CURRICULUM VITAE (2016)

SARA CASTRO-KLAREN

CITIZENSHIP

U.S.A.

DEGREES

B.A. University of California, Los Angeles, 1962

M.A. UCLA, Spanish American Literature, 1965

Ph.D. UCLA, Hispanic Languages and Literatures, with

Highest Distinction, 1968

APPOINTMENTS

Professor of Latin American Literature and Culture, The Johns HopkinsUniversity, 1987-

Professor and Chair, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, The University of California at Irvine, 2007-2008

Director, Latin American Studies, 1988-92 and 2002-2005.

Professor of Hispanic Studies, The Johns Hopkins University, l987-

Visiting Professor, GeorgetownUniversity, Spring, 2003.

Visiting Professor, University of California, Davis, Spring 2004

Visiting Profesor, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Doctoral Seminar, l999.

Visiting Clarence Robinson Professor, George Mason University, Spring, 1989.

Chief, Hispanic Division, The Library of Congress, 1984-1986.

Adjunct Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Georgetown

University, Fall 1984; Fall 1985, Spring l997, Fall l998.

Visiting Lecturer, School of Advanced International Studies,

The JohnsHopkinsUniversity, Spring, 1984.

Visiting Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Stanford

University, Fall, 1982.

Professor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Dartmouth

College, 1979-1984.

Associate Professor, Department of Romance Languages,

DartmouthCollege, 1975-1979.

Assistant Professor, Department of Romance Languages,

DartmouthCollege, 1970-1975.

Assistant Professor of Spanish. The University of Idaho, l968-l970

Instructor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, California

StateUniversity, Los Angeles, Spring/Summer 1968.

APPOINTED OR ELECTED TO INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARLY BOARDS

Modern Languages Association Executive Committee (elected) 1987-92.

Association of AmericanColleges and Universities (appointed)

l992-96.

Board of the Fulbright Programs (appointed) 2000-2004.

Scholars Council of the JohnKlugeCenter at the Library of Congress (appointed) 2001- and Steering Committee of the Board, 2006-

COURSES TAUGHT: Graduate and Undergraduate

*Indian and Spanish Chroniclers of the XV and XVI: An

Approach to Narrative Discourse (Graduate Seminar,

StanfordUniversity, Fall, 1982, and JHU)

*Colonial Texts/Post-Colonial Readings (Graduate Seminar, JHU)

*Latin American Culture and Literature: The Formative Years, 650-l650 (Undergraduate Course, JHU)

*Travel and the Displacement of the Subject: Columbus, Léry, Levi-Strauss and the Cannibal Complex (Graduate Seminar, JHU, GeorgetownUniversity, Spring, 2003)

*Vallejo and Martín Adán: Experimental Poetics (Graduate Course, Stanford University, Fall, 1982)

*Spanish American Narrative From 1940 to the Present (Dartmouth and JHU)

*Twentieth-Century Spanish American Novel (Dartmouth, JHU)

*The Spanish-American Essay (Dartmouth, JHU)

*Theory of Discourse Analysis (Dartmouth, Stanford, Georgetown, JHU)

*Feminist Theory (Graduate Seminar JHU, Georgetown University)

*Don Quijote (Dartmouth)

*Writing Auto-biography and Testimonial in Latin America (JHU)

*The Latin American Novel (JHU)

*Martínez Estrada and the 1930s in Argentina (Graduate Seminar JHU)

*Theory of the Novel: Bakhtin, Jameson,

Deleuze (Graduate Seminar JHU and Georgetown)

*Gender and Autograph: Women's Writing in Latin America (Graduate Seminar JHU)

*Cultural Theory and the Latin American Essay (Graduate Seminar JHU)

*The Latin American New Historical Novel (Graduate Seminar JHU)

*Latin American Colonialities and Post-colonial Problematics (Graduate Seminar, JHU)

*Borges, In Theory (Graduate Seminar, JHU, UC Irvine)

*Writing Mexico: Sahagun, the Anonymous and the Historiography of Ancient Mexico. Graduate Seminar, JHU)

*Narratives of Conquest: Time and Agency in the Construction of Memory” (JHU)

*Latin America and the Problematic of Cultural Studies” (JHU)

*Narrating Self and Nation: Sarmiento, Euclides da Cunha, Arguedas, Bola~no” (Graduate Seminar, JHU)

