Exclamation Marks: A Biographical Sketch of David T. Gies

By Jeff Bersett

David T. Gies. Retirement. There can certainly be no more inappropriate-seeming combination of name and noun than this, especially for those who know David. In none of its meanings does the word retirement or any of its variants apply easily to him. A selection of words and phrases, quoted directly from people who know him well, bear out the incongruity. Adjectives: “rigorous,” “relentlessly encouraging,” “mighty,” “knighted.” Nouns: “fun-loving spirit,” “a man of travel,” “one helluva sailor.” Entire dependent clauses: “your never-ending happy and positive spirit that made the rest of us look and feel like boring dips and dolts,” “[walking] on sunshine.” And this: “Dashing, Amusing, Vivid, Inspiring, Dignified, Teacher, Guru, Insightful, Ebullient, SPAIN!”

One thing about David Gies that should be noted from the outset: exclamation marks are necessary.

David is, in fact, retiring, but none of us believes that this will alter the way in which he lives his life. He will no longer stand in front of a classroom (though he probably will), he will no longer serve on committees or task forces or senates or other such things (though he probably will), he will no long be under any obligation to enlighten us with typically (for him) incisive and yet entertaining analysis of Spanish culture and literature (though he almost certainly will, we hope). He has earned the right to put another, perhaps more definitive, exclamation mark on a career that few could match, but we expect there to be more !!!!! to come.

Born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, David did not even take a Spanish class until fate made it necessary. His first experience with what would become the subject matter of his professional life (and many aspects of his nonprofessional life as well) serves as a microcosm of the years that would follow. Based on his already impressive merits, teenage David was awarded a scholarship to travel to Perú. To reiterate: he had never had a single Spanish class. As with all things that he has done since, David made the most of the journey that began with his very first plane flight.

As an undergraduate at Penn State he somewhat unenthusiastically declared a Spanish major (this is true—there are on occasion things about which David has not been enthusiastic), and as part of his program traveled to study for six months at the Universidad de Salamanca. At this point we witness the birth of the David Gies who has existed ever since, the one with the insatiable intellectual curiosity and the need to travel and the exclamation marks. In his own words:

Classes at the university were good, yet the real pull was the train system, which took me away every weekend (and, I confess, on numerous days in which I should have been in class) to places I had heard of vaguely and to other places I couldn’t even yet pronounce. Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Sevilla, Segovia, Carrión, Toledo, Medina Azahara, Santiago de Compostela, Santander—these cities became for me a vast outdoor museum, the locations where my real cultural education took place.

On these train rides, David would take with him books that he had purchased at the Librería Cervantes in Salamanca. He fell hopelessly and forever in love with Spain, in spite of the fact that the country suffered under the dictatorship of Francisco Franco.

Spain was not his only love. During his last year at Penn State, David married Mary Jane Kehoe (she was known to most as Mary Jo). They had met early in their time at the university, but had not begun to date each other in any serious way until their senior year. They traveled together in Europe during the summer after David studied in Spain, and David fell in love with the woman whom he has described as “brilliant and sophisticated… whose patience with a naïve boy from Pittsburgh only later became clear to me.”

Following graduation from Penn State, David continued his study of Spanish at the University of Pittsburgh. He would have left the school after a only a year to transfer to Columbia University (where he had been accepted for graduate study not once, but twice) were it not for one of the many happy accidents that have peppered his life. “The wrong thing never happens,” as he has said to all of us. In this case, the right thing that happened was the arrival of Javier Herrero to Pittsburgh as a professor in the program. One course with Mr. Herrero, and David decided that he had better stick around. Following Mr. Herrero to the program would be other luminaries, such as A.A. Parker and R.O. Jones. David did not go to New York, and he took note of this model of how to build a department. It would serve him well before long.

