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Aristides Dimitriou serves as Associate Professor of English at Gettysburg College, having joined the institution in 2018 as Assistant Professor and earning tenure with promotion to associate rank in 2025. He earned his B.A. from the University of Miami and Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 2018, with a dissertation titled "The Present Impasse: Hemispheric American Modernism and the Poetics of History." As a member of Gettysburg College's inaugural cohort of Mellon Faculty Fellows, he benefited from financial support and research opportunities tailored for diverse tenure-track faculty in their first year. Dimitriou, a first-generation college student with a disability and from a multi-ethnic immigrant family, focuses his scholarship and teaching on literatures of marginalized communities.
Dimitriou's academic interests encompass 20th- and 21st-century Ethnic American and Caribbean literatures, Global Modernism, Hemispheric American Studies, and Critical Theory. His current book project investigates the hemispheric literary imagination, analyzing how authors across the Americas envision space and time amid a shared imperial history. He teaches courses exploring multi-ethnic U.S. literature alongside Caribbean and Latin American traditions, as well as ethnic American literatures, science fiction, and critical theory, including offerings like "Arcs of Injustice: Race, Ideology, and Structures of Power in American Literature" and "Science Fiction Beyond Genre." Key publications include "The Poetics of Becoming: Duration and Divergence in Édouard Glissant's The Fourth Century" (Small Axe, 2025), "Things Done and Undone: Zora Neale Hurston's Temporality of Refusal" (Studies in the Novel, Winter 2023), "Mapping the New World Border: Karen Tei Yamashita's Tropic of Orange and the Global Borderlands" (MELUS, 2023), and an article in Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory (Summer 2021). Dimitriou contributes to campus governance as a member of the Student Life Committee and is affiliated with the Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino Studies program. Additionally, he participates in campus life as a percussionist.
