Skip to main content Skip to navigation
Washington State University

Vilma Navarro-Daniels, Ph.D.

Director, School of Languages, Cultures, and Race
Professor of Spanish and Film Studies
Marianna M. and Donald S. Matteson Distinguished Professor
Affiliate Faculty, Program in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Honors Faculty Fellow
Modern Language Association of America (MLA), Delegate Assembly, Representative of Western United States and Western Canada
Modern Language Association of America (MLA), Member, Age Studies Forum

Biography

2003 Ph. D. in Spanish, Department of Modern and Classical Languages, University of Connecticut. Thesis: “Pactos de la vida y el arte: La metaficción en el cine, teatro y cuento españoles de la transición tardía” (“Pacts between Life and Art: Metafiction in Spanish Film, Theater, and Short Fiction during the Late Transition”). Dissertation Director: David K. Herzberger.

1998 M.A. in Spanish, Department of Modern and Classical Languages, University of Connecticut.

1996 M.A. in Social Sciences, ILADES (Santiago, Chile) / Università Gregoriana, Roma. Thesis: “Los unos y los otros: Aproximación filosófica a una interpretación negativa de la diferencia.”

1987 Licentiate Degree in Philosophy, Universidad Católica de Valparaíso (Chile). Thesis: “La experiencia poética en el pensamiento de Jacques Maritain.”

Research

Dr. Vilma Navarro-Daniels’s field of study has gradually expanded throughout the years from 20th and 21st – Century Peninsular Spanish Literature, Film, and Culture to include Latin America, particularly the literature and cinema made in Chile –her country of origin— that deal with Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship (1973-1990), as well as the transition and consolidation of democracy afterwards. Her approach has always been –and still remains— interdisciplinary, bringing together her background in Philosophy, Education, and Social Sciences with her Literary and Film Studies. Her scholarly work focuses on the relationship between political, social, cultural, and economic transformations and their literary and cinematic representations. Her publications include the Peninsular Spanish novel, short fiction, poetry, film, and theater, in addition to Latin American literature, film and popular culture related genres such as TV series and comics. Her approach to literature, film, and other cultural products includes theories regarding gender, ethnicity, human rights, religion, dictatorship, transition to democracy, late capitalism, and a variety of genres, among others.

Her reputation as a scholar is behind her numerous research presentations in the U.S. and abroad: Canada, Chile, Dominican Republic, Scotland, and Spain. She has lectured and been invited as keynote speaker nationally and internationally. Vilma Navarro-Daniels’s service to the profession has also reached national and international levels. Beside keeping a heavy agenda as editorial referee and journal editor in the U.S. and abroad, she has served on the MLA Committee on Disability Issues in the Profession (2019-2022) and on the Executive Board of the Association of Gender and Sexuality Studies, AGSS, being elected for several positions (2015-2023).

She has been the recipient of the Mariana Merritt Matteson & Donald S. Matteson Distinguished Professorship in Foreign Languages and Cultures three times in a row: in Spring 2018, Spring 2021, and Spring 2023.

Research and Teaching Interests

20th – 21st Century Peninsular and Latin American Literature and Culture.
Peninsular and Latin American Film.
Classical Studies.
Dictatorship, Transition to Democracy and Cultural Products.
Metafiction and Intertextuality in Literature and Film.
Power and Production of Discourse.
Gendered and Racialized Discourses.

 

Publications
Books
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. En la elocuencia del silencio. Edición crítica de la obra poética de Marta Ortiz Lorca. Valparaíso, Chile: Ediciones Universitarias de Valparaíso (EUV). Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso.
    • In March 2021, this critical edition was selected as one of the awardees of the 2021 nationwide contest, Fondo del Libro, which consists of public funds granted by the Ministry of Cultures, Arts, and Heritage, Government of Chile.
Edited Volumes
Refereed Articles and Book Chapters
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Introduction”Revista de Estudios Hispánicos. 9.2. (2022): pp. 15-22.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “La amante fascista, de Alejandro Moreno Jashés: un viaje delirante a la oscura noche de Chile”. La mirada opuesta: voces de victimarios en la literatura latinoamericana contemporánea. Edited by Ana María Mutis and Margarita R. Jácome. Ciudad de México (DF): Bonilla Artigas Editores, 2021. 53-75.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. ’Sobreviviremos como dos robinsones’: la pérdida de referentes sociopolíticos como disolución del sujeto en ‘La muerte mientras tanto’, de Ignacio Martínez de Pisón”. Crear entre mundos: nuevas tendencias en la metaficción española. Edited by Iana Konstantinova and Sabrina S. Laroussi. València: Albatros Ediciones, 2021. 145-165.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “De himno y elegía: La guerra, de Gabriela Mistral, y Mientras los hombres mueren, de Carmen Conde.” La poesía de la guerra civil española: una perspectiva comparatista. Edited by Pilar Molina (Dublin Institute of Technology.) New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 2020. 213-30.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Miedo catártico, televisión y memoria: Los archivos del Cardenal.” Narrativas del miedo: Terror en obras literarias, cinemáticas y televisivas de Latinoamérica de los siglos XX y XXI. Edited by Karem Langer (Truman State University), David Rozotto (University of Waterloo), and Marco Ramírez (Lehman CUNY). New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 2018. 129-42.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “De la Península Ibérica a la Península de los Balcanes: Descentramiento de la identidad nacional en Guerreros, de Daniel Calparsoro.” Cuaderno Internacional de Estudios Humanísticos y Literatura. 23. (2016): 54-62.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “An Approach to Teach Carmen Martín Gaite’s La Reina de las Nieves.” Approaches to Teaching the Works of Carmen Martín Gaite. Ed. Joan L. Brown. MLA Book Publications, 2013. 165-72.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Carmen Martín Gaite’s Irse de casa or the metafictional creation of the self.” Women in the Spanish Novel Today: Reflections of Self in the Works of Three Generations of Writers. Eds. Kyra A. Kietrys and Montserrat Linares. Jefferson, NC: McFarland Press, Fall 2009. 9-23.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “La invención interminable de la historia deseada en Lo raro es vivir de Carmen Martín Gaite.” Leading Ladies. Mujeres en la literatura hispana y en las artes. Eds. Margaret R. Parker and Yvonne Fuentes. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2006. 60-69.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Un olor a ámbar de Concha Romero: Una lectura desde la relación entre el poder y la palabra.” Estreno. 29.1. (2003): 49-55.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “El convento como territorio de pecado: La creación de un espacio heterotópico en Entre tinieblas de Pedro Almodóvar.” Monographic Review / Revista Monográfica: Permutations of Sin in Hispanic Literature. 18. (2002): 147-60.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Los unos y los otros.” IV Concurso Nacional de Ensayo. Por una Cultura de Respeto a los Derechos Humanos. Santiago, Chile: Corporación Nacional de Reparación y Reconciliación, 1996. 69-163.