David finished his doctoral thesis, on Agustín Durán, while occupying his first professional position at St. Bonaventure University. The research work that he did for the project, at Mr. Herrero’s suggestion, forged another pattern that David would follow repeatedly during the following decades: an extended stay at the Residencia de Estudiantes in Madrid, weeks of intensive work in libraries and archives, balanced with avid exploration of places and food and drink and culture. David quickly made his name, and earned the respect of his fellow academics, as well the respect of many who had nothing to do with the scholarly life. At conferences around the world and while working in Madrid, he met all the important figures in Hispanism at the time, and soon became one of those figures himself.

In 1979, David was invited by Javier Herrero to join him in the project of rebuilding a moribund program, at the University of Virginia. David said yes. In short order, they convinced others to be a part of the department: Juan Cano Ballesta, Donald Shaw, Alison Weber, Fernando Operé, and Joel Rini in Spanish, Tibor Wlassics and Deborah Parker in Italian, as well as a number of other distinguished and inspiring teachers and scholars who formed one of the most impressive academic units in the United States. Following Mr. Herrero’s lead, they created an atmosphere of mutual support and team effort. David has continued to reinforce this tradition throughout his time at Virginia: the department developed a program that to this day trains it students to be outstanding teachers and scholars and, perhaps more importantly, to be good colleagues.

One of the key characteristics of the department that David fostered with his colleagues was the use of visiting scholars and authors to complement the academic work already being done on campus. During the period since David’s arrival on campus, he and his colleagues in the department have hosted Carmen Martín Gaite, Isabel Allende, Antonio Muñoz Molina, Rosa Montero, Mempo Giardinelli, and many others.

During his early years at Virginia, David conducted the research that would result in two of his most important contributions to the field: Theatre and Politics in Nineteenth-Century Spain: Juan de Grimaldi as Impresario and Government Agent (1988), and The Theatre in Nineteenth-Century Spain (1994). These books, just two of the four (or five, depending on how one counts them) that David has written, represent in microcosm the scope of David’s work, from focus on individual but key players in the world of theater or characteristics of specific cultural moments, to the big-picture significance of the wider view. Later, he would edit three more volumes that have proven to be essential as well: The Cambridge Companion to Modern Spanish Culture (1999), The Cambridge History of Spanish Literature (2004), and The Cambridge History of Theatre in Spain (2012). These are monumental works that have broadened our understanding of Spain as a whole, thanks in large part to David’s stewardship in the editorial process.

There is of course peerless quality in everything that David has done in terms of his scholarly work, but the sheer quantity of what he has done is breathtaking. In addition to the above-mentioned books, he has edited (as of this writing) nine others, he has published over 100 articles, made other written contributions to dozens of publications, written more than 130 book reviews (apart from the nearly 200 short reviews that he has published in the Virginia Quarterly Review), he has given lectures and presentations around the world regularly for almost fifty years, without pause. He has served on editorial boards for numerous publishers and scholarly journals and, since 1993, he has edited and published Dieciocho, which has served as a model for the entire academic community dedicated to Hispanic Studies.

David has also taken pains to share what he has learned beyond the strictly academic community. Working with the University of Virginia Center for the Liberal Arts (which he helped to establish), and, frequently, the National Endowment for the Humanities, David has created programs that have educated teachers from around the country on matters related to Hispanic culture. On two occasions he took groups of high school teachers to Spain (“Spain Today and Toward the Year 2000,” in 1992 and 1994), creating curricula that helped program participants to see beyond the long-ingrained stereotypes that cloud our perceptions of the country and its people.
In the last twenty years or so, the quality of this sort of work has changed for David. One cause for this development has been his involvement in the Semester at Sea program. When the University of Virginia became the official academic home of the program beginning in 2006, David was given, or rather had earned, the opportunity to become deeply involved in its educational mission. It is difficult to imagine a more perfect union of educator and educational model: David Gies, traveling the world while educating students and developing productive relationships with his colleagues. He served twice as the program’s academic dean (once on a voyage down the west coast of Latin America, and then for a trip that circled the globe), and he has directly affected the lives of literally hundreds of students and faculty members. Just as the train had served David during his time studying in Salamanca, the boat became the vehicle for students from all over the world to have their own museums al aire libre, their own real-world education.

