
MA on English-Language Literature at Stanford University. He studied on a post-graduate Fulbright scholarship for two years at Stanford University. During this period, his research focused on Contemporary Literature, under the tutelage of Marjorie Perloff, who guided and evaluated his MA thesis. Additionally, he worked with the teaching support of Diane Middlebrock and Susan Howe. He was Richard Rorty’s research assistant. In 2003, he received a research grantfrom the European Association of Anglo-American Studies (EAAS) at Indiana University and Smith College (Massachusetts) for two months. His teaching has focused on two main areas; English-Language Literature and Translation. His recent publications and conferences have analyzed the tangible relations between authorship, subjectivity, avant-garde, and experimentation, the ‘blank page’ as an expression space, and the geographic and historical study of the US as an ethnic, ideological, and historical battleground. His research fields are Contemporary Poetry, Contemporary Narrative, Written Culture History, Translation History, Cultural Construction of Authorship, Subjectivity and Textuality and Shakespeare.