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Joseph Mulligan

Graduate Student Research Fellow at Duke University

Joseph Mulligan is a PhD Candidate in the Spanish and Latin American Studies track of the Romance Studies department. He specializes in literature and politics in vernacular print cultures of Peru, Bolivia, Mexico, and Spain during the 19th and 20th centuries.

His research delves into the history of education reform, the critique of liberalism, and the rise of regionalism as responses to the marginalization of the indigenous majority by the urban lettered elite. He is influenced by the sociology of literature and post-Marxist philosophy in exploring questions of literacy, race, and post-secular spirituality with a focus on cultural mediation practices.

Joseph's dissertation titled "Poetics of Revelation: Communities of the Literary Oracular in Transatlantic Modernism (1939-1979)" analyzes visionary poetry and the philosophy of myth through comparative case studies on María Zambrano, Octavio Paz, and Jaime Saenz.

In the fall of 2020, Joseph served as the Bass Instructor of Record for Spanish 327: Culture on Wheels at Duke University, a seminar exploring civic engagement and education reform in Spain and Mexico. The course provided a historical perspective on social activism, teacher advocacy, and philanthropy by studying figures like María Zambrano, Ramón Gaya, Diego Rivera, and Frances Toor.

Joseph Mulligan completed a Bachelor of Arts in Hispanic and Italian Studies / English at the University at Albany, SUNY, and a Master of Arts in Romance Studies at Duke University. He has held positions such as Graduate Student Research Fellow, Researcher PhD Candidate, Graduate Student Instructor at Duke University, Localization Project Manager at Language Intelligence, and Assistant Managing Editor at Geotext Translations.

Joseph Mulligan
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Location

Durham, North Carolina