Clyde Moneyhun, a professor in the Department of Theatre, Film and Creative Writing, spoke at the Biennial Meeting of the International Hemingway Society in San Sebastian, Spain, in July 2024. His presentation focused on commitment to social justice in the travel writing of the celebrated war reporter Martha Gelhorn, Ernest Hemingway’s third wife.
Moneyhun’s research covers literature in and around the Iberian Peninsula. He translates from French, Italian and Spanish, but primarily from Catalan, a Romance language spoken in western Iberia. Hemingway and Gelhorn worked and traveled throughout the region during their lives.
You can learn more about Moneyhun’s translated literary works and research on his personal website.