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20th Century American Literature, University of Notre
Dame.
Director of the Graduate Program in
Rhetoric and Writing Studies.
Dr. Robinett's teaching and research interests include developmental
and advanced composition, narrative and memoir, technical writing, technology
and ethics, multicultural literature, Latin American and American literature,
among others. Her articles, in both English and Spanish, on literature
and technology, ethnic literatures, contemporary Latin American fiction,
computers and distance teaching and cyberethics have been published and
anthologized in such places as El Nuevo Mundo de la Filosofia y la
Tecnologia (Barcelona), James Wright: The Heart of the Light (Ann Arbor),
The Journal of Social and Biological Structures, Computing Research News,
Olmeteca, El Otro Laberinto (Costa Rica), and Modern Fiction
Studies. Among her publications are A Sourcebook On Computers
and Ethics, and This Rough Magic: Technology in Latin American
Fiction. She also translated and co-edited the work of a Dominican
poet in Desde Desconsuelo a compromiso/ From Desolation to Compromise:
A bilingual anthology of the Poetry of Aida Cartegena Portalatin.
Her recent publications include "Looking for Roots: Curandera and
Shamanic Practices in Southwestern Fiction," in Mosaic: A Journal
for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature, Spring 2003, “Listening
All the Way Home: Structure and Theme in Rudy Wiebe’s Sweeter Than
All the World,” Conrad Grebel Review, July, 2004 and "Medical
Narratives in Empirical Frameworks.” Academic Exchange Quarterly,
Fall 2005.
Her most
recent article, “The Narrative Structure
of Traumatic Experience,” explores
the ways in which the structure of literature written by combat soldiers reflects
their traumatic experiences and helps to determine the narrative structures they
use. It will be published in Literature and Medicine, Johns Hopkins
University Press, in spring, 2008. In 1993,
she was a Fulbright lecturer in the graduate program
at the University of Costa Rica. She lived and
taught for six years in England and Spain. She
has received the Alumni Association's Outstanding
Teacher Award at SDSU in 1995 and was chosen Most
Influential Professor at SDSU's Imperial Valley
Campus in 1999.
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