Harvard University Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
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Kimberlee Campbell

Professor of the Practice of Romance Languages and Literatures
On Leave 2009-2010


Academic Degrees: B.A., Alma College; M.A., University of Pittsburgh; Ph.D., New York University


Research Interests: Second Language Acquisition; Computer-based Learning; French and Spanish Medieval Epic Literature.
Selected Works:
Échos: Cultural Perspectives for Students of Beginning French (Yale University Press, 2003)

"Cyclical Temporality and Ritual Renewal in Hervis de Metz," Transtextualities (1996)

"Crusade and Bourgeois in Hervis de Metz," Aspects de l'épopée romane (1995)

"The Reiterated Self: Ritual Renewal and Narrative Cycles," Cyclification: The Development of Narrative Cycles in the Chansons de Geste and the Arthurian Romances, ed. with Bart Besamusca et al. (North-Holland, 1994)

"Fighting Back: A Survey of Patterns of Female Aggressiveness in the Old French Chanson de geste," Acts of the 1991 Congress of the Société Rencesvals (1993)

"Of Horse-Fish and Frozen Words," Renaissance and Reformation 14 (1990)

The Protean Text: A Study of Versions of the Medieval French Legend of Doon and Olive (Garland Publishing, 1988)

"The Renaissance Reader and Popular Medievalism in "Studies in Medievalism 3 (1987).

Other Courses Taught:
[Romance Studies 82. The Middle Ages at the Movies]
[Catalan Ba. Introduction to Catalan]
[Catalan 20. Catalan Language and Culture: a Multimedia Approach]
[Catalan 91r]

For more information go to the RLL course catalogue.


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Last updated on September 11, 2009