Spring 2020 Degree Recipients

Spring 2020 Graduate Degrees

Jocelyn Franklin
  PhD

My dissertation, "From Cultural Memory to Lived Reality: Layered Trauma in 20th and 21st Century Haitian Literature”, addresses the following overarching question: how do transgenerational traumas, those that inform cultural identity, how do they interact with or impact lived traumas, ones that we've experienced in our own lifetimes? More specifically, I am interested in how the formative cultural memory of early moments of colonial oppression —the middle passage, chattel slavery, as well as more recent iterations of neocolonialism such as the U.S. occupation of Haiti in the early 20th century— impact the representation of contemporary traumas in Haiti. I examine representations of episodes such as the Duvalier dictatorship, the 2010 earthquake, the cholera epidemic, and the overwhelming influx of NGOs following those events. I found that 20th and 21st-century Haitian authors represent trauma as cumulative, mutually referential, layered. I argue that such a perspective challenges the way that we, in academia, have tended to place trauma on a pedestal, exemplified by the Holocaust. It has been a true pleasure to spend the last few years deep in these books, in these beautiful prose.

Keenan Brown
  Master of Arts, French Literature

I would like to thank all my classmates, the faculty and staff for a great experience. I would also like to thank Sandrine Vandermarlière for all her hard work and improvements to the program.

Marie Gaudreault
  Master of Arts, French Literature

The people are definitely what made it worthwhile. The professors and students in the French Department are all insanely smart and motivated and it definitely helped me get through the program.

Ashton Nicewonger
  Master of Arts, French Literature

I am eternally grateful for my time here!

Marketa Raevsky
  Master of Arts, French Literature

I would really like to thank our faculty for sharing their profound knowledge and passion for different periods of French literature with me. Furthermore, I am incredibly grateful for having the chance to learn and work alongside Sandrine Vandermarlière. Language teaching belongs to my primary professional interests and Sandrine's support for us graduate teaching assistants and her commitment to implementing research-based and communicative language teaching approaches in her classrooms are truly inspirational.

Featured Undergraduates

Caroline Wright Card

Major: French
Double Minor: Business & Art History

The French language has been an enormous part of my life for a long time now. Continuing my education of the language and culture at University of Colorado has been a delightful and rewarding experience. My confidence in my speaking skills and in articulating my critical analyses have greatly developed throughout the French literary courses I’ve taken. My French studies have largely influenced my interests in artistic movements and have instilled in me a curiosity to find ways to intertwine all that I’ve learned of the French esprit with other interests of mine. I’d like to thank Professor Kilbane for challenging me to push myself and encouraging me to feel more confident in my observations. I’d also like to thank Professor Motte for sharing his admiration of contemporary literature.

My Senior Essay, “Tropismes : Architecture et littérature,” likened an architect and a writer, as literary architect, who worked to radicalize their economies of expression in order to provoke a discussion and uncover possible truths to candidly represent their era.

Lesley Kathalijn McLafferty

Major: French

One of my favorite aspects of studying French was the opportunity to study abroad in the beautiful city of Aix-en-Provence where I was able to immerse myself in the French culture and lifestyle. With almost six months of exposure there, I was able to grow and gain confidence with my speaking, writing, and reading based on the foundation given to me by the French Department at CU in previous years. I can’t thank the University of Colorado enough for the education, experiences, and friendships I’ve made throughout these last four year. Even though they are just a memory now, they will forever hold a special place in my heart.

 

I analyzed the book “Une Vie de Boy” by Ferdinand Oyono for my senior seminar essay. Sources from additional novels and poems by profound African writers aided my argument of the interdependence between the colonizer and the colonized in African colonies during the 19th and 20th centuries. The title of my essay was “La coexistence du colonialisme et de la manipulation humaine dans Une Vie de Boy par Ferdinand Oyono”. 

Joseph Palmer Resnick

Major: French
Double Minor: Business and Spanish

My senior essay is entitled "Le lien entre le minimalisme, le rôle du spectateur et le discours metathéâtral de Beckett dans En attendant Godot."  It gives an in-depth analysis of Samuel Beckett's play En Attendant Godot, and how the minimalist nature of the play gives a role to the spectators in the audience watching, and additional meaning to the play itself.

Celeste Elaine Johnson

(Fall 2019)
Major: French
Graduated With Distinction

From the first French class I took at CU with Professor Van Nelson through all my subsequent French classes with wonderful professors, I was taken with the warmth and personal connection I found in the department. I came into undergrad with no intention to pursue a French degree, but the lushness of the language and the supportive, intimate atmosphere of the department pulled me in almost instantly. My professors and courses in this department made my CU experience feel rich beyond measure, and I'm so thankful for the inspiration and resources I gained in my time here.

