Calendar

Apr 15

Carleton Connects with Professor Adriana Estill

Carleton Connects with Professor Adriana Estill "How and Why the Telenovela Haunts U.S. Primetime TV in the 21st c."

Tuesday, April 15th, 2014
11:00 am / Carleton College Center for Math and Computing, Room 11
map of Carleton Connects with Professor Adriana Estill

Northfield, MN

Carleton Connects: Professor Adriana Estill

"How and Why the Telenovela Haunts U.S. Primetime TV in the 21st C."

Tuesday, April 15
11 am - 12 pm CT

In shows as disparate as Ugly Betty, Modern Family, and House, U.S. primetime television has increasingly been interested in playing with genre by invoking Latin American telenovela conventions. How is the telenovela made visible? What relationship does it have to our national anxieties over Latino demographic growth? How is U.S. television mediating the way that we can and should know Latin America? Join Carleton Connects for Professor Adriana Estill's presentation of "How and Why the Telenovela Haunts U.S. Primetime TV in the 21st c."

To register for this program, please click here.   

About the Speaker

Adriana Estill teaches courses on U.S. Latino/a literature and twentieth century American literature, especially poetry. She also teaches in the American Studies program. She has published essays on Sandra Cisneros and Ana Castillo and recently contributed to the Gale encyclopedia of Latino/a authors with scholarly entries on Sandra María Esteves and Giannina Braschi. Her interest in popular culture has led to published articles on Mexican telenovelas and their literary origins as well as to current research into the perceptions and constructions of Latina beauty in contemporary Latino literature and the mass media. Degrees: Stanford B.A.; Cornell, M.A., Ph.D.

Sponsored by Cannon Valley Carleton Club. Contact: Catherine K. Smith, Alumni Relations Office