Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Mina Zdravkovic

I am completing my Ph.D. in English at Boston University, English department. My work focuses on the twentieth century novel (British, American, and some Continental) and examines the ways in which lateness as an aesthetic, cultural, and linguistic category informs the prose of writers in exile: concepts of pastiche, intertextuality, and self-reflexivity are crucial to it. The title of my dissertation, which I am writing under mentorship of professors Aaron Fogel and Ha Jin, is “On Late Style and Twentieth Century Novel: Textuality, Spectacle, and the Real in the works of Joseph Conrad, Vladimir Nabokov, and W. G. Sebald.” I have been a recipient of several prestigious awards in Serbia and US, among them Boston University’s Albert Gilman Award in 2001, and have published work on contemporary authors, the latest of which is an article on Peter Weiss’s two books of fictional autobiography Exile (Leavetaking and Vanishing Point), forthcoming in Compendium of Twentieth Century Novel, New York: Facts on File, 2007.
My other areas of interest include literary theory, film theory, and creative writing (fiction).
At Boston University, I have taught classes on contemporary fiction, drama, film, and writing.
I am currently working on a book of short stories Kafka’s Wall and on a documentary screenplay on literacy in Serbia.

Marija Govedarica


My name is Marija Govedarica. I am from Belgrade, Serbia and I received my BA in International Affairs at John Cabot University in Rome in 2003. Currently I am pursuing master's degree at Columbia University at School of International Affairs. I am at my second semester and expected to graduate in May 2008. My area of concentration is International Security Policy, but I am also interested in studies of human rights and I've been involved in many projects out of school within that subject. My professional interests lie in area of diplomacy and human rights activism.