Jason Busic
Associate Professor
Director of Middle East & North African Studies
Biography
Jason Busic joined the Department of Modern Languages in 2012 after teaching at St. Michael鈥檚 University, VT, from 2009-2012. Jason earned his doctorate from the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at The Ohio State University (2009) with concentrations in medieval and early modern Iberia and colonial Latin America. Prior to attending The Ohio State University, Jason completed his undergraduate and master鈥檚 degrees in Spanish from Ohio University. His research interests include folk narratives from Spain and Morocco, narrative theory, and religious and cultural contact in the Mediterranean. Jason enjoys teaching at all levels of the Spanish curriculum.
Degree(s)
M.A., Ohio University; Ph.D., Ohio State University
Learning & Teaching
Courses
- SP 111, First Semester Spanish
- SP 112, Second Semester Spanish
- SP 211, Intermediate Spanish
- SP 215, Advanced Writing and Grammar
- SP 220, Introduction to Literary Analysis
- SP 320, Survey of Spanish (Peninsular) Literature
- SP 330, Survey in Peninsular Culture
- SP 420, Seminar in Peninsular Literature
- SP 430, Seminar in Peninsular Culture
Research
Jason Busic studies cultural exchange and the shared cultures of Spain, Morocco, and the Mediterranean. He is currently exploring folklore, folk narrative, and narrative theory with a focus on Spain and Morocco.
Works
Publications
- 鈥淎 Clear Book, 賰鬲丕亘 賲亘賷賳: Translating the Psalms and Christian Identity into the Language of the Qur示膩n in Ninth-Century Cordoba.鈥 Iberian Babel: Translation and Multilingualism in the Medieval and the Early Modern Mediterranean. Ed. Michelle Hamilton and Nuria Silleras-Fern谩ndez. Leiden: Brill, 2022. 15-38.
- Yasmine Beale-Rivaya and Jason Busic, eds. Monographic Issue I. Places of Encounter: Language, Culture, and Religious Identity in Medieval Iberia. eHumanista 41 (2019)
- 鈥淣egotiating Language and Religion in Umayyad C贸rdoba: 岣f峁 b. Albar al-Q奴峁檚 Arabic Psalter.鈥 Monographic Issue I. Places of Encounter: Language, Culture, and Religious Identity in Medieval Iberia. Ed. Yasmine Beale-Rivaya and Jason Busic. eHumanista 41 (2019): 19-39.
- 鈥淔rom Medieval to Early Modern, from Christian to Muslim: Difficult Boundaries in the Arabic Gospels and Paul鈥檚 Epistles of Biblioteca Nacional de Espa帽a ms. 4971 (Sixteenth-Century Spain).鈥 Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 18.4 (2019): 26-50.
- 鈥淏etween Latin Theology and Arabic Kal膩m: Samson鈥檚 Apologeticus contra perfidos (864 CE) and 岣f峁 b. Albar al-Q奴峁檚 Extant Works (fl. late ninth/early tenth centuries).鈥 Medieval Encounters 25.5 (2019): 553-80.
- Yasmine Beale-Rivaya and Jason Busic, eds. A Companion to Medieval Toledo. Leiden: Brill, 2018.
- 鈥淐hristian Theology in Arabic and the Mozarabs of Medieval Toledo: Primary Texts, Main Themes, and Potential Problems.鈥 A Companion to Medieval Toledo. Ed. Yasmine Beale-Rivaya and Jason Busic. Leiden: Brill, 2018: 140-63.
- 鈥淩eligious Identity, Language, and Exegesis: The Mozarabs and an Arabic Gospel.鈥 La cor贸nica 46.2 (2018): 5-31.
- 鈥淢edieval Complexity: Convivencia and the Construction of Religious Identity in Mozarabic Apology.鈥 Enarratio: Publications of the Medieval Association of the Midwest 21 (2017).
- 鈥淐hristianity, Islam, and Mu岣mmad in the Mozarabic Liber denudationis (XI or XII Century).鈥 Revisiting Convivencia in Medieval and Early Modern Iberia. Ed. Connie Scarborough. Newark, DE: Juan de la Cuesta, 2014.
- 鈥淥rder and Resistance in the Polemical and Catechetical Literature of Early Modern Spain (1515-1599): Christians, Muslims, and Moriscos.鈥 Hispanic Review 82.3 (2014): 331-58.
- 鈥淧olemic and Hybridity in Early Modern Spain: Juan Andr茅s鈥 Confusi贸n o confutaci贸n de la secta Mahom茅tica y del Alchor谩n (1515).鈥 Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 12.1 (2012): 85-113.