Graduate Students 2023-2025
Phuong Nguyen, Linguistics. Major Professor: Professor Sylvie Dubois
Phuong comes from Vietnam, an Asian country. She received a Master degree in French linguistics in France in 2011. After graduation, she came back to Vietnam to teach French for Vietnamese students in the National University of Vietnam. At this time, her interest is in linguistics and sociolinguistics.
Khadim Doumouya, Literature. Major Professor: TBD
Khadim Doumouya is a native of Dakar in Senegal. He has completed his Bachelor's and his Masters in British and African Literature and Civilization at the University Cheikh Anta Diop of Dakar in Senegal. He also earned a Master in French and Francophone studies at Mississippi State University. He is currently working on a PhD in Francophone Literature. Research interests: African literary movements and their evolution through the history, their challenges and their place in the world literary circle.
JULIUS YAW OSEI, Literature. Major Professor: TBD
Julius is is a Ph.D. candidate in Francophone Literature. He earned his M.A. in French and Francophone Literature from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and his B.A. French and Geography from Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Ghana. He also holds a Diploma in Basic Education (D.B.E) from Wesley College of Education (WESCO), where he developed a solid grasp of his teaching area and skills in effective teaching methods, educational psychology, and professional ethics. His final project explored using jigsaw puzzles to help students overcome learning difficulties. A maverick researcher, Julius focuses on socially sensitive and often overlooked topics in Francophone and Maghreb literature. His master’s thesis examines how Christianity, Islam, and tradition African religions in Sub-Saharan Africa and Maghreb have contributed to the suppression of women, drawing from rare and lesser-known texts. His dissertation centers on Mauritanian Francophone literature, which forms a bridge between Sub-Saharan African and the Maghreb, providing fresh insights into identity, social divisions, and racial dynamics through Surrealism and Negritude. He has taught at multiple levels of education, from high schools, colleges, and universities, serving as a classroom teacher, teaching assistant, and junior lecturer (adjunct). His research areas include Contemporary Francophone Literature, North African Literature, Caribbean Literature, and Contemporary U.S. Civilization and Religion. Within these fields, he explores themes such as religion, gender, race, and identity, applying frameworks like intersectionality, Surrealism, Negritude, and postcolonial studies. He aims to challenge established narratives and amplify marginalized voices, reshaping how race, gender, and identity are understood in Francophone and comparative literature studies.
S. Trent Dunkin, Language and Society. Major Professor: Professor Greg Stone
Trent, a native of Denham Springs, Louisiana, currently holds two Bachelor of Arts
degrees from LSU in French (2010) and in English (2011). After completing his undergraduate
education, he continued his studies by obtaining a Master of Arts in Romance Languages
from the University of New Orleans (2019) and a Master of Library and Information
Science from LSU (2021). Presently, Trent is engaged in dissertation research, his
topic focusing on the origins and evolution of French identity during the medieval
period.
Not only is Trent a doctoral candidate
in the Department of French Studies, but he also serves as the Institutional Repository
Librarian for LSU Libraries. Before becoming a librarian, Trent worked as a Resource
Sharing Specialist for LSU Libraries’ Interlibrary Loan Services and as a Learner
Specialist for LSU Continuing Education. He also serves as Co-Editor-in-Chief of Tête-à-Tête:
Journal of Francophone Studies. Trent's specific
research interests are comprehensive, encompassing areas from Academic Librarianship
and Digital Libraries to Historical French Linguistics and Medieval French Civilization.
He has a particular interest in Old French and the relations between Capetian France
and Angevin England.
Alicia Hilaire. Major Professor: Professor Adelaide Russo
Alicia Hilaire received a BA in French, Oregon State University and a BA in Fashion Marketing Management, Art Institute of Atlanta. She earned a MA in French Studies and Master of Business Administration, Georgia State University. Awardee of the Édouard Glissant Fellowship at LSU, she is working towards a PhD in French and francophone studies. Areas of research interest include post-colonial studies, Caribbean and African literature, francophone cinema, French fashion and pop culture. Other interests include writing fiction and nonfiction novels.