Those who know David recognize fully, though, that behind all this work lies the only thing that matters more to him: his family. The people in his life have formed an inextricable part of everything that he does. Thus David was shattered when his wife Mary Jo passed away unexpectedly in early 1990. David has said that following her death, “it all felt somewhat meaningless to me.” As David tends to do, he made the most of the situation, and went back to work, expecting to live out his days on his own. However, in November 1993, in the offices of the Virginia Quarterly Review, he ran into a woman he knew from the school where Mary Jo had taught. Janna Olson was the new Managing Editor of the journal, and David fell madly in love with her. She had two children, Kirk and Krista, who welcomed David into their lives. David and Janna were married a year later in the University Chapel, mere feet from the offices of the VQR. Their family has grown in decades since: Kirk and Krista have both married and had children of their own. David and Janna, when not in Charlottesville or Spain or somewhere else in the world, can frequently be found visiting their children and grandchildren. David relishes his role as “Lito” (abuelito), as anyone will attest who has heard him talk about the kids, or who has seen his or Janna’s Facebook pages. The photos there depict a man whose love of and joy for his family are boundless.

*****

For his many efforts and achievements, far too many to continue to list here, David has received numerous prestigious awards and other forms of recognition. For example, in 2000 he was honored with the Thomas Jefferson Award, the highest honor granted at the University of Virginia. He found it difficult to believe that this was actually happening. He reports that when he heard his name announced he did not at first recognize it as his, that he suffered from some form of auditory dissonance, and that when he did understand that the name announced did belong to him his only thought was, “But they only give this award to people whose names are on buildings!” This occurred barely halfway through his tenure at the University, and the award was given to him at a time when many of his most impressive accomplishments were still in the future. In 2007, David learned that King Juan Carlos I of Spain would be inducting him into the Order of Isabel la Católica, for his service in the dissemination of Spanish culture. David Gies was officially a knight (!). Finally, in 2013 he was elected to a three-year term as President of the Asociación Internacional de Hispanistas, after having served as the organization’s Treasurer from 2001 to 2007 and its Vice President from 2007 to 2013. David was President of the very organization whose triennial conference had served as the site of one of his earliest triumphs: in Bordeaux, France, in 1974, having been encouraged to do so by Javier Herrero, David gave a talk on Agustín Durán.

*****

David Gies is retiring. Again, his life will change little beyond its surface contours. He will continue to absorb and evaluate and educate us about Spanish culture. He will continue to support his friends and colleagues and former students, as he has always done. He will continue to travel the world and eat delicious food and drink the best wine. He will continue to do all of this with the same unmatched enthusiasm that has marked nearly everything that he has done throughout his life. He will continue to be David Gies. Who will continue to be anything but retired.

David and Janna, New York City, January 2018

 

UVA Networks of Enlightenment

By Cynthia Wall

In October 2003, David and I started the university-wide XVIII Study Group, bringing faculty (from Architecture, American Studies, Art and Art History, English, French, German, History, Italian, Music, Philosophy, Religious Studies, Spanish, and the Robert H. Smith International Center for Jefferson Studies) together once a semester to share current work in the eighteenth century. Or rather, the eighteenth centuries–since that collaboration produced a wonderful two-day seminar in March 2013 for our tenth anniversary, and a book we co-edited from that seminar, The Eighteenth Centuries: Global Networks of Enlightenment, published January 2018 by the University of Virginia Press. For the Study Group, we had two firm rules: (1) NO HOMEWORK, and (2), PLENTY OF WINE. David has always been a joy as a colleague, his unbounded energy and optimism contagious, lifting all our spirits. David and Janna frequently hosted my partner Paul Hunter and me, plying us with food and drink as David and I scribbled notes at their kitchen table and Paul and Janna added wit and wisdom. David, I will deeply miss you as a colleague, but Paul and I both plan to delight in the friendship of you and Janna for aeons to come. –Much love from Cindy and Pablo!

Anicet Charles Gabriel Lemonnier, A Reading in the Salon of Mme Geoffrin, 1755

Adages and Almodóvar: Life Lessons via David Gies.

