Faculty Fellow

Jennifer Ponce de León

Image of Jennifer Ponce de León
Faculty Fellow

Jennifer Ponce de León

Associate Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania
Organization(s)

Jennifer S. Ponce de León is Associate Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania, where she is also faculty in Latin American and Latinx Studies (LALS) and Comparative Literature; affiliated faculty in Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies (GSWS) and Cinema Studies; and a member of the Graduate Group in Hispanic Studies. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on 20th and 21st century Left movements and cultural production in the Americas and Marxist and anticolonial thought. She works across studies of visual arts, literature, and performance; transnational Latinx and Latin American studies; and critical theory. She is Associate Director of the Critical Theory Workshop/Atelier de Théorie Critique, which holds an intensive summer research program at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris every summer, as well as public events online and at the University of Pennsylvania.

Dr. Ponce de León’s first book, Another Aesthetics Is Possible: Arts of Rebellion in the Fourth World War (Duke University Press, 2021) theorizes aesthetics as an integral force in contemporary political and social struggles. Its interdisciplinary analysis of experimental literature, visual art, and performance produced by Chicanx, Argentine, Mexican, and Chilean artists in the past two decades shows how these works have been influenced by, and articulated with, antisystemic movements, popular uprisings, and local struggles, including Zapatismo, anti-displacement struggles in Los Angeles, the 2001 uprising in Argentina, and radical grassroots human rights activism. Dr. Ponce de León is currently working on the book manuscript “Revolutionizing Aesthetics,” which she is co-authoring with Gabriel Rockhill for Columbia University Press's series New Directions in Critical Theory. It intervenes in debates within Marxist aesthetics and art and literary theory, while offering new analyses of works of literature, film, and visual and performance art from the Americas and Europe. Dr. Ponce de León is also co-editing Puto and Other Plays by Ricardo A. Bracho with Richard T. Rodriguez and Randall Williams.

Dr. Ponce de León co-authored with Gabriel Rockhill the Introduction to the English translation of Domenico Losurdo's Western Marxism: How It Was Born, How It Died, How It Can Be Reborn, which is forthcoming from Monthly Review Press in 2024. Her other publications include:“Cartographies of Contemporary Class Struggles: The Art and Pedagogy of the Iconoclasistas” in Latin American and Latinx Visual Culture; "After the Border is Closed: Fascism, Immigration, and Internationalism in Ricardo A. Bracho’s Puto," in American Quarterly (December 2021); “Toward a Compositional Model of Ideology: Materialism, Aesthetics & Cultural Revolution,” co-authored with Gabriel Rockhill and published in Philosophy Today, 63.1 (Winter 2020); “Through an Anticolonial Looking Glass: On Restitution, Indigenismo, and Zapatista Solidarity in Raiders of the Lost Crown” in American Quarterly (March 2018) and “How to See Violence: Artistic Activism & the Radicalization of Human Rights” in ASAP/Journal (May 2018). Her writing has also appeared in the edited collections Talking to Action: Art, Pedagogy and Activism in the Americas (U. Chicago Press, 2017); Dancing with the Zapatistas (Duke U. Press, 2015); Live Art in LA, 1970-1983 (Routledge, 2012); MEX/LA: Mexican Modernisms in Los Angeles (Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2011); Art and Activism in the Age of Globalization: Essays on Disruption (NAi, 2011), and in the journals Social Text, GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, e-misférica, Contemporary Theatre Review, The Journal of American Drama and Theater, and Interreview.

Dr. Ponce de received her PhD in American Studies from the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University; her M.A. in Art History from the University of California, Los Angeles; and her A.B. in Literature from Harvard University.  She was a 2018-2019 Ford Postdoctoral Fellow.