Gartner, Bruce S.
Arts &Letters Division
Ohio Dominican University
United States of America
Biography
Bruce Gartner, Associate Professor of Spanish, was awarded his doctorate from Emory University in Atlanta. He taught at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and Ohio State University before joining the faculty at Ohio Dominican. At ODU, he teaches Spanish language, civilization and history of Spain and Spanish America, Spanish for Medical Personnel, and has a special interest in the Spanish Baroque period. He has presented papers on Argentine, Spanish, and Mexican writers. He has published in: Mediavaelia The Indiana Journal of Hispanic Literatures Confluencia Postscript: The Publication of the Philological Association of the Carolinas Dr. Gartner also contributed a chapter to La palabra en vilo: narrativa de Luisa Valenzuela, edited by Gwendolyn Díaz and María Inés Lagos. He has organized and chaired sessions on: Spanish Golden Age Prose and Genre The Reader and the Postmodern in El Lazarillo de Tormes, Cervantes, and María de Zayas The Amorous Discourse of Borges, Juan Ramón Jiménez, and Fernando de Rojas The Chicano Novel Hispanic Women's Poetry. Bruce Gartner, Associate Professor of Spanish, was awarded his doctorate from Emory University in Atlanta. He taught at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and Ohio State University before joining the faculty at Ohio Dominican. At ODU, he teaches Spanish language, civilization and history of Spain and Spanish America, Spanish for Medical Personnel, and has a special interest in the Spanish Baroque period. He has presented papers on Argentine, Spanish, and Mexican writers. He has published in: Mediavaelia The Indiana Journal of Hispanic Literatures Confluencia Postscript: The Publication of the Philological Association of the Carolinas Dr. Gartner also contributed a chapter to La palabra en vilo: narrativa de Luisa Valenzuela, edited by Gwendolyn Díaz and María Inés Lagos. He has organized and chaired sessions on: Spanish Golden Age Prose and Genre The Reader and the Postmodern in El Lazarillo de Tormes, Cervantes, and María de Zayas The Amorous Discourse of Borges, Juan Ramón Jiménez, and Fernando de Rojas The Chicano Novel Hispanic Women's Poetry.
Research Interest
Arts &Letters Division