Julia Abramson
Election
Position
Name
Julia Abramson
Candidate statement
Julia Luisa Abramson is the Faculty Fellow for the Humanities and Arts in the Office of the Vice President for Research and Partnerships and an Associate Professor of French in the Department of Modern Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics at the University of Oklahoma.
Abramson’s publications address transdisciplinary topics having historical and contemporary interest.
She is the author of Learning from Lying: Paradoxes of the Literary Mystification (U Delaware P, 2005) and “Hoax, Fraud, Plagiarism, Forgery” (Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature, forthcoming 2023).
Accompanying Food Culture in France (Greenwood P, 2007), her articles about food culture and practice have appeared in EMF: Studies in Early Modern France, JEMCS: the Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies, Sociologie et Sociétés, and Papilles : Culture & patrimoine gourmands.
Her publications on financial culture feature in Finance and Society, Common-place: The Journal of Early American Life, and the edited volume L’Argent du libertinage (L’Harmattan, 2021).
Abramson has been affiliated with ASECS for more than 25 years and has served on the Modern Languages Association (MLA) executive committee for the Division on Eighteenth-Century French Studies.
Her research grants have supported archival and rare books research and public humanities projects engaging general audiences and academic participants.
She is committed to promoting visionary and flexible institutional adaptation, along with inclusive and ethical practices.
Abramson’s publications address transdisciplinary topics having historical and contemporary interest.
She is the author of Learning from Lying: Paradoxes of the Literary Mystification (U Delaware P, 2005) and “Hoax, Fraud, Plagiarism, Forgery” (Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature, forthcoming 2023).
Accompanying Food Culture in France (Greenwood P, 2007), her articles about food culture and practice have appeared in EMF: Studies in Early Modern France, JEMCS: the Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies, Sociologie et Sociétés, and Papilles : Culture & patrimoine gourmands.
Her publications on financial culture feature in Finance and Society, Common-place: The Journal of Early American Life, and the edited volume L’Argent du libertinage (L’Harmattan, 2021).
Abramson has been affiliated with ASECS for more than 25 years and has served on the Modern Languages Association (MLA) executive committee for the Division on Eighteenth-Century French Studies.
Her research grants have supported archival and rare books research and public humanities projects engaging general audiences and academic participants.
She is committed to promoting visionary and flexible institutional adaptation, along with inclusive and ethical practices.