Kirsten Harmon (CPLT major, 2009) wins 2010 ACLA Presidential Undergraduate Prize
Kirsten Harmon (B.A. Comp Lit 2009) is the recipient of the 2010 American Comparative Literature Association Presidential Undergraduate Prize, for her honors thesis "Voices of the South. Re-telling History through Fiction in the Works of William Faulkner and Gabriel García Márquez".
Kirsten was awarded the prize at the annual ACLA conference in New Orleans on April 3, 2010.
Citation:
"With “Voices of the South. Re-telling History through Fiction in the Works of William Faulkner and Gabriel García Márquez,” Kirsten Harmon has written a very compelling comparative work across two languages. The topic of “The Two Souths” in itself is fraught with controversial issues, yet Kirsten used excellent judgment in covering vast amounts of secondary sources, both topic-specific and theoretical, knowing how to sift through these materials without losing sight of her purpose. As she engages with primary texts, Kirsten also shows an admirable sense of historical, political and formal problems, and produces an integrated, flowing and powerful piece. Sophisticated, lucid, and graceful, her writing is a flexible instrument that transmits the subtlety and complexity of her thought, without sacrificing directness and passion."
Upcoming Events
- Oct 22, 5:15pm: Marking Time: Apocalyptic Historiography in Latin Jerusalem
- Oct 24, 6pm: Arabic Conquests or Islamic Conquests?
- Oct 30, 6:30pm: The Annual Dracula Lecture by Professor Goldfrank