Taiwo Ogundeyi. Major Professor: TBD
Taiwo Ogundeyi is from the Southwestern part of Nigeria. He holds a bachelor's degree in French Studies from the University of Benin, Nigeria. In
Summer 2024, he completed his Masters in French and Francophone Studies with a minor in Mass Communication at Louisiana State University.
He is currently a PhD student at LSU. Prior to his arrival at LSU, he had taught French language at both junior and senior high for 5 years. Taiwo
is interested in Atlantic history of nostalgia, its intersection with memory and trauma, as well as their contextual representation in Francophone
literature, specifically in Sub-Saharan and Caribbean francophone studies. He is also interested in how contemporary Francophone literature
grapples with how modern technology shapes identity and culture.
Rachel Overley. Literature. Major Professor: TBD
A Louisiana native from Baton Rouge, Rachel holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from LSU in French (2008). She has participated in several immersion programs at Université Sainte-Anne in Nova Scotia. Through LSU she studied abroad in Limoges, France and experienced LSU in Paris. Rachel has taught Elementary French in the public school system for 4 years and began teaching in 2021 at LSU's University Laboratory School where she is currently an Elementary French and Spanish Instructor. Her interests include: Teaching foreign language, Francophone literature, French Poetry, Linguistics, Culture, Civilization, Literature, and Language.
Rachel Kirk. Major Professor: Professor Bastien Craipain
Rachel is from Baltimore, Maryland and has a BA in Political Science and French from Virginia Tech and an MA in International Education Development from Teachers College, Columbia University. Her master’s thesis was on the history and representation of Arabic language instruction in French public schools. She has taught high school French in New Orleans and was a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant in Rabat, Morocco. She has led several high school and university intercultural education programs in metropolitan France, Spain, Martinique, and Morocco. Prior to coming to LSU, she worked as a program manager at AC4, a research center at the Earth Institute at Columbia University. She is interested in environmental and digital humanities, and how the relationship between colonialism and anti-colonial resistance has shaped culture, institutions, and cultural production in the Francophone world.
Zull-Kifuly Moumouni
Zull-Kifuly is a Ph.D. student in French Literature, with a Minor in Political Science at Louisiana State University. He is interested in the representation of political violence and human rights violation in contemporary francophone literature of sub-Saharan Africa. He is also interested in the dynamics of immigration in Afropéa francophone literature. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in African studies from the English Department at the University of Abomey-Calavi, Benin, and a Master’s degree in Applied Second Language Acquisition from Missouri State University, United States.
Zull-Kifuly taught English as a Foreign Language in secondary schools of Benin for 7 years. He also worked with the American Peace Corps as Counterpart of Peace Corps Volunteers (CPCV) for two years before being selected for the Fulbright- Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Program in 2018. During his Master’s program, he taught French at undergraduate level as Graduate Teaching Assistant and won the Outstanding Teaching Graduate Assistant Award of Spring 2023. He is currently teaching FREN 1001-1002 at LSU as part of his Graduate Assistant responsibilities.
Wolé Olúgúnlè
Wolé Olúgúnlè is a Yorùbá scholar from Oka Akoko, Ondo State, Nigeria, and a Ph.D. candidate in the Departments of French Studies and Comparative Literature at Louisiana State University. His research focuses on African and Caribbean dramatic aesthetics, Afrocentric worldviews, and cultural narratives, with particular attention to autocriticism as a lens for exploring the socio-political realities, spiritual dimensions, and phenomenology of Black communities.
His scholarly interests span African and Caribbean literatures, ifacriticism, and the intersections of psychology, philosophy, and environmental studies within Black narratives. By bridging ancestral wisdom with contemporary theatrical expressions, he seeks to illuminate the richness and complexity of Black aesthetics in global literary traditions.
