Claudia Berrios-Campos
- (She/Her/Ella)
- berriosc@msu.edu
- Wells B480
- Assistant Professor
- Romance and Classical Studies
Biography
Dr. Berríos-Campos, Academic Specialist in Early Modern Andean Cultural Studies in the Department of Romance and Classical Studies, specializes in Early Modern Spanish Literature and Colonial Latin American Literature; Andean and Indigenous Literatures; Decolonial and Postcolonial Studies; and Violence and Armed Conflicts in the Andes and Global South. She also works with Identity and Memory Studies; Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies; and Visual Studies, Film, and Audio-Visual Culture. She has taught Spanish at MSU since 2012 and, more recently, worked as an Editorial Assistant for the Journal of Gender and Sexuality Studies at MSU, recently becoming the Production Editor for the journal. She has been the recipient of the Dr. Johannes Sachse Memorial Award, the Varg-Sullivan Award, and the 2021 Victoria Urbano Award, and published in several peer reviewed publications. Before coming to Michigan State, Dr. Berríos-Campos had teaching experience at the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Peru where she also earned her B.A. in Literature. She also has an M.A. in Hispanic Literatures and a Ph.D. in Hispanic Cultural Studies, both from MSU.Research Interests: Early Modern Spanish Literature and Colonial Latin American Literature, Andean and Indigenous Literatures, Intersectionality, Decolonial and Postcolonial Studies, Violence and Armed Conflicts in the Andes and the Global South, Identity, Memory and Genocide Studies, Gender, Sexuality and Women’s StudiesDegree: Ph.D. – Michigan State University.
She is also a founder member of the MSU Latinx Film Festival and has continued working on the project since its inception.
Works
Dissertation
Articles
- “Atrapado hasta los huesos: el cuerpo mutilado como metáfora de la violencia de la colonialidad del poder en Adiós Ayacucho de Julio Ortega,” Journal of Literature and Trauma Studies, 10.1-2, 2021
- “Las violencias del no reconocimiento. Los límites del discurso moderno occidental y la cosmovisión andina como propuesta en la novela Rosa Cuchillo.” Partera de la historia: violencia en literatura, performance y medios audiovisuales en Latinoamérica. Ed. Chrystian Zegarra and Osvaldo Sandoval. México: Editorial de la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana y Editorial Nómada (2022): 47-65.
- “El camino del ostracismo: la justicia en el mundo andino y la negación de la reciprocidad en Guamán Poma de Ayala.” Letras, 91.133 (2020): 187-210.
- “The sasachakuy tiempo: The Representation of Intersectional Violence in Literature of the Peruvian Armed Conflict (1980-2000).” Journal of Gender and Sexuality Studies/Revista de Estudios de Género y sexualidades, 45.2 (2019): 71-93.
- “La tentación de la legitimidad: Estrategias y oscilaciones discursivas para alcanzar la representación en el Manuscrito de Huarochirí.” Revista de Crítica Literaria Latinoamericana, 80 (2014): 139-149.
College of Arts & Letters News
- Film Festival Shines Spotlight on Latinx Culture and Global IssuesCollege of Arts & Letters
February 8, 2024The MSU Latinx Film Festival (LxFF) is returning this year after a four-year pandemic-induced hiatus. Scheduled for Feb. 15-18 at several different venues across the Michigan State University campus and in the Lansing and East Lansing communities, the 2024 festival will continue […] Read Now →
- College Welcomes 27 New Faculty and Staff MembersCollege of Arts & Letters
September 7, 2021This semester, the College of Arts & Letters is pleased to welcome 27 new faculty and staff members. Please join us in welcoming these newest faculty and staff members to the College.
- Spanish Students Present Research at CLACS ConferenceCollege of Arts & Letters
March 16, 2017Ten graduate students from MSU’s Spanish program are presenting their research at the Graduate Student Conference hosted by MSU’s Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies on Friday, March 17. Scheduled from 1 to 5:30 p.m. on the 3rd floor of MSU’s International […] Read Now →
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