*Narrative Theory and the Contemporary Novel” (Graduate Seminar, JHU)

*Narratives of Conquest: Cieza de Leon, Garcilaso de la Vega and Prescott (Graduate Seminar, JHU)

*Modern Latin American Political Thought

*Terror and Migration

*Borges. In theory. (JHU, Graduate Course)

RESEARCH INTERESTS

Colonial Studies/ Post-colonial Theory

Literary Theory/ Cultural Theory

Narrative Discourse in History and Fiction

Historiography

The novel

Women's Writing

Cultural Studies

Latin American Political Thought

FELLOWSHIPS AND AWARDS

*Excellence in Teaching Award. Finalist.The Johns Hopkins University, 2009, 2015.

*Faculty for NEH Seminar on "Brazil, The Invisible Giant". Awarded to the OhioStateUniversity, May, 2001.

*The Johns Hopkins Senior Class Old Gold and Sable Award (Most Valuable Faculty Member) May, 2000.

*Faculty for NEH Seminar on "Non-western Texts". Awarded to the Long IslandUniversity for l994-95 Academic year.

*Faculty for NEH Institute on Literature and Cross Cultural Negotiation. Awarded to the KeyElementary School. Arlington, Virginia, Summer, l993.

*Faculty for NEH Institute on "The Encounter", June 1992,Grant awarded to G.L.Shepperd, Essex Community College, and Baltimore.

*DartmouthCollege Senior Faculty Fellowship, 1982-1983.

*National Endowment for the Humanities Grant for a Symposium

"Commitment and Rebellion: Recent Latin American

Poetry", DartmouthCollege, May 1981.

*Fellow, WoodrowWilsonInternationalCenter for Scholars,

1977-1978.

*Young Humanist Fellow, Andrew Mellon Foundation, for residence at the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies, 1975-1976.

*DartmouthCollege Sabbatical Leave, Winter 1975.

*DartmouthCollege Faculty Fellowship, Winter 1973.

*Outstanding Women's Teaching Award, UCLA, 1965.

*Teaching Assistant, Department of Spanish and Portuguese,

UCLA, 1962-1965.

PUBLICATIONS

I. Books

1. El mundo mágico de José María Arguedas. Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, 1973. Re-issued by Indigo Press in Paris, 2004. pp. 5-208

2. Mario Vargas Llosa: Análisis introductorio. Lima: Latino Americana Editores, 1988.

3. Escritura, transgresión y sujeto en la literaturalatinoamericana, México: Premiá, 1989.

4. Understanding Mario Vargas Llosa. Columbia: The University of South Carolina Press, 1990. pp. 1-247

5. The NarrowPass of Our Nerves: Debating Post- colonial Theory . Madrid: Vervuert, 2011.

6. For it is Just One World: Reading the Inca Garcilaso in the Age of globalization. Edited with Christian Fernandez. The University of Pittsburgh Press, 2016.

Work in Progress

  1. Writing the Inca Empire: The Inca Garcilaso and Renaissance Political Theory

II. Edited Books

1. Estudios Andinos. Oklahoma, 1987 (edited with Rose Minc).

2. Women's Writing in Latin America. An Anthology (edited with Sylvia Molloy and Beatriz Sarlo).With an introduction by Sara Castro-Klarén (3-27). Boulder: Westview Press, 1991.

3. Narrativa Femenina en America Latina/Latin American Women's Narrative: Practices and Theoretical Perspectives. General Editor, Alfonso de Toro. With an Introduction by Sara Castro-Klaren (9-38). Pluralidad de discursos. Madrid/Frankfurt: Iberoamericana/Vervuert, 2003.

4. Beyond Imagined Communities: Reading and Writing the Nation in Nineteenth Century Latin America (with John Chasteen). WashingtonD.C.: The Woodrow WilsonCenter Press/The JohnsHopkinsUniversity Press, 2004.

5. A Companion to Latin American Literature and Culture and Literature.Blackwell, 2008.

III. Contributions to Books

1. "Fragmentación en La casa verde", in Mario Vargas Llosa. Ed. José Miguel Oviedo. Madrid: Taurus, 1981, 286-299

2. Various entries on Latin American authors in the RevisedEdition of the Reader's Encyclopedia, New York, 1979.

3. “Guaman Poma and the Space of Purity", in Separatism and Ethnicity: A Comparative Approach. Ed. Raymond Hall. Boston: Pergamon Press, 1979.