Wolé earned his M.A. in French Studies and Comparative Literature from the University of Ibadan and his B.A. in French Language and Literature from the University of Benin, both in Nigeria. With several years of experience as a French teacher and tutor, he now serves as a Graduate Teaching Assistant at LSU. His doctoral research examines the phenomenology of Black aesthetics in African and Caribbean from the nineteenth to the twenty-first centuries.
Tajudeen Salaudeen
Tajudeen is a Nigerian currently pursuing a Ph.D. In the department of French Studies at Louisiana State University, with research interests in Francophone Studies and Comparative Literature. He earned his bachelor’s degree in 2012 from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, and his master’s degree in 2018 from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria. With a strong background in teaching literature and French as a foreign language to students of diverse levels and backgrounds, Tajudeen currently serves as a Graduate Teaching Assistant in the Department of French Studies. His academic interests span postcolonial studies, African and Caribbean literature, and narrative theory.His current research focuses on the Bildungsroman and the literary representation of street children in contemporary African narratives.
KAREN AMARTEIFIO
Karen Amarteifio is a Ghanaian who holds an undergraduate degree in French and Francophone Studies from the University of Cape Coast, Ghana. She is a graduate student in the department of French studies at LSU. She is currently completing her master's program in French Studies with a minor in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, after which she will advance into the PhD program. She is a beneficiary of the generous scholarships offered by the department. During the summer of 2024, she attended the Institut d'études françaises de Touraine, France, for a month-long language immersion program. Her research Interests include : Francophone Literature and Women studies.
ONOMEJOH PRINCEWILL
Onomejoh Princewill is a seasoned researcher and PhD student in the Department of
French Studies at LSU. His interests include comparative literature, world literature,
francophone and caribbean studies. He holds a bachelor's degree in Foreign Languages
from the University of Benin (First Class Honors), where he graduated as the all-time
best student from the Faculty of Arts and the Department of Foreign Languages. He
also earned a masters degree in translation from the same university with distinction.
Princewill has taught french extensively at different levels. Before joining LSU,
He was an adjunct lecturer at the University of Benin as well as the head of French
Department, Boiling Point Academy, Benin City, Nigeria.
Avril Akogun
Avril Akogun is a Ghanian who graduated from the University of Cape Coast in Ghana
with an undergraduate degree in French and Francophone
studies. She is currently a graduate student in LSU's Department of French Studies.
She is working on completing her Masters in French Studies
with a minor in Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies. She will proceed for her PhD
in French Stuides after her Masters program. Avril's research interest
is French and Francophone women writers. Avril is a recipient of the French Department's
generous scholarship program. She participated in a one-month language immersion
program at the Institut d'Etudes Françaises de Touraine, France, during
the summer of 2024.

Junia Seiyefa Owumi
Junia Seiyefa Owumi is a Nigerian who obtained her undergraduate degree in French language and communication from Université Africaine de technologie et management (UATM-Gasa formation) Gbegamey, Benin Republic. Junia is currently a graduate student in LSU’s Department of French Studies. She is enrolled in a dual degree program at Louisiana State University. She is working on completing her master's degree in the Department of French Studies, alongside Education(minor) after which she will proceed into the PhD program. Junia is passionate about feminism, academia, Francophone literature, and culture. Before joining LSU, Junia was a French lecturer at the Nigerian Army College of Medical Sciences in Lagos, Nigeria.
Aviana San Souci
Aviana San Souci graduated from Louisiana State University with a Bachelors of Arts in Francophone Studies and a minor in Italian Studies.She is currently pursuing her Masters in Francophone Studies with a minor in anthropology through the PhD program in the same department.She wishes to combine her academic interests of French and cultural studies with an examination of environmental justice issues in the francophone Carribean, through the lens of ecocriticism and personal narrative.Aviana is also involved in study abroad, serving as the Graduate Assistant for the LSU in the Alps undergraduate program."