I am a literary, cultural, and intellectual historian of the early modern Hispanic world. I was educated at the Universidad de Extremadura (where I studied Classics and Spanish Philology) and the University of Cambridge (where I studied the MPhil in European, Latin American, and Comparative Literatures and Cultures and completed my PhD in Spanish). Before coming to Oxford, I taught at Cambridge as Affiliated Lecturer in Medieval and Early Modern Iberian Literatures and Cultures. My research has been supported by the 'La Caixa' Foundation, the Arts and Humanities Research Council, and the Cambridge Trust.
My research maps the evolving intersections between the period’s medical, rhetorical, theological, and political theories of memory in relation to the practice and poetics of Petrarchism. My first monograph project (Memory on the Line: Petrarchan Lyric, Intellectual Change, and Political Identity in Early Modern Spain) explores these topics chiefly through the work of three of the period's foremost poets-scholars: Juan Boscán, a distinguished courtier at the court of Charles V and the Spanish translator of Castiglione's Cortegiano; Fernando de Herrera, one of the leading figures of late sixteenth-century Sevillian humanism; and Juan de Jáuregui, an aristocrat and Crown censor under the protection of the Count-Duke of Olivares.
I am also interested in the literary and cultural history of the human body. My work in this area uses a transhistorical approach to theories of embodied cognition to enquire into the effects and responses to the literary representation of bodies in movement and bodies in pain. I have written on this topic in relation to Aristotle, the anonymous Rhetorica ad Herennium, Giulio Camillo Delminio, Garcilaso de la Vega, Giovanni Pontano, Fernando de Herrera, and Viktor Shklovsky.
At the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, I lecture in Prelims Papers III and IV and in FHS Paper VII. At Merton College, I tutor Prelims Papers II, III and IV and FHS Papers II, VII and X.