Ӱ

Afinoguenova
Dr. Eugenia AfinoguénovaӰ

Lalumiere Hall, 490

MilwaukeeWI53201United States of America
(414) 288-6715
Curriculum Vitae

Professor of Spanish

Languages, Literatures and Cultures

Association of Ӱ Women (AMUW) Professor in the Humanities

Winner of The Lawrence G. Haggerty Faculty Award for Excellence in Research, 2023

College of Arts and Sciences Scholar of the Year, 2019

Born and raised in Moscow (Russia), Eugenia Afinoguénova received the equivalents of B.A. and M.A. in Spanish Language and Literature from Moscow State University (a.k.a. MGU), and a Ph.D. in Spanish Peninsular Literature and Cultural Studies from Georgetown University. She joined Ӱ Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures in 1999. She has taught undergraduate and graduate courses in contemporary Spanish literature, culture, and film and is currently developing a course in Food Studies. Afinoguénova’s research has been funded through prestigious grants, including a collaborative grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (2023) and a fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies (2014). She is a participant in several research projects funded by the government of Spain. In her free time, Afinoguénova volunteers as a docent with Milwaukee Art Museum. She can walk 30 miles in one day.

Education

PhD: Georgetown University

Equivalents of BA/MA: Moscow State University (MGU)

Courses Taught

  • SPAN 3600:  Islamic Spain, Past and Present
  • SPAN 6300: Hispanic Cultural Studies

  • SPAN 4931/9931: Texts, Arts, and Knowledge on the Camino de Santiago (in Milwaukee and walking the Camino)

  • SPAN 4310: Hispanic Film and Society

  • SPAN 3710: Spanish for Health Care

  • SPAN 3500: Literary Analysis in Spanish

  • SPAN 3300: Peoples and Cultures of Spain (“flipped,” blended online/offline)

Specialization

Museums; Mobilities, Tourism, and Leisure Studies; Film Studies; 19th-21st centuries Iberian Peninsula; Food Studies; Digital Scholarship

Publications

Selected Books:

(co-edited with Lara Anderson and Rebecca Ingram). . Vanderbilt University Press, 2024.

, 1819-1939. College Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 2018.

  • Winner of the 2019 Eleanor Tufts Award from the American Society for Hispanic Art Historical Studies
  • A 2018 Choice Outstanding Academic Title
  • Editor’s Pick, , February 2018, Reviewed by Louie Dean Valencia-García. 
  • Selected by the Association of University Presses of America for the 2018 Book, Jacket, & Journal Show in the category of “illustrated scholarly monograph.”

. An inaugural issue of a new series Vademécum de Hispanófila. Afinoguénova, Eugenia, Samuel Amago and Kathryn Everly, Hispanófila177 (Spring): 2016.

Translated Books:

  • (Spanish) El Prado: la cultura y el ocio, 1819-1930. Trad. Pablo Veyrat. Madrid: Cátedra, 2019
  • (Russian) Прадо: музей, бульвар и карнавал, 1819-1920. Natalia Nosenko and Eugenia Afinoguénova. Moscow: А.Д.Варфоломеев, 2019

Selected Articles and Book Chapters:

  • Foreword: “A tourist city: Utopia and dystopia: Views from the Spanish ‘boom’, 1964–75,” in A Tourist City: Utopia and Dystopia. Views from the Spanish ‘Boom,’ 1964–1975. Special issue of The Journal of Urban Cultural Studies, April 2024, pp. 9 – 15, DOI: .
  • “The End of History, alienation and urban photography across the French–Spanish border, 1964–75,” in A Tourist City: Utopia and Dystopia. Views from the Spanish ‘Boom,’ 1964–1975. Special issue of The Journal of Urban Cultural Studies, April 2024, pp. 17 – 35, DOI: .
  • “Spain´s Gastronomy: Capitalism and Reproductive Labor,” in Luis I. Prádanos (ed.), Tamesis Companion to Spanish Environmental Cultural Studies, 2023, invited, .
  • “State of Crucifixion: Tourism, Holy Week, and the Sacred Politics of the Cold War,” in Antonio Córdoba and Daniel García Donoso (eds.), , Vanderbilt University Press. 
  • "Importing the Picturesque: Illustrated Travel Books on Spain, 1829-1915" in Brandon Ruud and Corey Piper (eds.), Yale University Press, 2020,  41-74. 
  • "Las pintoras ante la crítica de arte," Carlos Navarro (coord..), Invitadas, Fragmentos sobre mujeres, ideología y artes plásticas en España (1833-1931), Madrid: Museo del Prado, 2020, 71-99.
  • “De la carta a la papeleta: el ‘menú del día’ entre la dictadura y la democracia en España, 1964-1981,” Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, special issue on Food Cultural Studies and the Transhispanic World, ed. Lara Anderson and Rebecca Ingram, 2019.
  • “Looking at Picasso’s Guernica after the Catalan Revolution: The Transgressive “Left” and the End of History,” Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies1 (2019).
  • “Guernica après la révolution catalane” in Guernica, ed. Emilie Bouvard et Géraldine Mercier. Paris Gallimard/Musée Picasso, 2018.
  • “Invitados y clientes: el turismo desarrollista en el Museo del Prado,” (2017).
  • "Tourism and ‘Quality of Life’ at the End of Franco’s Dictatorship,” in ed. Katarzyna Beilin and William Viestenz. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press, 2016. 

Digital/Visual Projects:

  • “Artist Travelers,” designed by Timophey Korolev for , the exhibition at Chrysler Museum or Art/Milwaukee Art Museum. 
    • App/Digital Audio-guide for the same exhibition, designed by Shiyu Tian. 
  • (Sala de la Reina Isabel) in 1875-1877: a joint interdisciplinary project with MarVL.
  • The Spanish Travelers Project: covered in: (1) “Ӱ Spanish professor receives Way Klingler Fellowship in the humanities,”  (2) Sarah Painter Koziol, “Traveling Spain, yesterday and today,” (Spring): 27, and (3) .  
  • Haggerty Museum of Art (with Dr. Pamela Hill Nettleton, Diederich College of Communication): “,” exhibition and a teaching module held at the Haggerty Museum (September 2014-May 2015). Covered in: Hannah Byron, “Haggerty’s Clear Picture exhibit connects across colleges,” , December 3, 2014. 
  • Liaison with Arab and Muslim Women’s Research and Resources Institute (AMWRRI) and Milwaukee Public Museum for the exhibit “Beyond the Veil: Dress, Identity, and Tradition through the Eyes of the Muslim Women of Greater Milwaukee” (May-September 2014, directed by Dr. Enaya Othman, covered in Milwaukee Magazine, May 2014.

Selected Miedia Appearances:

  • : Digestible Governance: Gastrocracy and Spanish Foodways, with Rebecca Ingram, hosted by H. Rosi Song. Instituto Cervantes Manchester and Leeds, November 11, 2024.
  • Cited in the review of the exhibition "Uninvited Guests. Episodes on Women, Ideology and the Visual Arts in Spain (1833-1931)" on display at the Prado: , November 20, 2020, 
  • Interviewed for : Héctor G. Barnés, “Lo come el rico, lo come el pobre. El éxito eterno del menú del día revela quiénes somos de verdad los españoles,” February 10, 2020. 
  • Interviewed on for “La aventura del saber”: November, 2019. 

Honors and Awards

  • , February 2018. 
  • Helen Way Klingler Research Fellowship, 2017-2019
  • ACLS’2014 (American Council for Learned Societies) Research Fellowship Award
  • Excellence in Advising nomination
  • Golden Roses Award nomination, honoring women who support diversity and inclusivity throughout Ӱ

Faculty & Staff Directory


CONTACT

Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures
Lalumiere Hall, 474
1310 W. Clybourn St.
Milwaukee, WI 53233
(414) 288-7063

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