My research interests sit primarily within the emerging field of Transatlantic Studies, or the comparative analysis of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Peninsular and Latin American literatures and the cultural flows between Spain and its former colonies. With a focus on issues relating to travel, migration, immigration, and national and transnational identity formation, I am interested in the dynamics of power inherent in the cultural and intellectual contact between Spain and Latin America and their representations of each other. In addition, my research traces Spain's intellectual, cultural and literary responses to the demise and loss of its empire and how reactions to Spain's post-imperial status are played out in its former colonies.
At present I am working on revisions of a book project that explores the attempts made by Spanish and Latin American writers and intellectuals to reassess their respective postimperial and postcolonial realities following Spain’s loss of its last colonies in 1898. I trace the ways in which Latin American writers endeavour to imagine from Spain the regeneration of their homelands, and Spanish writers seek answers to their nation’s post-1898 malaise via transnational encounters in Spain’s former colonies. The book considers Spain’s renewed interest in Latin America at a time when the growing threat of United States influence in the region began drawing Latin American intellectuals towards the former imperial centre from where they re-evaluate the cultural significance of Spain for imagining national renewal at home.