Humanities

UW-Green Bay

Date: September 9, 2009

New Faculty Profile: Gabriel Saxton-Ruiz

Gabriel Saxton-Ruiz is a new faculty member in Humanistic Studies and Spanish.  We thought you might like to know a little more about your professor and colleague, so we asked him a few questions about himself.

Where did you go to college?

Virginia Tech; University of Tennessee

Who was your favorite professor and why?

Luis Cano – he has a wonderful sense of humor, and was not afraid of including Science Fiction/Hard-boiled Detective Novels in “serious” PhD seminars.

You have a PhD in what field?

Modern Foreign Languages (major: Spanish; 2nd concentration: French Studies; 3rd concentration: Applied Linguistics)

What did you do your research on?

Contemporary Peruvian Narrative and Political Violence

What are your current research interests?

I will be presenting a paper (tentatively titled) “Political science fiction in the plays of Juan Rivera Saavedra,” at the Jornadas Internacionales de Teatro en Puebla, Mexico next July.  I am also interested in translating some recent Peruvian novels/short stories.

What courses do you teach?

Spanish Language, Culture and Literature courses

How would you describe your teaching style?

I enjoy classes that are interactive.   I prefer having my students express themselves and relate the texts they read to their own reality.  I try not to lecture for an hour and fifteen minutes.

What do you like to do for fun?

I love to play and watch soccer…I support Club Deportivo Universidad César Vallejo (Peru).  Music – I was a College Radio DJ and worked at a record store…but I don’t wear Kurt Rambis glasses. Cooking – I am the cook in the house – I tend to prepare lots of Peruvian and Spanish dishes.  Family – I love spending time with my wife and kids.

What was the last good book you read?

La paz de los vencidos by Jorge Eduardo Benavides (Tree of Smoke translated by Denis Johnson).

If we looked at your playlist what would we find?

  1. Thirteen – Big Star
  2. God Loves You, Michael Chang – Dent May & His Magnificent Ukulele
  3. Ando Meio Desligado – Os Mutantes
  4. Shoot You Down – Stone Roses
  5. Ain’t Got No/I Got Life – Nina Simone
  6. The Concept – Teenage Fanclub
  7. Here Comes Your Man – Pixies
  8. Town Called Malice – The Jam
  9. If We Can Land a Man on the Moon, Surely I Can Win Your Heart – Beulah
  10. Candy – Morphine
  11. Northern Sky – Nick Drake
  12. The Journey To Serra da Estrela – The Phenomenal Handclap Band
  13. I’m So Tired Of Being Alone – Al Green
  14. Staring At The Sun – TV On The Radio
  15. This Life Makes Me Wonder – Delroy Wilson
  16. Lo que ves es lo que hay – Rubín y los Subtitulados
  17. Anything by the Beatles, Beach Boys, Stevie Wonder and Paco de Lucía…

New Faculty Profile: J. Vincent Lowery

Vince Lowery is a new faculty member in Humanistic Studies and History.  We thought you might like to know a little more about your professor and colleague, so we asked him a few questions about himself.

Where did you go to college? 

University of Mississippi

Who was your favorite professor and why?

Ted Ownby – open to anything, always thinking outside the box – and Winthrop Jordan – the most challenging professor I have ever encountered who transformed my analytical and writing skills.

You have a PhD in what field?

History

What did you do your research on? 

Popular Memories of the Ku Klux Klan, 1870s-1920s

What are your current research interests? 

Popular Culture/Memory; New South Boosterism

What courses do you teach? 

US History, African American History, Ethnic Diversity

How would you describe your teaching style?

Energetic, Passionate

What do you like to do for fun? 

Golf, moviegoing (neither of which are done with great frequency), and getting to know Green Bay with my family

What was the last good book you read?

Amy Wood’s Lynching and Spectacle and John Coski’s The Confederate Battle Flag.

If we looked at your playlist what would we find?

Jim James (of My Morning Jacket), Grizzly Bear, The Swell Season

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