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Samuel Sotillo

Senior Lecturer

he/his/him

Department of World Languages and Cultures

Language and Computer Labs 206A

Bio

My name is Samuel F. Sotillo and I was born and raised in Venezuela. I worked as a network analyst and webmaster for many years before making the transition to teaching foreign languages and the Humanities. In 2011, I co-founded an academic press (A Contracorriente Press) and was responsible for its book production process until early 2020. Currently, in addition to teaching, I lead the study abroad program in Valencia, Spain each summer.

Projects

Venezuelan Literature Project

Responsibilities

Director of the Spain: Language and Culture in Valencia Summer Program

Former NCSU Faculty Senator

Co-founder, A Contracorriente Press

Website

https://go.ncsu.edu/sfsotillo

Research Publications

Recent Papers in Spanish Literature:

Technical papers published by e-zine infosecwriters.com:

Articles published by ZopeMag:

  • Book Review: The Definitive Guide to Plone
  • Product Review: Bastion Ledger
  • Product Review: mxODBC
  • Product Review: Formulator
  • Product Review: ZStyleSheets
  • Transactions by example: (Part II of II)
  • Transactions by example: (Part I of II)

Articles published by IBM DeveloperWorks:

  • Using DB2 and Zope to build a help desk application

Articles in Spanish

  • Eric Hobsbawm (1917-2012). Prodavinci.com (Oct 2012)  (Obituary on Historian Eric Hobsbawm’s death)
  • Borges, Averroes y los malentendidosProdavinci.com (Jan 2011) (A review on Umberco Eco’s research on Jorge Luis Borges’ “The Search for Averroes”)
  • Václav Havel y la sociedad civil, Venezuela analítica (June 2000) (Originally published by El Nacional, a Venezuelan newspaper)

 

Education

B.S. Information Security East Carolina University

M.A. Spanish Literature and Culture North Carolina State University

Area(s) of Expertise

My interests are second language teaching, the use of IT in teaching and learning, contemporary Venezuelan literature, the works of Jorge Luis Borges and Mario Vargas Llosas, medieval and early modern Spanish culture and literature, and the intersection of literature, politics, and digital technologies.