Office of the Dean
Michael J. Horswell, PhD
is Dean of the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters at MŮ. The College of Arts and Letters houses 16 academic programs which offer 22 bachelor's degrees, 17 minors, 12 certificate programs and 19 graduate degree including a PhD in Comparative Studies, with more than 4000 majors and 400 graduate students enrolled. The College features award winning authors, Guggenheim Fellows, Lannan Foundation Fellows, Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award winners, O. Henry and Pushcart award receipts, Fulbright scholars, Royal Historical Society Fellows, Woodrow Wilson Society Fellows, Grammy award nominations, and critically acclaimed artists and performers.
Dr. Horswell earned his Ph.D. in Latin American literature at the University of Maryland, College Park. He also holds a MA in Spanish from Middlebury College in Vermont, anda BA in Spanish and Business Economics from Wofford College in his native South Carolina. Dr. Horswell specializes in the literature and culture of the colonial period aswell asindigenous literatures of the Andes. In addition to pursuing graduate studies in Spain and Argentina, he studied Andean culture and the Quechua language for two summers atthe Bartolomé de las Casas Research Center in Cuzco, Peru (1995-1996) and has spent seven summers doing limited fieldwork with native Quichua speakers in Ecuador (2001- 2007, 2010).Before becoming the Dean of the College, Dr. Horswell served as Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies (2012-2017) and Chair of the Department of Languages, Linguistics and Comparative Literature (2008-2012).
His first book,Decolonizing the Sodomite: Queer Tropes of Sexuality in Colonial Andean Culture(Austin: University of Texas Press, 2005), focused on indigenous gender and sexuality as tropes used in the representation of the conquest and colonization of the Americas. His interest in the confluence of sexuality and culture in the Hispanic world has led to two recent collections of essays co-edited with Dr. Nuria Godón,Sexualidades Periféricas. Consolidaciones literarias y fílmicas en la España de fin de siglo XIX y fin de milenio(Madrid: Fund amentos, 2016) and the special issue of theJournal of Language and Sexualityon the theme of "Transnational Discourses of Peripheral Sexualities in the Hispanic World" (Vol. 5, no. 2: 2016). Dr. Horswell has also published articles and book chapters on important literary figures such as Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala and el Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, Latin American cinema and the Baroque in the Americas, including two recent volumes, one co-edited with Luis Duno-Gottberg,Sumergido-Submerged: Alternative Cuban Cinema(Houston: Literal Publishing, 2013) andBaroque Projections: Images and Texts in Dialogue with the Early Modern World, co-edited with Frederic Conrod. (Delaware: Juan de la Cuesta, 2016). His recent article inRomanic Review,"Negotiating Apostasy in Vilcabamba: Titu Cusi Yupanqui Writes from theChaupi" (2012) is related to his new book project on Andean indigenous andmestizowriters from the colonial period tentatively titled,Desiring Pizarros and Incas: Comparative Andean Affects and the Writing of Conquest.
Rebecca Lautar, MM
Rebecca Lautar, Professor of Music, is an Associate Dean for the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters. She served as Music Department Chair from 2011-2020, and was appointed as Associate Dean of Faculty, Enrollment Management and Logistics in the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters in 2020. She is an active concert violinist, and performed as a tenured member of the Palm Beach Opera Orchestra from 2000-2020. She has also performed in numerous recitals at MŮ, including as a member of the MŮ Chamber Soloists, and has appeared as a soloist with the MŮ University Symphony. She teaches string pedagogy and methods for music education majors. She received a Master of Music with Distinction from Indiana University, where her teachers included Mimi Zweig and Franco Gulli.
Barclay Barrios, PhD
Dr. Barclay Barrios, Professor of English, is the Associate Dean of Undergraduate Studies and Broward Campuses for the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters. He received his PhD from Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey and his work focuses on queer theory, writing program administration, pedagogy, and computers and composition. He is the author of the freshman composition textbooks Emerging: Contemporary Readings for Writers, now in its fifth edition, and Intelligence. As Associate Dean of Undergraduate Studies, he touches every aspect of the undergraduate experience from recruitment and admission to orientation to advising and problem resolution to student success and degree completion.