4. "Ontological Fabulation: Toward Cortázar's Theory

of Literature", in The FinalIsland. Ed.Jaime Alazraki and Ivar Ivask. University of Oklahoma Press, 1978, 140-150.

5. "Teoría de la crítica literaria feminista y la escritura femenina en América latina", La sartén por el mango. Eds. Patricia González y Eleana Ortega. P Puerto Rico: Huracán, 1984, 179-195.

6. "Mario Vargas Llosa", in Latin American Writers. Scribner Writers Series, New York, 1989. Revised and expanded, 2002.

7. "José María Arguedas", in Dictionary of Literary Biography: Contemporary Latin American Fiction. Ed. William Luis. Bruccoli, Clark Layman, Columbia, S.C. 1989.

8. "Discurso y transformación de los dioses en los Andes:Del Taqui Oncoy a "Rasu ñiti". Edición y Prologo. Luis Millones. El retorno de las Wakas, Lima, 1989. 331-407.

9. "Colon (IV) y Léry: viaje y el desplazamiento del sujeto". Beatriz González y Lucia H. Cóstigan. Eds. Crítica y descolonización: El sujeto colonial en la cultura latinoamericana: Caracas: Academia Nacional de Historia, 1992. 51-66.

10. "Los contextos de Cortázar." Prologue to Julio Cortázar:Rayuela. Critical edition of Rayuela. Eds. Julio Ortega y Saúl Yurkievich. Colección Archivos, Paris/Madrid, 1990, 639-651.

11. "Guaman Poma y el espacio de la pureza". Ed. Saúl Sosnowski. Lectura critica de la literatura latinoamericana. 2 Vols. Caracas: Biblioteca Ayacucho, l993 (Reprint of article published in l979 in Ethnic Autonomy)

12. "What does Cannibalism Speak? Jean de Lery and the Tupinamba Lesson" Ed. Pamela Bacarisse. Carnal Knowledge. Essays of the Flesh, Sex and Sexuality. Pittsburgh: Ediciones Tres Rios. l993, 23-43.

13. "Situations". Carlos Alonso. Ed. Educated Guesses:

Personal Reflections on the Future of Latin American Literary Studies. Latin American Literary Review. Special Anniversary Issue. l972-l992. l992, 26-29.

14. "Monuments and Scribes: El hablador Addresses Ethnography". Eds.Terry Peavaler and Peter Standish. Structures of Power: Essays in Spanish American Fiction. Albany: SUNY Press. l996, 39-57.

15. "Dancing and the Sacred in the Andes: From the Taqui-Oncoy to Rasu-Ñiti". Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. New World Encounters, Berkeley: University of California Press, l993, 159-176.

16. "Unpacking Her Library: Rosario Ferre on Love and Women". Review: Latin American Literature and Arts. No.48. Special Issue. Latin American Women's Contemporary Writing and Arts. New York, l993, 33- 39.

17. "Escritura y cuerpo en Lumperica. Ed. Juan Carlos Lertora. Una poética de la literatura menor: La narrativa de Diamela Eltit. Santiago de Chile: Editorial Cuarto Propio, l993, 97-110.

18. "The Lit Body or the Politics of Eros in Lumperica". Ed. Gordon Brotherstone. Indiana Journal of Hispanic Literatures. Inaugural Issue Bloomington, l993,41-51.

19. "El orden del sujeto en Guaman Poma". Special Issue. Crónica Indias y Mestizas: El problema del sujeto. Revista de Crítica Literaria Latinoamericana. No.41 (l995), 121-134.

20. "Writing Sub-Alterity: Guaman Poma and Garcilaso, Inca". Dispositio 46 (l994), 229-244.

21. "Literature, Feminism and the Alpha Male: A Search Beyond the Dominance Metaphor". Working Paper Series. No. 209.The Latin American Program. The WoodrowWilsonCenter. WashingtonD.C. l994. 30 pages.

22. "The Subject, Feminist Theory and Latin American Texts". Special Issue. Studies in 20th Century Literature. Winter l996, 271-302.

23. "The Paradox of Self in The Idea of a University". Ed. Frank Turner. John Henry Newman's Idea of a University. Yale University Press, l996, 318-338.

