Professor Profile: Alejandro Puga

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Alejandro Puga is a Spanish professor in DePauw’s language department and a distinguished harmonica player on the side. This week, The DePauw had the opportunity to sit down with Professor Puga and learn more about him.

 

The DePauw: Where did you grow up?

Alejandro Puga: I grew up in Southern Minnesota, very much a child of the Mid-West. My family is from Mexico, and we traveled back and forth at least annually to Mexico to visit family.

TDP: What was that continuous transition back and forth like for you?

AP:  I would have to say it wasn’t a continuous transition back and forth in my early life, but I think later in my young-adult life, the parts of me that were curious about my Mexican heritage became more foregrounded.

TDP: Where did you go for your education?

AP: I went to McAllister College for undergrad, and then I spent a year studying painting at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. And then I did my masters at Loyola University in Chicago for Hispanic literature, and then I did my PhD at Indiana University.

TDP: What made you want to go into teaching?

AP: I think… teaching in graduate studies was part of the game. You were a T.A. and you took methodology classes and you were given Spanish classes to teach. And like a lot of the best things in my life, I stumbled into a love of teaching. I discovered that it is incredibly revealing to have a certain amount of knowledge, and then have the problem of not just transferring that knowledge but making it dialogic, making it part of an interaction with a group of people who may or may not be interested in what you’re saying… I found that to be one of the challenging and rewarding things I’ve ever done.

TDP: When does it feel most rewarding to have another language under your belt?

AP: I don’t one ever has any language under their belt… The greatest mistake anyone could make is to say, “I’ve got this now.” [But it’s been rewarding to be able to speak in a foreign language] every day. I don’t want to sound derogatory when I say this, but I really feel sorry for monolingual people, because for me, it’s at least a second life, if not a third and a fourth and a fifth that I’m living… I think that speaking a second language, reading a second language, writing in a second language, all the challenges and frustrations and rewards that endeavor brings makes life full and interesting and fun.

TDP: What’s your favorite Spanish-speaking country or city to visit?

AP: I love Mexico City. For me, it’s an addiction. It is a place that challenges me culturally and linguistically. The moment when I most think that I am a Chilango, there is an experience that reminds me that I am not… But other places that are Spanish-speaking that I’ve loved are Barcelona, Buenos Aires… Santiago, Chile was also just a wonderful city to visit. Basically, anywhere I’ve been that’s Spanish adds another layer of complexity to my experience…

TDP: How long have you been playing the harmonica for?

AP: On and off, about… I can’t believe this…25 years, on and off… I remember… this friend of mine, who was into blues music, brought a harmonica  one time and started playing it… It was one of those few moments where I said to myself, “I must learn how to do that.” So I learned initially through little instructional books and things like that and listening to lots and lots and lots of records.

TDP: What’s your favorite type of music?

AP: Blues, I like Chicago, urban blues especially… One of the things I like about blues is that there’s great blues and really terrible blues, and you still learn from listening to  even the worst exponents. It’s just a very democratic form of music.

TDP: What’s the one piece of advice you would offer DePauw students?

AP: Be patient with the degree and the quality of your experience here