Professor of Spanish, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
About
I work primarily on Latin American literature from Borges to the present, and contemporary theory from Benjamin to the present, or what I would prefer to call an amorphous and permeable “now” of thinking and writing. My work is motivated by the relationship between politics and aesthetics, especially the ways that language and other modes of inscription—particularly as staged by literature and other forms of culture—resist totalizing structures, from words and concepts to complete systems. In my first book, Reading Borges After Benjamin: Allegory, Afterlife, and the Writing of History (SUNY Press, 2007), I examine some of the ways that life and history exceed and unsettle representation in the work of Benjamin and Borges, with a special focus on Borges’s early work. In my second book, Witnessing Beyond the Human: Addressing the Alterity of the Other in Post-coup Chile and Argentina (SUNY Press, 2017), I consider the question of how to think of the nature of testimony beyond pre-conceived ideas of self and other, including the most basic sense of a shared humanity, during a time in which both sides of the violent political spectrum justified themselves as acting in the name of humanity. This book brings together some of Jacques Derrida’s thoughts on life (survival) and testimony in relation to the work of three writers and a visual artist—Juan Gelman, Sergio Chejfec, Roberto Bolaño, and Eugenio Dittborn—whose works explore the nature of life, relation, and representation, and point to the possibility of a witnessing “beyond the human.”
Since finishing my second book, I have been working primarily on two projects, including a return to the denaturalization of power in Borges’s work, and representations of violence, history, and representation in contemporary Chilean art and aesthetic theory.
Selected Publications:
“Juan Gelman’s Open Letters: Mourning and Mundo Beyond Militancy,” in The New Centennial Review 14.1 (2014).
“Deconstruction and Latinamericanism, Reconsidered (A Propos John Beverley’s Latinamericanism After 9/11),” Política común 4 (2013).
“Borges Before the Law,” in Thinking With Borges. David Johnson and William Eggington, eds. Aurora, Colorado: Davies Group Publishers, 2009.
Recent graduate courses taught:
Thinking the Visual (2018)
Borges and Theory (2015)
Ideology, Aesthetics, and the Human (2013)
Recent undergraduate courses taught:
The Changing Role of Culture in Latin America
Borges y sus mundos
Magical Realism
Roberto Bolaño, Life Between Literature and Politics
Research Areas:
- Contemporary Latin American literature, Southern Cone, literary and cultural theory, visual arts, cultural studies, poetry, testimony
Affiliations:
- Romance Languages & Literatures
- Comparative Literature