
Raul Coronado
Raul Coronado's teaching and research interests are in Latina/o literary and intellectual history, from the colonial period to the 1940s. His first book project, A World Not to Come: A History of Latino Writing and Print Culture (Harvard 2013), focused on the transnational development of a print and literary culture in Texas. However, rather than take literature as the beginning object of study, his teaching and research historicizes the process by which certain genres came to be identified as literature. Consequently, he emphasizes the contemporary, social meaning of writing. The nineteenth-century specialization of knowledge associated with modernity gave shape to our contemporary definition of literature as a genre distinct from political writing, journalism, and history, for example. By modernity, he invokes the Enlightenment's dream: the notion that society could, with the benefit of studied knowledge, progress indefinitely. But the spread of modernity from Europe to the Americas was never merely a question of reproducing an original blueprint. How democratic institutions unfolded, how writing fragmented and became specialized into political and aesthetic spheres, and the subjective transformations required for these changes all depended on who and what existed at the local level as well.
His teaching balances the need for coverage and theoretical analysis; it focuses on and is attuned to the historical specificities of a particular region of the Americas—the U.S.-Mexico border—but simultaneously provides new insights into the literary and cultural legacies of modernity and colonialism in the Americas. In the next several years, his teaching will focus on the development of a US Latina/o public sphere; how 19th and early 20th century Latinas/os engaged with and theorized the development of a modernity in the US Southwest, New Orleans, and the East coast; Latina/o intellectual history and cultural studies; and comparative postcolonial literatures and theories of nineteenth-century Americas. He also has a longstanding interests in queer and feminist theory, with a particular focus on how women of color have theorized the queer subject and the emergence of queer Latina/o print culture and publics.