By Jenny Rademacher

I first met David when I was contemplating getting my PhD. I’d finished a Master’s program in economics and international affairs at SAIS in Washington DC and then, with two small children, we’d moved to Lynchburg, Virginia where my husband – having just finished his MBA – had taken a job. I felt like Lynchburg was a million miles away from DC, and I was suddenly adrift. I saw that there was a course in Spanish film over the summer at UVA and thought it might be a good way to test the waters. I think I emailed David to find out about it as the course was already under way, and he said something like, “It’s for high school teachers, but don’t worry about signing up for it officially – just come on up!” On the first day, there was a lunch in the faculty dining room. I remember I didn’t have the necessary ID, and that they wouldn’t accept cash – and David took care of it. “No pasa nada,” he assured me. This was my first exposure to David as consummate host. I have so many wonderful memories of the departmental picnics, of his amazing paellas, and of leisurely discussions over wine and pinchos at his house when he offered the course on Ethics through Film with a friend from the law school. His natural warmth and exuberance make him an amazing connector – he’s always gathering people, ideas, galvanizing us into something greater.

Later, when I started the PhD program, I knew David as an exceptional professor. I was lucky enough to take his course on 18th and 19th century poetry. I say this even though he did make me drive three hours round trip at one point to scour Alderman stacks for a single misplaced reference in a paper. When I reminded him of this recently, he laughed and said, “Well – it worked out pretty well for you!” I don’t know why I didn’t just make up the page number at the time. But, I think all of us wanted to go the extra mile in David’s classes and to earn his approval, even if I was surely thinking a few less adulatory thoughts on that long drive to C-ville that day.

While I was doing some of my dissertation research, I spent a week or so in the Residencia de Estudiantes in Madrid. David and I overlapped on this trip, and I got to see him in his element. I feel like it was kismet that he introduced me to Harriet Turner and Roberta Johnson, who became wonderful friends and mentors. Roberta, Harriet and I spent many late afternoons drinking wine and talking about life and literature. The three of us saw Almodóvar’s Volver, and an amazing exhibit at the Reina Sofía. The Feria de Libros was happening during that time, and David and I went together. It’s no secret how much David loves encountering famous people, and on this occasion Pedro Almodóvar was there and David asked me to take a picture of him with Almodóvar. I don’t think my photography skills impressed him (a huge faux pas in DTG-land), but he was quintessentially generous about it and it is still a great memory that has stuck with me – bumping elbows with Almodóvar in Retiro.

David introduced me to other people in Spain who were helpful for my dissertation and in later writing, and who’ve also become friends, including writer Rosa Montero and economist Gayle Allard. And when I recently interviewed Javier Cercas, he talked about David and other colleagues from UVA, remembering how he had been received so warmly there.

If “no pasa nada” was my first welcoming reminder from David, others of his remarks have also stuck with me. After sending him a copy of my dissertation, I found a few typos and other small errors. I wrote him an email, concerned about this. “Don’t sweat the small stuff,” he said. And then, when I was heading into my dissertation defense, he reminded me, simply: “Stay calm and confident.” What other advice does anyone really need in life than these three – Don’t worry about it; Don’t sweat the small stuff; Stay calm and confident?
I started the PhD program with two small children, and finished it with two more, having moved twice (to DC and back to Lynchburg) in the process. As he reminded me in an email when I received tenure, it wasn’t an easy path – but faculty like David who were constant advocates along the way made it feasible. As I wrote in my dissertation acknowledgments: “I have been particularly fortunate to have encountered a number of superb professors who encouraged me and whose insights and friendship have been powerful influences. Special thanks go to David Gies, whose knowledge regarding Spanish film and culture has been an inspiration […]”

Truly, one of the great gifts of pursuing my PhD at UVA has been the friendships made along the way. I was delighted to travel back to C-ville to see Randolph, David, Joel, and so many other dear faculty at Randolph’s retirement party. It is especially rewarding to see faculty who taught and mentored become lifelong friends.

