Lecturer in Latin American Studies at Queen’s in 2011. Her research, grounded in sociological approaches to literature, has led to the publication of two monographs. The first examined processes underpinning the formation of the Mexican literary canon and the second analysed the politics at play when it comes to prizes for Latin American literature.

Alongside her work on canon formation and women’s writing she has worked with Dr Jane E. Lavery (University of Southampton) studying the ways in which women in Latin America are using digital technologies to reach new audiences and to produce new types of multimedia cultural production. She is one of a team of editors working on the recently commissioned Palgrave Handbook of Digital Latin American Studies.

Sarah is the current Vice President of the Society for Latin American Studies (SLAS), a member of the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Peer Review College and Hispanic Studies Section Editor for the journal Modern Languages Open.

The lecture will be recorded and available to view online shortly after the event.

 

The Council Chamber is located on the first-floor of the Lanyon Building and is accessed via the staircase next to the main entrance.
Access via the lift in the Welcome Centre can be made available on request, please contact Maria Meehan (m.meehan@qub.ac.uk)
Department
Audience
All
Hashtag
#LoveQUB
Venue Information
Yes
Add to calendar
Event Organiser Details
Name Maria Meehan
Email m.meehan@qub.ac.uk