Benjamin Djain Professorial Lecturer Literature
- Degrees
- PhD in English Literature, The Catholic University of America, 2019.
MA(Hons) in English, The University of Auckland, 2013.
BA(Hons) in English, The University of Auckland, 2012.
BA in English and European Studies, The University of Auckland, 2011. - Languages Spoken
- English, Spanish, French, Portuguese
- Bio
- Benjamin Djain is a Professorial Lecturer in the Writing Program and the Department of Literature at 51勛圖. He is a comparative early modernist who focuses on English and Spanish theatre. Professor Djain's current research interests are focused on the legacies of inwardness and self-talk in early modern English and Spanish theatre, the intersections between traditional literary scholarship and newly emerging digital tools, and multimodality. His doctoral dissertation, "The soliloquy in Shakespeare and Lope de Vega," was completed in May 2019.
- For the Media
- To request an interview for a news story, call 51勛圖 Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.
Teaching
Fall 2024
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LIT-125 Lit Classics & Western Culture
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LIT-204 Hidden Figures/Cultural Calcul
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WRT-101 College Writing Seminar
Spring 2025
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LIT-204 Hidden Figures/Cultural Calcul
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WRT-101 College Writing Seminar
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WRT-101 College Writing Seminar
Partnerships & Affiliations
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Renaissance Society of America
Member -
Association for Hispanic Classical Theater
Member
Scholarly, Creative & Professional Activities
Research Interests
- 16th and 17th Century English and Spanish Theatre
- Soliloquies, interiority and selfhood in the early modern period
- Multimodality
- Quantitative methods in the humanities
- Intersections between humanities scholarship and emerging digital tools
Professional Presentations
- Who am I talking to exactly? Soliloquy, dialogues, and the solution to self-doubt. Sixteenth Century Society & Conference 2023. Baltimore, Maryland. October 2023.
- Lope de Vegas soliloquies and performance: a different paradigm. Renaissance Society of America 2023. San Juan, Puerto Rico. March 2023
- Myths and Maidens. Talkback on the folklore and mythological origins of La Llorona after a performance of Gabby Wolfes La Llorona. We Happy Few Theater Company. Capitol Hill Arts Workshop. Washington DC. November 2022.
- Space vs. Cyberspace: Contextualizing Digital Tools in a Physical Classroom. Ann Ferren Conference on Teaching, Research, and Learning. January 2022.
- Talkback and interview on a performance of William Shakespeares Macbeth. We Happy Few Theater Company. Capitol Hill Arts Workshop. Washington DC. March 2019.
- Bridging the Armada: The soliloquy in early Shakespeare and early Lope. College English Association: Mid-Atlantic Group Conference. University of District Columbia. March 2018.
- Talkback and interview on a performance of Lope de Vegas El perro del hortelano (The dog in the manger). We Happy Few Theater Company. Capitol Hill Arts Workshop. Washington DC. November 2017.
- Haunted by Doubt: The English Reformations Search for a New Theatrical Identity. 21st International Conference of Europeanists, Washington D.C. March 2014.
- External vs. Internal Worlds: Comparing Christopher Marlowes Doctor Faustus with Mira de Amescuas El Esclavo del Demonio (The Slave of the Devil). Inaugural National Symposium for Postgraduate Researchers: Languages, Literatures, and Intercultural Studies, The University of Auckland. October 2012.
Selected Publications
Review of Lope de Vegas La prueba de los ingenios. Comedia Performance 19 (2022): 201-204.
Review of Lope de Vegas A Wild Night in Toledo. Comedia Performance 18 (2021): 130-133.
Reflective Artists Statement for Multimodal Assignments (with Angela Geosits). Writing Spaces Assignment and Activity Archive. (2021): https://writingspaces.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Djain-Geosits-AAA-contribution.pdf
External vs. Internal Worlds: Comparing Christopher Marlowes Doctor Faustus with Mira de Amescuas El Esclavo del Demonio (The Slave of the Devil). The European Connection 16 (2012): 1-11.