 

Peer-reviewed Interviews 

• Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “De la autobiografía a la ficción: memoria y alcances de la narrativa gráfica chilena de autoría femenina. Una conversación con Marcela Trujillo (Maliki)”. REGS (Revista de Estudios de Género y Sexualidades)/JGSS (Journal of Gender and Sexuality Studies), 51.2 (2025): pp: 63-72. ISSN 2637-9961 / EISSN 2637-997Xhttps://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/msup/regs/article/51/2/63/407784/De-la-autobiografia-a-la-ficcion-memoria-y

 

Non Peer-reviewed Papers
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “La enseñanza de la lengua y cultura españolas a través de la literatura y el cine. Una experiencia con no-nativos de nivel avanzado.” Cuadernos Cervantes. 53 (2004): 32-37.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Amor divino, amor lesbiano: Apropiación y resignificación del imaginario católico en Entre tinieblas de Pedro Almodóvar.” Power in Latin American and Iberian Literature and Film. Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Columbia and NYU Graduate Conference on Spanish and Portuguese Literatures. New York: Columbia University, 2002. 57-62.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Mujer y nuevo orden.” Temas. Santiago de Chile: Diario La Época, July 1995. 18-21. (co-author).
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Para desaprender el miedo a la libertad.” Ni caos ni conformismo. Ideas para mirar lejos en Educación. Rancagua, Chile: Corporación Municipal de Servicios Públicos, 1993. 157-65.
  • Vilma C. Navarro-Daniels. “Una utopía posible.” Temas. Santiago de Chile: Diario La Época, August 1993. 16-7. (co-author).

 

 

Contact Dr. Navarro-Daniels

Thompson 110C
509-335-8672
navarrod@wsu.edu

Courses Taught

Graduate

  • FORLANG 560 Seminar in Scholarly Methodology
  • SPAN 552 Topics in 19th Century Peninsular Spanish Literature
  • SPAN 553 Topics in 20th Century Peninsular Spanish Literature
  • SPAN 554 Seminar in Peninsular Spanish Literature and/or Culture
  • SPAN 559 Special Topics in Peninsular Spanish Studies
  • AMER ST 555 U.U. Interventions in Latin America

Undergraduate

  • SPAN ED 299-1 Summer Institute, Intensive Spanish Language and Culture, First Semester
  • SPAN ED 299-2 Summer Institute, Intensive Spanish Language and Culture, Second Semester
  • SPAN 110 [ARTS] Peninsular Spanish Film, taught in English
  • SPAN 306 Intermediate Reading and Translation
  • SPAN 310 [ARTS] Peninsular Spanish Film, taught in Spanish
    • Pedro Almodóvar Visits WSU
    • Carlos Saura’s Lens
    • Representations of Violence, War, and Oppression in Peninsular Spanish Film
    • Representations of Childhood, Adolescence, and Youth in Peninsular Spanish Film
  • SPAN 311 [ARTS] Latin American Film, taught in Spanish
    • From the End of the Earth: Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay through their Cinematic Traditions
    • 21st Century Latin American Women Filmmakers
  • SPAN 320 [DIVR] Peninsular Spanish Culture
    • A Historical Approach
    • Regional Cultures
  • SPAN 350 [ARTS] Introduction to Peninsular Spanish Literature
  • SPAN 450 [CAPS] Seminar in Peninsular Spanish Studies-Themes
    • Metafiction in Peninsular Spanish Film, Drama, and Narrative in Post-Francoist Spain
    • Ancient Greek Mythology and its Traces in Spanish and Latin American Literature and Film
    • The Multiple Voices of Latin American Women
  • SPAN 451 [CAPS] Seminar in Peninsular Spanish Studies-Authors
    • Federico García Lorca: A Total Artist
  • SPAN 452 [CAPS] Seminar in Peninsular Spanish Studies-Genres
    • 20th Century Peninsular Spanish Theater
  • UH 330 University Honors, Western Civilization. Taught in English
  • UH 370 University Honors, Global Issues in Social Sciences. Taught in English
  • UH 380 University Honors, Global Issues in Arts & Humanities. Taught in English
  • FORLANG 410 [CAPS]  Advanced Studies in World Cinema

Online Teaching

  • FORLANG 110 [DIVR] Introduction to Global Film, taught in English
  • SPAN 111 [ARTS] Latin American Film, taught in English
  • SPAN 311 Latin American Film, taught in Spanish