Always positive and enthusiastic in class.
This comment is not public.
Jonathan Carlyon serves as Associate Professor of Spanish and Chair of the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at Colorado State University in the College of Liberal Arts. He holds a Ph.D. in Hispanic Languages and Literatures from the University of Connecticut, completed in 2003. His doctoral dissertation, titled "The Americanist Andrés González de Barcia Carballido y Zúñiga (1673–1743) and the Creation of the Colonial Spanish American Library," laid the groundwork for his scholarly contributions to the field.
Carlyon's primary research interests encompass colonial Latin American literature, the history of the book, and material culture. His major publication, Andrés González de Barcia and the Creation of the Colonial Spanish American Library (University of Toronto Press, 2008), offers an in-depth analysis of Andrés González de Barcia's editorial endeavors. Barcia, a prominent early Enlightenment scholar, produced over two dozen critical editions of rare Spanish works on the New World, incorporating marginal notes, prefatory essays, and indices. Carlyon demonstrates how these efforts created the first comprehensive "colonial Spanish American library," providing order to colonial historiography and laying the foundation for modern studies in Spanish American letters, bibliography, and book history.
Other notable works include "An Introduction to Andrés González de Barcia's Intellectual Project for New World Scholarship" published in Dieciocho: Hispanic Enlightenment (2005), "Gerónimo de Uztáriz and the Economic Shades of Enlightenment in Spain" in Cuaderno Internacional de Estudios Humanísticos (2009), a chapter "Library" in the Lexikon of the Hispanic Baroque (2014), and a review of Neil Safier's Measuring the New World in The American Historical Review (2010). In addition to his scholarly output, Carlyon engages in interdisciplinary projects, such as research on caelia, a pre-Roman beer from the Iberian Peninsula, and collaborations on the cultural significance of Spanish rivers. He has also served as Interim Director of the Global Studies Interdisciplinary Minor and co-leads the Camino Abroad study abroad program in Spain, enhancing students' immersion in Spanish language and culture.