I should add, too, that I have always loved seeing how Janna and David fit together like a glove. It was wonderful when the kids were small to come to their house for the faculty picnic, and great to see them both enjoy grandchildren. I am looking forward to seeing the many Facebook pictures of all of David and Janna’s many travels and other adventures now that they will have more time to globe trot.

David and Janna find the pleasure in every drop of life, everywhere they go

By Anna Brickhouse

David was the dean of the inaugural Semester at Sea voyage for UVA, and because he hired me I was able to travel with my husband and sons, then 4 and 7, to eight countries in Latin America. They will be 15 and almost 18 by the time of David’s party, and it is still a defining event of their lives, and ours. He put together an amazing adventure for us all, and made us happy every day to be there. I will always treasure that experience, and I learned so much by watching how David and Janna find the pleasure in every drop of life, everywhere they go. Eat, drink, ask questions, tell stories, laugh a lot–they know what they’re doing!

David and Janna, Bruce and I are so happy to celebrate tonight with you!

 

My pact with David

By Rebecca Haidt

I first met David perhaps 24 or 25 years ago at (I believe) a Mid-America conference. I was giving a paper on Fray Gerundio—my first conference paper while on the tenure track. As I was speaking, I saw a tall, slim, dark-haired man cross the back of the room rapidly and make a bee line toward Randolph Pope, with whom I was blessed to have done my dissertation. Someone next to me on the panel—was it Lin Sherman?—leaned over and whispered that that was David Gies. I must have been introduced to David after the session; but the real first meeting came later, at the conference luncheon. David approached my seat and said “come over here, sit next to me.” This was my first experience of David’s compelling friendliness and charm; the sense that with David, anything could happen. So of course I followed David! And when we sat down, he said: “Your paper was terrific. Keep doing good work. As long as you do good work, I will support you.”

Now, this was said with simple directness, a quality I value tremendously (and have come to appreciate in David as the mark of someone who knows how short are our days here on this planet, and how important it is to make them count). But I did not yet know the generosity and compassion David brought to everything he did with and for his students. I did not yet know his incredible smarts, his consummate work ethic, his passion for excellence, his global vision. I did know that someone eminent in my chosen field had just made two remarkable things happen in the space of a few seconds: He had made a pact with me; and —more important— he had made me think, “I can do good work if David thinks I can do it.”

As I remember that moment, it was the start of a commitment, which is different from only professing something. I committed to do good work as a scholar. I would say that is the greatest gift David gave me that day, had he not also gifted me with keeping the promise he made all those years ago. Over the years, David has never stopped being a mentor. Through my ups and downs, my better and worse, David has advised me, and recommended me to others; he has given me opportunities, and helped me in emergencies. He stuck with me even when I didn’t take his always excellent advice. He remembered what I was capable of, even when I didn’t. I will not achieve even a tenth of what David has worked to bring about during his amazing career as a gifted scholar, teacher, administrator, and connector. But I am profoundly grateful to know this star of a human being, fiercely alive, fiercely creating, fiercely giving. How fortunate I was to get out of my chair all those years ago, and follow him.

 

How do we know David Gies? Let me count the ways…

By Wynne Stuart

How do we know David Gies? Let me count the ways . . .

I started writing something linear and boring — but David Gies and is his life are neither.

So. . .

WHERE would we be without Tinto and Tapas, Great stories from the family, the pets, the World and Semester at Sea, Very happy times of food, wine, and discovery at the Paramount and with Cavalier Travels?

David Gies: Always an engaged, inspired, and inspiring teacher. Curiosity, exuberance, intelligence, attention to detail, caring, joy.

Because of him, Vicki and Wynne love Spain and the warmth of the culture and will continue our Spain / France banter, as only he can incite!

WHERE would we be without Janna with David, as they travel forward together in their adventures?

