- Sharon Delmendo
Sharon Delmendo is an English professor at
St. John Fisher College .An alumnus of
Occidental College in Los Angeles, Professor Delmendo received her PhD in English in 1993 from theUniversity at Buffalo, The State University of New York , finishing her dissertation, "Engendering the American Domestic," in Amherst, MA, on a Five College Minority Fellowship at Hampshire College. She is currently a Professor of English atSt. John Fisher College in Rochester, NY and is the youngest faculty member to rise to the rank of full professor at St. John Fisher. Also notable, the Dean of the College bestowed upon her the "Teacher-Scholar Award" in 1999 and the Board of Trustees' honored her with the "Trustees' Distinguished Scholar Award" in 2006.Her book, a research project in Philippine-American studies entitled, "The Star-Entangled Banner: One Hundred Years of America in the Philippines" (
Rutgers University Press , 2004), explores the post-colonial anthropological, social and political issues that help to define the relationship between theU.S. and thePhilippines . "The Star-Entangled Banner" was also published in the Philippines in 2006 (University of the Philippines Press, 2006) and was subsequently honored as a finalist for the Philippines' National Book Award in 2006. Her current manuscript in progress is a study of World War II films set in the Philippines, entitled "Pacific Theater: Reel War in the Philippines, 1939–1950."Professor Delmendo's academic work is characterized by an interdiscplinary method (see:
interdisciplinary teaching ) that combines elements ofamerican studies ,asian studies ,history ,political science ,film theory andliterary criticism . Such interdisciplinary methods have become more important as traditional academic research begins to yield to a practical approach that is useful to non-academics, especially for those grappling with the challenges ofglobalization ,international trade ,foreign direct investment andforeign policy , because those issues almost always involve cultural misunderstandings. Very often cross cultural transactions are handicapped by theethnocentrisim of one or more of the transactors and examinations of interculturalhistoriography holds the promise of reducing the potential for misunderstanding.Dr. Delmendo's work bears a resemblance to the
Annales School of history, although she makes no claim to be a historian, in that she is more interested in the "psychology of the epoch" than she is in the dominant event, such as a war or an independence movement. The root of her work is characterized by the endeavor to understand the cultural lens of Philippine and American nationalism and the resultant "refraction " that the respective national and cultural identities impose upon the topic. Great men or women, then, are often studied not as important subjects in themselves but more asavatars of a particular cultural, nationalistic or historiographical viewpoint while historical events or movements are studied as incubators of the elements of cultural, ethnic and nationalist identities.In many ways, Dr. Delmendo’s work displays the underpinnings of
post-structuralism in that she interprets texts or films to expose meanings that are a product of a cultural or ethnicmetanarrative that is as much an artifact of its time, place, ethnic or cultural origin as it is the result of any intended narrative by the author or, in the case of film, director. Therefore, her arguments depend upon an understanding of how a work is related to self identify in terms of the specific sub-categories of ethnic, political and nationalist identities. Very often these expositions focus upon the colonial and post-colonial experiences that have influenced the U.S. and Philippine identities.External links
* [http://keep2.sjfc.edu/faculty/sdelmendo/Index.html Professor Delmendo's home page]
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