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Home > Academics > Faculty > Faculty Profiles > Justin Crumbaugh
Justin Crumbaugh
Assistant Professor of Spanish
Specialization
Spanish and Basque studies, particularly in relation to critical theory, cinema, political media, and economic discourse
Justin Crumbaugh has taught a range of courses on modern Spain, including seminars on themes such as consumer culture, travel narratives, Basque political violence, and the notion of economic and cultural “backwardness.” He is the author of Destination Dictatorship: The Spectacle of Spain's Tourist Boom and the Reinvention of Difference (SUNY Press 2009), a book that links the surge in mass tourism in Spain during the 1960s to the Franco dictatorship's attempts to reconsolidate power through modernization and “economic government.”
His scholarly articles appear in the Hispanic Review, the Hispanic Research Journal, the Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies, and other publications. Crumbaugh's current research examines evolving ideas about victimhood in contemporary Spain, from myths about “red terror” during the Spanish Civil War to the current media focus on the “victims of terrorism.”
Before coming to Mount Holyoke College, Crumbaugh was a visiting assistant professor in the Department of Romance Languages at the University of Pennsylvania.
News Links:
"New Assistant Professors Add Depth and Breadth to MHC," College Street Journal, September 5, 2003
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