Juan Ramos

Professor

Areas of Expertise

Modernismo and Avant-Gardes in Latin America, World Literature and Latin America, Decolonial Thought and Latin American cultural production

Education

Ph.D., University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Biography

Juan G. Ramos has taught at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, MA since 2011. He was born and lived in Guayaquil, Ecuador before moving to New Jersey. At Rutgers-Newark, he completed a BA in English and secondary education and at the University of Massachusetts Amherst he completed a Master of Arts and PhD in Comparative Literature and a graduate certificate in Latin American Studies.

His book Sensing Decolonial Aesthetics and Latin American Arts (University of Florida Press, 2018) explores the concept of decolonial aesthetics as related to the development of antipoetry, the nueva canción movement, and New Latin American Cinema during the 1960s and early 1970s. He is co-editor of the volume entitled Decolonial Approaches to Latin American Literatures and Cultures (Palgrave, 2016), which brings together renowned Latin Americanists to engage with key concepts related to decolonial theories and thinking while stressing points of contact with literary and cultural texts ranging from the colonial period to the twentieth century, and bringing to the fore new ways in which such theoretical discussions can be fruitful to reanimate specific lines of inquiry in literary and cultural scholarship. He has also published on the connection between poetry and film, film and spectral theory, avant-garde literature in the Andes, as well as the historical crónica during modernismo, early twentieth-century modernist fiction, and twenty-first-century Latin American fiction.

Ramos is finishing a book-length project tentatively entitled "Andean Modernismos: Affective Forms in Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru," which studies poetry, fiction, literary criticism, translation, and literary journalism as literary forms that were at once innovative in transforming literary conventions, while producing emotional and affective responses among audiences in their national and international contexts. This book project engages with key scholarship in New Modernist studies, Andean studies, and Affect studies. In support of this project, he was awarded the M.H. Abrams Fellowship at the National Humanities Center (2021-2022) and a Faculty Fellowship from the College of the Holy Cross (Fall 2021). During the 2024-2025 academic year, he will also be a visiting researcher in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Georgetown University and a visiting scholar in the Center for Latin American and Latinx Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.

He is a past chair of the Ecuadorian Studies section of LASA (2018-2020), a past member of the PMLA Advisory Committee (2018-2021), currently serves on the PMLA Editorial Board (2023-2025).

  • Readings in Latin American Lit
  • Modern Span & Span-Amer Poetry
  • Latinidades in Literature & Pop Culture