My senior essay was titled "L’infranchissable: les frontières dans _La maladie de la mort_." In _La maladie de la mort_, Duras examines the ways that the many boundaries that divide our world create otherness. In particular, she interrogates divisions rooted in gender, epistemology, communication, metaliterary discourse, and perception of the other, boundaries which the text not only probes theoretically but also enacts between itself and the reader. My paper examines how the many types of frontiers that outline the characters and relationships in Duras' text create otherness and how this otherness is subsequently reproduced within the reader.

Fall 2019/Spring 2020 Undergraduate Major Degree Recipients

Fall 2019 Majors


Celeste Elaine Johnson
Major: French
Graduated With Distinction

Patrick Robert O'Meallie
Major: French

Spring 2020 Majors


Darcy Rose Angus
Major: French
Minor: Italian

Caroline Wright Card
Major: French
Double Minor: Business & Art History

Lesley Kathalijn McLafferty
Major: French

Grant Logan Powell
Double Major: French and International Affairs

Joseph Palmer Resnick
Double Major: French and Spanish
Minor: Business

Laura Ann Rossman
Double Major: French and Spanish
Graduated With Distinction

Fall 2019/Spring 2020/Summer 2020 Undergraduate Minor Degree Recipients

Fall 2019 Minors


Diego Arriola
Major: Economics
Minor: French

Madi Clements
Major: Neuroscience
Double Minor: French and Biochemistry
Graduated Summa Cum Laude
Graduated With Distinction

Jenna Marie Coffey
Major: Biochemistry
Minor: Italian

Samuel W Evans
Major: Computer Science
Minor: French

Virginia Joy Lida
Major: International Affairs
Minor: French

Alan Benjamin Tett
Major: Technology, Arts & Media
Minor: French

Zoe Snyder Volpa
Major: English
Minor: French
Graduated With Distinction

Richard Williams
Major: Mathematics
Minor: French

Zachary Edward Zontek
Major: Spanish
Minor: French

 

Summer 2020 Minors


Gretchen Joann Devereux
Major: Music
Minor: French
Graduating With Distinction

Sophie Donelson Gillman
Major: International Affairs
Minor: French

Isabel Nelson
Major: Mechanical Engineering
Minor: French

Eliana Somin Yatsko
Major: International Affairs
Minor: French

Tarek Youssef
Major: International Affairs
Double Minor: French and Business

Spring 2020 Minors


Khalid Aldawood
Major: Computer Science
Minor: Italian

Oceane Andreis
Major: Computer Science
Triple Minor: French, Leadership Studies, Technology, Arts & Media

Darcy Rose Angus
Major: French
Minor: Italian

Katherine Beltz
Major: Psychology
Minor: French

Louisa Carmen Brott
Major: Film Studies
Minor: French

Olivia Jeanine Dannheiser
Major: International Affairs
Double Minor: French and Political Science

Anoushka Pranjali Divekar
Major: Music Education
Minor: French
Graduated Summa Cum Laude

Margaret Elam
Double Major: English and Economics
Minor: French

Katherine Suzette Ellis
Major: International Affairs
Minor: Italian

Chloe Greene
Major Strategic Communications, Public Relations
Minor: French

Heidi Hedieh Harris
Major International Affairs
Triple Minor: French, Economics, and Journalism

Kohlton Donald Holsapple
Major: History
Minor: Italian

Julian Jurkoic
Major: Aerospace Engineering
Double Minor: French and Engineering Management
Graduated Cum Laude

Kyle Richard Kent
Major: Psychology
Minor: French

Louisa Kupfer
Major: International Affairs
Minor: French

Marc Benjamin Leroux
Major: Business Finance & Accounting Bachelor's & Master's
Minor: French

Alexis Levejac
Double Major: International Affairs and Political Science
Minor: French

Sydney Elizabeth McCain
Major: Art History
Double Minor: French and Classics

Diego Mendiola Campillo
Major: Aerospace Engineering
Double Minor: French and Engineering Management

Rayna Twobears Miller
Major: Film Studies & Production
Double Minor: Italian and Studio Art

Morgan Taelor Murrell
Double Major: Psychology and Neuroscience
Minor: French

Jean-Christophe James Owens
Major: Electrical Engineering
Minor: French

Isabella Pugliese
Major: Economics
Minor: Italian

Gabriel John Ramos
Major: Music
Minor: French
Graduated With Honors

George Christopher DeVier Sainty
Major: International Affairs
Minor: French

Sarah Marie Sajbel
Double Major: Political Science and International Affairs
Minor: French

Rachel Antonia Solko
Major: International Affairs
Minor: French

Riven Sumner Sprinkle
Major: Linguistics
Minor: French

Madeleine Wagner
Major: English
Minor: French

Tessa Marie Wetherbee
Major: English & Creative Writing
Minor: French
Graduated With Distinction

Ariel Kaye Wiesner
Double Major: Speech, Language & Hearing and Linguistics
Minor: Italian