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A Companion to Latin American Literature and Culture


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      Jerónimo Arellano is Associate Professor of Latin American Literature at Brandeis University. He is the author of Magical Realism and the History of Emotions in Latin America (Bucknell University Press, 2015) and the editor of “Comparative Media Studies in Latin America” (2016), a special issue of Revista de Estudios Hispánicos. He is currently working on a book on Latin/x American screenwriting, its cultural history and creative practice.

      Adriana J. Bergero (University of California at Los Angeles) has published El Debate político: Modernidad, poder y disidencia en Yo el Supremo de Augusto Roa Bastos (1994); Haciendo camino: Pactos de la escritura en la obra de Jorge Luis Borges (1999); Memoria colectiva y políticas de olvido: Argentina y Uruguay (1997, with Fernando Reati); (1970–1990) Estudios literarios/Estudios culturales (2005, with Jorge Ruffi nelli). She has published on cultural studies with a focus on the Southern Cone, urban and sensuous geography, gender studies, and postcolonial studies. Her Intersecting Tango: Cultural Geographies of Buenos Aires, 1900–1930 is forthcoming.

      Orlando Betancor is an associate professor at Barnard College/Columbia University. He received his BA in Philosophy from the Universidad de la República (Montevideo, Uruguay) in 1997 and his PhD in Romance Languages and Literatures (Spanish) from the University of Michigan in 2005. Before joining the Barnard faculty he was an Assistant Professor at the University of Southern California (2005–2008) and he also held a visiting appointment at the department of Comparative Literature at Princeton (2007–2008). He is the author if The Matter of Empire: Metaphysics and Mining in Colonial Perú (2017), published by Pittsburgh University Press. His current interests are world-ecology, eco-Marxism, and speculative fiction. Bentancor has published articles in Hofstra Hispanic Review, Revista Iberoamericana, Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies and Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies.

      John Beverley is Professor of Spanish and Latin American Literature at the University of Pittsburgh and an advisory editor of boundary 2. His publications include Del Lazarillo al Sandinismo (1987); Literature and Politics in Central American