Jordana Dym

Jordana Dym is Professor of History whose research and teaching interests include
                           Latin America, the history of cartography, book history and public history. She teaches
                           a Latin American survey, regional courses on Central America, the Caribbean and Mexico,
                           and topics courses on the history of travel and travel writing, war and peace, maps,
                           and publics. Engaging with written, visual and aural sources, her classes encourage
                           students to present findings in papers, newspaper article, sound stories, websites
                           and exhibits. She offers a first-year seminar on maps in the world, and enjoys building
                           international connections for and with students in travel programs in France, Mexico,
                           Cuba, Guatemala and Puerto Rico. She has twice directed Ȧ's Latin American
                           Studies minor program, and was the inaugural director of the John B. Moore Documentary
                           Studies Collaborative (MDOCS) (2014-2018), developing the DocLab,  and Storytellers' Institute.
Jordana's publications include From Sovereign Villages to National States: City, State and Federation in Central
                              America, 1759-1839 (2006) and  (2021), articles in French, English and Spanish, and an exhibit catalog, Declarando Independencias (Archivo General de la Nación, Mexico, 2010). She has collaborated with colleagues
                           in the Americas, Europe and beyond as editor of ѱDzé (2008-2013), guest editor of special issues for Araucaria and Colonial Latin America Review, and co-edited four books: Politics, Economy and Society in Bourbon Central America (with C. Belaubre, 2007), Napoléon et les Amériques (with C. Belaubre and J. Savage, 2009; English edition, 2010), Mapping Latin America: A Cartographic Reader (with K. Offen, 2011); Las declarations de independencia: Los textos fundamentals de las independencias americanas (with A. Ávila and E. Pani, 2013); Centroamérica durante las revoluciones atlánticas: el vocabulario político, 1750-1850 (with S. Herrera Mena).