24. "El Cuzco de Garcilaso: El espacio y el lugar del conocimiento". Ed. José Antonio Mazzotti &Juan Zevallos Aguilar. Asedios a la heterogeneidad cultural. Philadelphia: Asociación Internacional de Peruanistas. l996, 135-151.

25. "Corporizacion Tupi: Léry y el manifiesto antropófago".Revista de Crítica Literaria Latinoamericana. 45(l997) 193-210.

26. "Las pacarinas y la virginidad o de la sexualidad en Guaman Poma".Eds. Jorge Rufinelli& Luis Millones. Nuevas perspectivas en cultura y literaturas andinas. Special Issue. Nuevo Texto Critico. Stanford. (l997) 51-64.

27. "Lima: A Blurred Centrality." Ed. Mario Valdés. A Comparative Cultural History of Latin America. Oxford University Press, 2004. vol.2, 426-443

28."Peru:The Twentieth Century."Ed.Daniel Balderston. Guide to Cultural Studies in Latin America. Routledge Press, 2000.

29. "Mimicry Revisited: Latin America, Post-colonial Theory and the Location of Knowledge." Eds. Alfonso de Toro & Fernando de Toro. El debate de la postcoloniedad en Latinoamérica. Frankfurt and Main: Vervuert. Iberoamericana. l999. 137-164.

30. "Interrumpiendo el texto de la literatura latinoamericana:Problemas de falso reconocimiento." Ed.Mabel Moraña. Nuevas perspectivas desde/sobre AméricaLatina:El desafió de los estudios culturales. Santiago de Chile: Cuarto Propio. 2000. 387-405.

31. "El hablador se dirige a la antropología". Estudios culturales amazonicos. Special Issue of Revista Academica de la Amazonia Peruana.Lima, 2001. Revised translation of original article published in English in Structures of Power (l996).

32. "'Like a pig, when he's thinkin': Arguedas on Affect and on Becoming an Animal". Julio Ortega. Ed. Jose Maria Arguedas; The Fox From Up Above and The Fox From Down Below. Pittsburgh UP. 2000. 307-323.

33. "A Genealogy for the 'Manifesto Antropofago', or the Struggle Between Socrates and the Caraibe". Nepantla. Inaugural Issue. Vol. 2. Issue 4. Duke UP. 2000. 295- 322.

34. "Writing with his Thumb in the Air". Afterword. Alvaro Felix Bolaños and Gustavo Verdesio. Eds. Colonialism Past and Present: Reading and Writing About Colonial Latin America Today. SUNY UP, 2002, 261-288.

35. "Historiography on the Ground: The Toledo Circle and Guamán Poma". Ileana Rodriguez. Ed. The Latin American Subaltern Studies Reader. Duke UP, 2001, 143-171.

36. “Lima: A Blurred Centrality”. In Mario Valdés and Jedlal Kadir (eds). Literary Cultures of Latin America. 3 vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003, 426-443.

37. “The Nation in Ruins: Archeology and the Rise of the Nation”. In Sara Castro-Klaren and John Chasteen eds). Beyond Imagined Communities; Reading and Writing the Nation in Nineteenth- Century Latin America. The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003, 161-196.

38. “El caldero de Babilonia: La mística del espacio de la soledad en Cien anios de soledad”. In Stephen Hart and William Rowe (eds). Studies in Latin American Literature and Culture in Honour of James Higgins.Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, Special Issue. LiverpoolUniversity Press, 2004,117-135.

39. “The Recognition of Convergence: Subaltern Studies in Perspective”. Disposition. 52, vol. XXV 95-106, 2005.

40. “Desire, the City and the Dogs of Paradise”. In Miguel Angel Zapata (ed). Mario Vargas Llosa and the Persistence of Memory. Lima: Hofstra University/UNMSM, 2005, 27-41.

41. “In-forming the Body of Man in the Caatinga”. The Colorado Review of Hispanic Studies, 2005, 99-116.

42. “The Nation and Public Literacy: What is in the ‘Pre’of the Pre-Columbian and the ‘post’ of the Postcolonial?” In ADFL Bulletin. New York: Modern Languages Association, 2006, 16-21.

43.“Framing Pan-Americanism: Simon Bolivar’s Findings”. CR: The New Centennial Review. Michigan State University Press, 2003, 25-53.

44. “Posting Letters: Writing in the Andes and the Paradoxes of the Post-colonial Debate”. In Mabel Mora~na, Enrique Dussel and Carlos Jauregui (eds).Coloniality at Large: Latin America and the Postcolonial Debate. Duke UP, 2008, 130-157.

