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Skip to content Our PeopleMenu Close Explore AcademicsDepartments & ProgramsMajors & MinorsGraduate Degrees and ProgramsStudent ResourcesGetting StartedAcademic PlanningScholarships, Fellowships & AwardsExperiential LearningGraduation & Post-Graduate AdvisingForms & PoliciesOffice of Graduate Studies in Arts & SciencesThe AmpersandAwards & NotablesCampus LifeHold That Thought podcastThe Ampersand Magazine Our EventsCommencement Performances & ShowsOur PeopleFaculty DirectoryStaff DirectoryFaculty & Staff ResourcesAwards & RecognitionCommittees & CouncilsFaculty Activity ReportingTenure & PromotionGraduate Student ResourcesOffice of Graduate Studies in Arts & SciencesDegrees and ProgramsGraduate AdmissionsArts & Sciences Strategic PlanThere are no boundaries to what you can achieve with a degree from Arts & Sciences.Apply TodayHomeAbout Arts & SciencesOur Alumni NetworkAcademic CalendarHow to giveContact Us Arts & Sciences Graduate Studies in A&SWilliam AcreeAssociate Vice Dean of Graduate EducationProfessor of Spanish, American Culture Studies (Affiliate) and Performing Arts (Affiliate) Co-Director, Incubator for Transdisciplinary FuturesPhD, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill BA, Berry CollegeDownload CV Department of Romance Languages and Literatures Performing Arts Department American Culture Studies research interests:Cultural History Popular & Material Culture Global Street Cultures Public Space & State Formation Afro-Latin America Public Humanitiescontact info:Email: [email protected]: 314-935-5145Office: Ridgley 313office hours:Thursday: 10:00AM-12:00PM Get Directionsmailing address:Washington University MSC 1077-146-310 One Brookings Drive St. Louis, MO 63130-4899William Acree is a transdisciplinary scholar whose research and teaching explore the cultural history of Latin America, the enduring impacts of everyday experiences, and the ways cultural goods and activities inflect public life, politics, and identities. Acree’s work has engaged the cultural history of reading, delved into the extravagant, playful, and always surprising world of popular performance, studied the almost forgotten lives of Afro-Latin American writers and thinkers, and followed the emergence of modern popular culture in Latin America. Linking all these areas is Acree’s persistent interest in the everyday and lasting impact of what are often ephemeral cultural activities and products. He began developing this line of research first in Everyday Reading: Print Culture and Collective Identity in the Río de la Plata (1780-1910) (Vanderbilt University Press; Argentine edition with Prometeo Editorial), which received the Southern Cone Studies Section 2013 Humanities Book Award of the Latin American Studies Association. More recently, this focus on everyday life took him to the circus, the world of extravagant showmen & women, and the stages of popular theater. In performance venues and and in daily interactions beyond, theater-goers explored relationships of race, ethnicity, migration, and class. The tensions playing out on stage, and between rural life and this pivotal moment of modernization are at the heart of Staging Frontiers: The Making of Modern Popular Culture in Argentina & Uruguay (University of New Mexico Press Diálogo Series; Argentine edition with Prometeo Editorial), winner of the 2020 Best Book award from the Latin American Studies Association Nineteenth Century section. Acree is currently working on a collaborative project on the Stories that Win—political origin stories, stories of community and national beginnings, heroic tales and product launches that people tell and retell. He received his BA from Berry College and his PhD from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. His research has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, a J. William Fulbright Scholar award, a Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Fellowship, and grants from the Mellon and Tinker Foundations. Collaborative Work     Mapping Street Cultures in Modern Latin(x) America     First English translation of Eduardo Gutiérrez’s page-turner The Gaucho Juan Moreira: True Crime in Nineteenth-Century Argentina, translated by John Chasteen (Hackett, 2014)     Co-edited Empire’s End: Transnational Connections in the Hispanic World, with Akiko Tsuchiya (Vanderbilt University Press, 2016)     Co-edited Jacinto Ventura de Molina: los caminos de la escritura negra en el Río de la Plata, with Alex Borucki (2nd rev. ed. Iberoamericana / Vervuert, 2010)     Co-edited Building Nineteenth-Century Latin America: Re-rooted Cultures, Identities, and Nations , with Juan Carlos González Espitia (Vanderbilt University Press, 2009) Selected Journal Articles     On the Heels of Juan Moreira: Lessons for the Cultural History of Reading” (PMLA)     “Divisas and Deberes: Women and the Symbolic Economy of War Rhetoric in the Río de la Plata, 1810-1910” (Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies)     “The Creole Circus and Popular Entertainment in 19th-Century Argentina and Uruguay,” in the (Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History)     “Hemispheric Travelers on the Rioplatense Stage” (Latin American Theatre Review)     “  Jacinto Ventura de Molina: A Black Letrado in a White World of Letters, 1766-1841” (Latin American Research Review)     “Luis Pérez, A Man of His Word in 1830s Buenos Aires and the Case for Popular Literature” (Bulletin of Spanish Studies)      "El primer negro de el mundo en la carrera de las letras’: Raza, revolución y el vocero de la ‘república nigro-literaria’ en el Río de la Plata” (Afro-Hispanic Review) From our podcast:Good Gaucho Gone Bad: The Creole DramaWilliam Acree helps us envision and understand the lasting significance "Creole dramas," a dramatic craze that swept Uruguay and Argentina in the 19th century. in the news:4.19.22Group project: The story of the Arts & Sciences Strategic Plan3.2.22Acree appointed Dean's Fellow for Graduate Education Initiatives Back to AmpersandStaging Frontiers: The Making of Modern Popular Culture in Argentina & Uruguay Empire's End: Transnational Connections in the Hispanic World The Gaucho Juan Moreira: True Crime in Nineteenth-Century Argentina Quick LinksExplore AcademicsStudent ResourcesThe AmpersandEventsOur PeopleAbout A&SContactAcademic CalendarA&S ComputingUniversity DirectoryUniversity LibrariesInside ArtSciArts & Sciences Strategic PlanEmployment OpportunitiesCopyright 2024 by:Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. LouisFollow Arts & SciencesInstagramFacebookTwitterLinkedInYouTubeLet your curiosity lead the way.Find out how to apply and get started todayApply Now1 Brookings Drive / St. Louis, MO 63130 / wustl.edu

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