Latin American Studies
Faculty & Staff
Elliott Young
Associate Professor of History
Department of History
Phone:(503)768-7454
E-mail:eyoung@lclark.edu
Latin America, Borderlands, Mexico, Cuba and Transnational History.
Juan Carlos Toledano
Associate Professor, Spanish Section Head
Director of Latin American Studies
Spanish Language & Literature
Box: 30
Phone: (503)768-7425
E-mail: toledano@lclark.edu
The fantastic in Latin America; Contemporary Cuban and Caribbean Studies, and Critical Theory. Juan Carlos is a native of Spain.
Matthieu P. Raillard
Assistant Professor of Spanish
Spanish Language and Literature
Box: 30
Phone:(503)768-7418
E-mail:raillard@lclark.edu
Spanish Enlightenment and Romanticism; Contemporary Spanish Literature; Literary theory; History of intellectual thought and epistemology; Theories of authorship and authority.
Freddy O. Vilches
Assistant Professor of Spanish
Spanish Language and Literature
Box: 30
Phone: (503)768-7431
E-mail: vilches@lclark.edu
Contemporary Spanish-American literature, poetry and song, Latin American Cultural Studies. Prof. Vilches is a native of Chile.
Wendy Woodrich
Senior Lecturer
Spanish Language & Literature
Box: 30
Phone: (503)768-7428
E-mail: woodrich@lclark.edu
Spanish language, Latin American literature and culture, Hispanics in the United States. Wendy is a native Oregonian.
Bruce Podobnik
Associate Professor
Sociology
Phone: (503)768-7664
E-mail: podobnik@lclark.edu
Revolutionary and insurgent movements, environmental impacts of capitalism, efforts to create sustainable and egalitarian futures in Latin America.
Franya Berkman
Assistant Professor of Music
Phone: (503)768-7417
E-mail:fberkman@lclark.edu
Gloria González
Visiting Assistant Professor Sociology
Phone: 503/768-7667
Email: ggonzalez@lclark.edu
Race and Ethnicity, Gender, Sexuality, Family, Youth, Latina Body Image and Representation
Matthew Johnston
Assistant Professor of Art History/Modern Art
Phone: 503/768-7389
Email: mnj@lclark.edu
Matt Johnston ia an art historian, specializing in nineteenth-century American visual culture. He researches and writes on the development of uses for emerging media such as print and photography, as well as the role of visual representations in the study of native cultures in nineteenth-century ethnology and archaeology.
Contact Us
The Latin American Studies Program is located in Miller Center for the Humanities.
email forlang@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-7420
fax 503-768-7434
Director Juan Carlos Toledano
Latin American Studies Program
0615 S.W. Palatine Hill Road, MSC 30
Portland, Oregon 97219