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Publications:
  • “The Inter-Ethnic Return: Racial and Cultural Multiplicity In Foundational Asian American and Chicana/o Literatures.” Comparative American Studies, 8.4 (2010): 267-282.

  • (Book Review) Claudia Sadowski-Smith, Border Fictions: Globalization, Empire, and Writing at the Boundaries of the United States. MELUS, 34.2 (2009): 203-206.

  • All Spanish to English translations in Arthur Zajonc (ed.), We Speak as One: Twelve Nobel Laureates Share Their Vision for Peace. Arvada, CO: PeaceJam Foundation (2006).  

  • “Gendered Nationalism in Xicoténcatl.” MELUS, 30.1 (2005): 189-204.

  • “An Interview with Nobel Laureate Rigoberta Menchú Tum, June 2003.”  Delaware Review of Latin American Studies, 5.1 (2004): http://www.udel.edu/LASP/Vol5-1Sae-Saue.html

Courses/Seminars:
  • Introduction to Fiction

  • Chicana/o Literature

  • Southwest Literature: Imagining Transnational Cultural Geographies
Jayson Gonzales Sae-Saue specializes in Chicana/o and Asian American literatures. His current project examines how Chicana/o and Asian American novels negotiate inter-racial contact and cultural flows between a range of U.S. minority populations in order to construct viable visions of ethnic identity. In alignment with his transnational and inter-ethnic approaches to literary studies, Dr. Gonzales Sae-Saue’s classes explore the aesthetic developments of ethnic American literatures within broad social historical perspectives. His courses examine the cultural and social interventions ethnic literary forms make and investigate how multi-ethnic conceptions of U.S. history move us into comparative frameworks for reading minority literatures.
   
Jayson Gonzales Sae-Saue
Assistant Professor
Ph.D., Stanford
 
 
Office: Dallas Hall, Room 11
Office Hours: TTh 11-12
Phone: 214-768-4369
Email: jsaesaue@mail.smu.edu
Webpage:  

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