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Prof. Paul Firbas
Associate Professor of Latin American Literature

Ph.D., Princeton University , 2001
M.A., Univ. of Notre Dame, 1995
B.A. Univ. Católica del Perú, 1992

Paul Firbas is associate professor in the Dept of Hispanic Languages and Literature at Stony Brook University, affiliated faculty in History and former director of the Latin American and Caribbean Center (LACS). He specializes in Spanish-American texts of the colonial period. Before coming to Stony Brook in 2007, he was assistant professor at Princeton University (2001-2007) and visiting professor at Columbia University (spring 2007). His research deals with epic poetry, textual criticism, historiography, the colonial geography of transatlantic South America and the production of printed news in the Early Modern period. In 2006 he published a study and a critical edition of  Armas antárticas, epic poem written by Juan de Miramontes Zuázola (Lima: PUCP, 2006). He is also the editor of a volume of essays on Ibero-American epic texts in the colonial word  Épica y colonia  (Lima: Univ. de San Marcos, 2008).  In 2016 he co-edited with Esperanza Lopez Parada and Marta Ortiz a catalog of the exhibit they curated at the National Library of Spain: La biblioteca del Inca Garcilaso  (Madrid: BNE, 2016); and in 2017, with José A. Rodríguez Garrido, he published an annotated edition and study or the first periodical news-sheets published in the Americas: Diario de noticias sobresalientes en Lima y Noticias de Europa (1700-1711) (New York: IDEA, 2017; the second volume, 2023).

He has edited monographic issues of specialized journals and published several articles on epic poetry and cultural traditions in colonial Peru and Chile, on Sarmiento de Gamboa narratives on the Strait of Magellan, on Miguel Cabello Balboa writings and expedition to Esmeraldas, on Inca Garcilaso’s writings, etc. He is currently working on a book of the material history of the printing press in colonial Lima (1620-1720); on the circulation of information and news between Europe and South America in the early 18th century; and on a series of essays on moral geography, memory and excavation in “the extended Andes”.

He has also co-edited with Pedro Meira Monteiro a book on documentary film maker Andres Di Tella: Cine documental y archivo personalConversación en Princeton (Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI, 2006); and with Arcadio Díaz Quiñones, a book of conversations with Ricardo Piglia, La forma inicial (Talca, Chile: Univ Talca, 2015; reprinted in Bs. As: Eterna Cadencia, 2015 and Mexico: Sexto Piso, 2015).