David’s leadership and friendship

By Judith Shatin

David and Janna are wonderful friends, and have been so for years. However, when David approached Michael and me about joining the Semester at Sea journey down the Pacific coast of Central and South America during the summer of 2007, we were somewhat skeptical. But he persisted, and we eventually agreed. Little did we know that this journey would turn out to be one of the highlights of our lives. This was a part of the world that we had never visited, and we still think of the rich friendships and unforgettable experiences. None of this would have been possible without David.
In addition to teaching courses in music (soundscape composition, including harvesting sounds ranging from hummingbirds to the sounds of the ship; and music theory, based on music of the countries we visited), I took students on a couple of memorable side-trips, including one to meet with musicians in Santiago. David also has the propensity for turning up just when he is needed, as he did at a program of my music in Santiago, where he stepped in and translated, no doubt improving upon, my remarks.
David has the extraordinary capacity to seemingly remember every person he meets, and certainly all of the students on this trip! He radiates positive energy, too rare a quality! On the rare occasions when problems arose, David was always ready to assist anyone who needed help. In sum, his friendship and kindness and the academic level that he both demonstrates and requires, elevated that entire experience, just as they have done throughout his career.

Future students don’t know what they will be missing

By Iana Konstantinova

Dear David,

Congratulations on your retirement. I will never forget your enthusiasm and energy in class. Your teaching style completely inspired me to try and be like you in the classroom. Even though I only audited your class, it was one of the most impactful classes on me from graduate school.
Two years ago at the AIH, you introduced me to Rosa Montero. I had just started working on a paper about her (which was recently published in a special issue of Letras Hispanas) and was overjoyed to be meeting her in person. Thank you for that introduction. And thank you for being such an inspiration to all of us. Future students don’t know what they will be missing, but your influence will continue for generations as those of us you have inspired seek to inspire others.
I hope you enjoy retirement and look forward to seeing travel photos from your and Janna’s new adventures.
Thank you for everything.

Warmest wishes,
Iana Konstantinova

Fierce and Passionate Crusader for Libraries

By Karin Wittenborg

An homage to David Gies

It has been a singular pleasure to read all the accolades from David’s colleagues, friends, and students. What an impressive roster of credentials, achievements, and awards. Frankly, he makes a normal person look like a total slacker.

I know David in a different arena and I had hoped to surprise you with reports of one of his extracurricular activities. Alas, John Portman has already scooped me by mentioning in his tribute that David recruited him to the Library Advisory Committee.

David Gies loves libraries, especially the UVA Libraries. He is an ardent advocate and supporter, who embraces new ideas and practices, and is vocal in his appreciation of the library staff — especially of Miguel Valladares-Llata, Librarian for Romance Languages and Latin America Studies.

Since I retired at the end of 2014, I cannot vouch first hand for David’s campaign to restore the library link on the University’s home page, but it is totally characteristic of David’s attention to the things that matter and his commitment to making change happen. I have been told that sometime after my retirement, a redesign of the homepage omitted the libraries — and that David was outraged.

In typical David fashion, he sprang into action and organized a cohort of like-minded faculty and students who insisted that the libraries be reinstated on the home page — and they were in short order. I suppose that story could be apocryphal, but I believe that David was the fierce and passionate crusader who brought the libraries back to the center of the University — just as Jefferson had planned from the very beginning. We all shall be forever in his debt.

No one will be surprised when I say that David is a genuine bon vivant. He is a party waiting to happen.

I had the good fortune recently to join a UVA alumni travel plan to Portugal and Spain guided with great panache by David. At every turn, in addition to learning about history, culture, and architecture, David would also tell us about the local culinary treasures and lead us into incredible restaurants and cafes. He is just as knowledgeable about street food as he is about Michelin restaurants.

Part of David’s charm is that he is not a food or wine snob. He will effusively thank a guest who brings an expensive wine to dinner and he will appreciate every swallow. A few months later, he may tell you about a $7.99 bottle of red from Kroger that is very pleasing to the palate.

My greatest regret is that I was never was able to go on Semester at Sea with David and Janna.

To me, Janna and David are a magical couple. They complement each other and share the same adventurous spirit. They are always in motion, attending concerts, plays, and other performances locally and internationally. I can’t recall going to an event in Charlottesville where I didn’t encounter them — and learn about the next big thing.

With great appreciation,
Karin Wittenborg
University Librarian Emerita