Betsy Lewis (elewis)

Academic Degrees

B.A., Auburn University; M.A., Ph.D., University of Virginia

Elizabeth Franklin Lewis, Professor of Spanish, received a Ph.D. (1993) and M.A. (1989) in Spanish literature from the University of Virginia, after earning a B.A. (1987) in Spanish from Auburn University. She researches women writers and gender issues in 18th- and 19th-century Spain.

Among her recent publications are two books, Eve’s Enlightenment: Women’s Experience in Spain and Spanish America, 1726-1839(LSU Press, 2009), and Women Writers of the Spanish Enlightenment: The Pursuit of Happiness (Ashgate, 2004), and two articles, “Actos de caridad: Women’s Charitable Work in Eighteenth-Century Spain” (2008) and “The Sensibility of Motherhood: Josefa Amar y Borbón’s Discurso sobre la educación fisica y moral de las mujeres (1790)” (2002). Dr. Lewis was awarded a 2011-2012 Mary Washington Faculty Development Grant for the project “Women and Charity in Spain, 1786-1939,” a digital humanities project that she is completing with a team of undergraduate research students.

She is a member of the Modern Language Association of America, the American Society of Eighteenth-Century Studies, the Ibero American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and the Sociedad Español de Estudios del Dieciocho.

Betsy Lewis in the News

Student Achievement Shines at UMW’s Annual Research and Creativity Symposium

University of Mary Washington’s campus was alight with ingenuity last week at its 19th annual Research and Creativity Symposium. Students from across academic disciplines presented results of creative projects and scholarly research cultivated alongside faculty mentors throughout the past year. Junior education major Maddy Woodard built a website to help Read more…

Research and Creativity Symposium Showcases Array of Student Endeavors

Scientific studies, artistic compilations and ingenious creations came to life across campus last week for the University of Mary Washington’s 18th annual Research and Creativity Symposium. Junior Summer Orledge studied pollution in local waters. Sophomore Donald Glander used solenoids to create an “electric piano-guitar.” First-year physics and computer science major Read more…
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