45. “Estudios transatlánticos: Geo-politicasen una perspectiva comparada”. In Iliana Rodríguez & Josebe Martinez, eds. Estudios transatlánticos poscoloniales. Madrid: Anthropos, 2010, 91-119.

46. “Cámac y la memoria emocionada: Entrecruces de Henry William Hudson y JoséMaría Arguedas”. In Leila Gómez. Ed.Entre Borges y Conrad: estetica y territorio en William Henry Hudson. Madrid: Vervuert, 2012, 351-366.

47. “Lessons about the Writing Self and the Boom: Donoso, Fuentes and Vargas Llosa”.In Lucille Kerr and Alejandro Herrero-Olaizola. Eds. Modern Language Association Press. 2015.

48. “Disentangling the Knots: Vargas Llosa and Jose Maria Arguedas in La utopia arcaica”. In Juan de Castro, Ed. Critical Inisghts. Mario Vargas Llosa. Amenia, New York: Grey House Publising, 2014, 71-88.

49. “Media Ecstasy: La tia julia y el escribidor and the Unbereable Glare of Porno-graphy”. In Mathew Bush and Tania Gentic, Eds.Technology, Literature and Digital Culture in Latin America. Mediatized Sensibilities in a Globalized Age. London: Routledge, 2015, 23-43.

50. “Recorridos Chamanicos:Sobre el afecto cognitivo en Arguedas, W.H. Hudson y Deleuze y Guatari.” Reprinted in Cuadernos de literatura, Vol xvii. No.35. Enero-Julio, 2014, 151-172.

51. “Lessons about the Writing Self and the Boom:Donoso, Fuentes and Vargas Llosa.”In Lucille Kerr ed.Teaching the Latin American Boom.New York: The Modern Languages Association, 2015, 40-50.

52. “Notes from the Field: Decolonizing the ‘Spanish Major’”. In Juan Ramos and Tara Daly, eds. Decolonial Approaches to Latin American Literatures and Cultures. Palgrave, 2016, 3-19

53. “For it is but a Single World: Marsilio Ficino and the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega in Dialogue with Pagan Cultures”. In Sara Castro-Klaren and Christian Fernandez, eds. The Inca Garcilaso and Contemporary World-making. Pittsburgh: The University of Pittsburgh Press, 2016, 195-229.

IV. Articles

1. “Todos los cuentos de Jose Maria Arguedas”. Lima: Amaru. April, 1967, 84-89.

2. “Mundo y palabra: Hacia una problematica del bilinguismo en Arguedas”. 1972. 97-105. (reedited in Lima: Runa, 1978. 8-11)

  1. “Las fuentes del narrador en Los rios profundos”.

Mexico: Cuadernos Americanos. March-April, 1971, 230-238.

  1. “Cortázar,Surrealism,and‘Pataphysics”. Comparative Literature, Summer 1975. 218-236.
  1. “Fragmentation and Alienation in La casa verde”. Modern Language Notes. March, 1972. 286-99.
  1. “Todas las sangres: A Change of Skin”. Latin American Literary Review. April, 1973. 83-98.
  1. “Media vuelta en cuatro dimensiones: Cortazar y la ‘patafísica”. Lima: Textual: October 1975. 97-105.
  1. “Jose Maria Arguedas: Testimonio”. Hispamérica. Fall, 1975.
  1. “Interviewing and Literary Criticism”. Ideologies and Literatures. May-June 1975. 69-73.

10. “The Latin American Perspective: Four Conversations”. Interviewed by Common Ground. July 1976. 33-36.

11. “Cortazar Lector: Entrevista con Sara Castro-Klaren”. Cuadernos Hispanoamericanos. 1980.364-66.

