Brian Whitener is an Associate Professor of Spanish at the University of Buffalo and author of Crises Cultures: The Rise of Finance in Mexico and Brazil (Pittsburgh Press, 2019). Brian is the co-director of The Communal Hypothesis research group.
More on profile here.
More on profile here.
Katryn Evinson is an Assistant Professor of Romance Studies at Duke University and is the co-director of The Communal Hypothesis research group. She is currently at work on her first book Sabotage: Artistic Destruction and the Creative Economy in Neoliberal Europe.
More on profile here.
Academia.edu / katrynevinson.com / Google Scholar
More on profile here.
Academia.edu / katrynevinson.com / Google Scholar
Gavin Arnall is a writer, professor, and organizer based in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He is the author of Subterranean Fanon: An Underground Theory of Radical Change (Columbia University Press, 2020) and the co-editor of Universality and Translation: Sites of Struggle in Philosophy and Politics (Fordham University Press, 2025). His current research focuses on the affinities and (missed) encounters between Marxism and Indigenous radicalisms in Latin America.
Bret Leraul is an Assistant Professor of Comparative Humanities at Bucknell University. He is the author of Study Without Ends: Aesthetic Education in Neoliberal Argentina and Chile (Northwestern, forthcoming). He is currently working on a project titled The Informal: Cultural Infrastructures of the Americas.
Daniel Nemser is an associate professor of Spanish at the University of Michigan and the author of Infrastructures of Race: Concentration and Biopolitics in Colonial Mexico (University of Texas Press, 2017).