Eric Berlatsky, PhD
is Associate Dean of Graduate Studies, Interim Chair of Languages, Linguistics and Comparative Literature, and Professor of English. Previous to his current positions, he was Chair of the Department of English for 6.5 years. He is the author of The Real, The True, and The Told: Postmodern Historical Narrative and the Ethics of Representation (Ohio State UP, 2011), the editor of Alan Moore: Conversations (UP of Mississippi, 2012), and the co-editor, with Sika Dagbovie-Mullins, of Mixed Race Superheroes (Rutgers UP, 2021). He has published articles on the fiction or comics of Charles Dickens, Joe Siegel and Jerry Shuster, Virginia Woolf, Milan Kundera, Paul Auster, Graham Swift, Art Spiegelman, Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, Hanif Kureishi, and Posy Simmonds. He has co-published work on race and the superheroes Ms. Marvel/Kamala Khan, Black Lightning, Moon Girl, and Spider-Man with Sika Dagbovie-Mullins.
Kevin Wagner, PhD
is the Associate Dean of Research and Creative Activities and Professor of Political Science. Previously, he served as the Chair of Political Science for 6 years. He was awarded the OLLI Distinguished Professorship in Current Affairs twice. His research area is technology and politics, both in the United States and abroad. He has co-authored three books and many research articles in this area. His work has been published in leading journals and law reviews including Political Behavior, Political Research Quarterly, Social Science Quarterly, Journal of Information Technology and Politics and The Journal of Legislative Studies. He has worked on some of the leading research on the effects of technology on politics with studies ranging from American elections to the Arab Spring, Russia, and Asia. His latest book is “Directed Dissidence: How China Wins Online” from Oxford University Press (2023). He currently writes the weekly syndicated “Civics Project” column for Gannet Newspapers.
Contact Us
Office of the Dean
Boca Raton Campus, AH 217
horswell@fau.edu
Boca Raton Campus, AH 217
Rebecca Lautar, MM
Professor, Music
Boca Raton Campus, AH 214C
561-297-3863
rlautar@fau.edu
Dr. Kevin Wagner
Boca Raton Campus, AH 214D
561-297-0115
kwagne15@fau.edu
Boca Raton Campus, AH 214B
bbarrios@fau.edu
Boca Raton Campus, AH 211A
561-297-0928
eberlats@fau.edu
Gabrielle Denier
Boca Raton Campus, AH 211B
561-297-0155
gdenier@fau.edu
Grace Medina
Boca Raton Campus, AH 214
Adrienne Gionta
Ft. Lauderdale Campus, HEC 1008B
954-236-1106
agionta@fau.edu
Development Office
Laurie Carney
Boca Raton Campus, AH 210
561-297-3606
lcarney@fau.edu
Daniela Andrade
Boca Raton Campus, AH 210
561-297-2337
dandrade2018@fau.edu
Business Office
Kathleen DiMaggio
Boca Raton Campus, AH 215A
561-297-3300
dimaggio@fau.edu
Janice Cunningham
Boca Raton Campus, AH 215
561-297-2949
jjcunnin@fau.edu
Donna Bryan
Boca Raton Campus, AH 215D
561-297-2513
dbryan@fau.edu
Marilza Lopes
Boca Raton Campus, AH 215C
561-297-0852
mlopes1@fau.edu
Communications Office
Polly Burks
Boca Raton Campus, AH 108
561-297-2595
pburks@fau.edu
Nicole Jacobsen
Boca Raton Campus, AH 108
561-297-2848
jacobsen@fau.edu
Mayra Villacrez
Boca Raton Campus, AH 108
561-297-2258
mvillacrezsa2016@fau.edu