  1. “Humor y clase en Pantaleón y las visitadoras”. Revista de Critica Literararia Latinoamericana. 1979. 105-118.
  1. “El dictador en el paraíso: Cambio de guardia,Las rayas del tigre,La ronda de los generales”. Hispamerica. Fall 1979. 21-36.
  1. “Critic and Public: New Directions in Literary Criticism”. Latin American Research Review. Spring 1979. 276-280.
  1. “The Word and the World in Jose Maria Arguedas”. Review 79. 1979. 17-21.
  1. “May We not Perish: The Incas and Spain”. The Wilson Quarterly. Summer, 1980. 166-75.
  1. “Martinez Estrada, Sarmiento, and the “Other”: Or, Desire as History”. Dispositio. Vol, XV, No. 40, 71-81.
  1. “Del recuerdo y el olvido: El sujeto en breve carcel y lumperica”. pp 196-207.
  1. “Crimen y castigo: Sexualidad en J.M. Arguedas”. Jose Maria Arguedas. Revista Iberoamericana. January/March 1983. 106-176.
  1. “El dictador en el paraíso”. Lima: Hueso Humero. 1982. (Reprint).
  1. “Desde en anverso de las cosas: La poesia de Cobo Borda”. Bogota: Eco.1981. 285-93.
  1. “Traducciones, ediciones, el Boom”. Ideologies and Literatures. Spring, 1984.
  1. “Desire, the Author and the Reader in Cortazar’s Narrative”. The review of Contemporary Fiction. Fall, 1983.
  1. “Dolor y locura: la elaboracion de la historia en Os Sertoes y La guerra del fin del mundo”. Revista de Critica Latinoamericana. Fall 1984. 207-30.
  1. “Santos and Cangaceiros: Inscription without Discourse in Os Sertoes and La guerra del fin del mundo””. Modern Language Notes. 1986. 366-88.
  1. “After All, Someone has to write it… or, The Novelness of a possible Poetics for Women”. Ideologies and Literatures, l989.
  1. “By (T)Reason of State:The Canon in Latin American Literature”. Revista de Estudios Hispanicos. Fall 1989. 1-20.
  1. “Dancing and the Sacred in the Andes: From the Taki-Oncoy to ‘Rasu-Niti’”. Dispositio.36-38. 1989. 169-187.
  1. ““Como chancho, cuando piensa”: el afecto cognitivo en Arguedas y el con-vertir animal”. Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispanicos Vol XXVI, 1-2, Otono/Invierno 2001-2002. pp 25-39.
  1. “Narrativa Femenina en América Latina: Prácticas y Perspecivas Teóricas”. Iberoamericana, Vervuert, 2003. pp 9-38.
  1. “An Inexorable Crescendo of Pain: On the Feast of the Goat”. In The Commom Review. December 2011.
  1. “Un Inca para el siglo XXI o de como leer los Comentarios reales (1609) en claves actuales” Miríadas Hispánicas. Universidad de Valencia, España. Abril 2011.
  1. “Cámac y lamemoria emocionada:Entrecruces de William Henry Hudson y José María Arguedas”. In leila Gómez, ed. Entre Borges y Conrad: Estética y territorio en William Henry Hudson. Madrid: Vervuert, 2012, 351-366.
  1. “Recorridos chamánicos: Sobre el afecto cognitivo en Arguedas, W.H. Hudson y Deleuze y Guatari”. Revista de Critica Literaria Latino Americana. No. 75. Lima-Boston, 2012, 27-50.

V. Translations

1. “Travels (“Los viajes”, from Los ríos profundos of JoséMaría Arguedas)”. Translated by Sara Castro-Klaren and Arturo Madrid. Latin American Literary Review. Volume IV, Spring-Summer, 1976, Number 8. pp. 143-149.

VI. Interviews. Radio and TV

  1. "Teoría Postcolonial y literatura latinoamericana: Entrevista con Sara Castro-Klaren". Interview by Juan Zevallos Aguilar. Revista Iberoamericana. 176-77 (l996) 963-971.
  1. Interview with Nelida Pinon for the archives of the Library of Congress, May 1986.
  1. Interviewed various contemporary authors and colonial topics in Latin American Culture and Literature for Factoria Audiovisual (Buenos Aires) for a semester long course in video on Latin American Culture and Literature by Luciana Rabinsky.
  1. On The Feast of the Goat by Mario Vargas Llosa, for “What’s the Word”. Baltimore, 2009.

VII. Bibliographies

1. Editor of the "General Section" (Theory, Literary History, Anthologies, Conference Papers, etc). Handbook of Latin American Studies. Library of Congress. Contribution of more than 50 entries to volumes 52, 54, 56, 58, 60.

VIII. Review Essays, and Reviews

1. "Literacy, Conquest and Interpretation: Breaking New Ground on the Records of the Past." Social History. Vol. 23, 2 (l998) l33-l45.