Dr Liz Harvey-Kattou

Dr Liz Harvey-Kattou


I am a Senior Lecturer in Spanish and Latin American Studies in the School of Humanities.

I teach Spanish language, twentieth and twenty-first century culture in Spain and Latin America, film studies, visual culture, and the Final Year Project. My current research focuses on gender and the family in contemporary Central American cinema, while my past research projects have analysed identity and nationhood in Costa Rican literature and film.


My current research project focuses on gender and the family in contemporary Central American cinema, considering how directors portray a variety of 'ways of being' in terms of gender and family models. These seek to subvert traditional ideals and binary concepts, showcasing the multiplicity of ways in which gender the families are individually and communally constructed in contemporary filmmaking from Central America.

My previous research projects focused on the theme of national identity in Costa Rica and how literature and films have been used as cultural protest to highlight counterhegemonic representations of the nation.


In brief

Research areas

Spanish and Latin American Studies, Film Studies, Gender, Sexuality, National Identity and Central American cinema studies

Skills / expertise

Visual and literary analysis and Postcolonial theory

Supervision interests

I supervise any area of Spanish and Latin American Studies, a variety of areas within Visual Culture and Film Studies, and projects relating to theories of identity, culture, and society.
Awards
AHRC Doctoral Studentship

AHRC