Jonathan E. Mayhew
- Professor
Contact Info
Office Phone:
Wescoe Hall, room #2624
Research —
My primary research currently is on the Spanish playwright and poet Federico García Lorca. I am at work on two book projects: "Lorca: The Fractured Subject" and "Musical Lorca," a study of musical settings of Lorca's work.
Research interests:
- Twentieth-Century Spanish and Spanish American Poetry
- Lorca
- Contemporary US Poetry
- Translation Theory
- Poetry and Performance
- Prosody
- Jazz
- Music and Literature
Teaching —
Teaching interests:
- Twentieth-Century Spanish and Spanish American Poetry
- Lorca
- Contemporary US Poetry
- Translation Theory
- Poetry and Performance
- Prosody
- Jazz
- Music and Literature
Selected Publications —
Mayhew, Jonathan. “ ‘Footnotes to Apocryphal Lorca’ .” Paideuma, 2020.
Mayhew, Jonathan. “‘José-Miguel Ullán: Hacia Una Poética de Lo Visual.’” Hispanic Issues , 2020.
Mayhew, Jonathan. “‘Poetic Literacy 101: Beyond Nervous Cluelessness’ .” Approaches to Teaching Latin American Poetry, edited by Jill Kuhnheim and Melanie Nicholson, MLA, 2019.
Mayhew, Jonathan. Lorca’s Legacy: Essays in Interpretation. Routledge, 2018.
Mayhew, Jonathan. “‘A Poet’s Theatre: Lorca on the American Stage from Prometheus in Granada to Barbarous Nights.’ .” Hecho Teatral, 2015.
Mayhew, Jonathan. “The Genealogy of Late Modernism in Spain: Unamuno, Lorca, Zambrano, and Valente.” Modernist Cultures , 2012.
Mayhew, Jonathan. Apocryphal Lorca: Parody, Translation, Kitsch. University of Chicago Press, 2009.
Selected Presentations —
Mayhew, J. (3/31/2016). “Who Speaks in the Work of Federico García Lorca”. Florida State University
Mayhew, J. (1/31/2016). “Vallejo and the Trials of Translation”. MLA Convention. Austin
Mayhew, J. (10/13/2015). “Lorquian Self-Fashioning.”
Mayhew, J. (5/15/2015). Entre Lorca y Celan: modelos de una modernidad futura. International Congress on "Celan en España". University of Cáceres
Mayhew, J. (3/23/2015). Lorca's Muscial Legacy. ACLA. Seattle
Mayhew, J. (3/31/2011). Modernism and Cultural Exceptionalism: From Miguel de Unamuno to José Lezama Lima. CUNY Graduate Center