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Professor Javier Sanjinés retired from active faculty status on May 31, 2023, after twenty-six years at the University of Michigan.

Javier attended the Universidad Mayor de San Andrés (La Paz, Bolivia) where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science in 1971. He studied literary sociology at the Ecole Pratique de Hautes Etudes in Paris, France, where he also earned in 1974 a master’s degree in Latin American Studies at the Université de Paris-III.

After working two years as an attorney in La Paz, Javier moved to the United States in 1982, earning a Ph.D. in Spanish and Portuguese from the University of Minnesota (1988). After faculty appointments at the Catholic University of Bolivia, the Universidad Mayor de San Andrés, and the University of Maryland, he joined the University of Michigan as Assistant Professor of Spanish in 1997 and was promoted to Associate Professor in 2003 and to Professor in 2010. 

Javier is a distinguished scholar of modern Latin American literature and a highly regarded specialist in the cultural politics of postcolonial societies.  Throughout his career, he was invited professor in several universities in Latin America, such as the Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar (Ecuador) and Duke University.  He has given numerous invited lectures in some of the most prestigious universities in the US (Berkeley, Duke, Stanford) and abroad (Cambridge, Shanghai, Goethe Institute), as well as in different institutions such as the World Bank, the Department of State, and the Library of Congress.

His five books include Mestizaje Upside Down: Aesthetic Politics in Modern Bolivia (2004, with a Spanish version in 2014) and Rescoldos del pasado: Conflictos culturales en sociedades postcoloniales (2009, with an English version, Embers of the Past, in 2013).  In addition, he has published more than 100 articles and book chapters in the many areas of his expertise; a volume of his selected essays, Canon y subversion: ensayos escogidos, was published in La Paz in 2022.

Javier’s work garnered him several honors and awards. In 1991 he received the Fundación BHN (Banco Hipotecario de Bolivia) Book Award for Literatura contemporánea y grotesco social en Bolivia (1992), a seminal study that was selected in 2017 as one of the two-hundred books re-edited by the Bolivian Bicentennial Library (Vice-Presidency of the Plurinational State of Bolivia); and in 2005 he was elected Member of the prestigious Académie de la Latinité.  Previously, he had been a Tinker Foundation Research Fellow in Center for Latin American Studies at University of Pittsburgh (1981-1982) and a Rockefeller Foundation Post-doctoral Fellow in the Chicago Humanities Center at the University of Chicago (1995).  

Over the years, Javier taught numerous undergraduate classes and graduate seminars on a broad range of topics in Latin American literature and culture, as well as graduate proseminars for the Program in Latin American and Caribbean Studies and sophomore seminars for undergraduates.  As researcher, professor and colleague, he has left an indelible mark in the Department of Romance Languages and at the University of Michigan.

Congratulations on your retirement, Javier!  We are deeply grateful for your friendship. You will be missed!

Smiling student poses for graduation photoshoot

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Every single gift matters in RLL. Your generosity allows RLL students to experience the world.

From funding to support international programs to events with leading scholars from around the world, RLL continues to create opportunities for students to explore the world around them and to prepare for their future as global citizens. 

With your help, we can continue to open doors and minds. Learn how your gift can make a difference.