Jorge Cuellar

Jorge E. Cuéllar

Assistant Professor

Appointments

Assistant Professor, Latin American, Latino & Caribbean Studies

Faculty Director, CASA-Cuba Exchange Program

Area of Expertise

Central American Studies,

Cultural Studies,

Critical Social Theory,

Media Studies

Biography

Jorge E. Cuéllar is a scholar of politics, culture, and daily life in modern Central America. His research and teaching focus on Central American Studies, Cultural Studies, Race, Migration, and Critical Social Theory.

His current book project, Everyday Life and Everyday Death in El Salvador, traces the practices of peoplehood, community formation, and everyday life-making amongst varied groups in El Salvador since the end of the Salvadoran Civil War. Via embedded observation, unstructured interviews, and archival analysis, this work explores the quotidian modes of living, thinking, and being produced by historical inequality, the postwar Salvadoran state, and by structural shifts in the transnational system. A multi-sited study, Cuéllar's research attends to the cultural and political strategies employed by diversely situated in-country Salvadorans that, despite living in conditions of extreme marginality, economic abandonment and routine violence, engage in practices of refusal, survivance and critique that motion towards restored and dignified social futures.

Cuéllar's research has appeared in American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Comparative American Studies, Diálogo, Revue française d'études américaines, Latino Studies, and Radical History Review, among others. His public essays and columns can be found in El Faro, NACLA, Social Text's Periscope, Los Angeles Review of Books, NLR's Sidecar and Radical History Review's The Abusable Past. Cuéllar regularly offers comment and analysis on contemporary Central American politics and society across a variety of media outlets. Recently, his writing has explored contemporary financial experiments in Latin America, the pandemic's impact on Central American migration, and the authoritarian turn in El Salvador. 

Founded in 2019, Cuéllar also advises the Central America Project, a student-driven public humanities initiative focused on drawing attention to Central American scholarship, analysis, and culture in the U.S. and in the isthmus. This collective work produced the bilingual exhibition Bolas de Fuego: Culture and Conflict in Central America at the Hood Museum of Art in 2022. From 2020-22, he was a Founding Faculty Fellow for the Consortium of Studies in Race, Migration & Sexuality (RMS). At present, he serves as Faculty Advisor to the Central Americans United Student Association (CAUSA) and as Faculty Director of the CASA-Cuba Exchange Program at the College.

Education

Ph.D. Yale University

M.Phil. Yale University

M.A. University of Southern California

B.A. University of California, Santa Barbara

Publications

Edited Volumes

Isthmian Saberes: Embodied Knowledge and Archival Praxis in América Central, with K. Corinealdi and P. López Oro, NACLA Report on the Americas, Vol. 57, No. 2, Summer 2025. 

¿Dónde están? NACLA: Report on the Americas, Vol. 56, Issue 2, Summer 2024.

Peer-Reviewed Articles

"Panamá, Exhausted" NACLA: Report on the Americas, Vol. 54, Issue 4, 2022, pp. 369-375.

"Shock Mobilities During Moments of Acute UncertaintyGeopolitics, 2022, pp. 1-24.

"Vital minimums: El Salvador between youth and old ageLatino Studies 19, Issue 4, 2021, pp. 518-540.

"How to Read Equipo Maíz: Cartooning the Political in El SalvadorRadical History Review 141, 2021, pp. 176-202.

"Waterproofing the State: Migration, River-Borders, and Ecologies of ControlComparative American Studies: An International Journal, Vol. 18, No. 1, 2021, pp. 59-74.

"El Salvador's Hydrosocial CrisisNACLA: Report on the Americas, Vol. 52, Issue 3, 2020, pp. 317-323.

"Deracination/Elimination: Colonial Terror and the 1930s Race Laws in El SalvadorAmerican Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 42, No. 2, 2018, pp. 39-56.

Select Book Chapters

"Banana Republicans and the Capitol Riot" in Robert Carley, Beenash Jafri, et al. (eds.), Cultural Studies in the Interregnum, Philadelphia: Temple University Press, pp. 107-119, 2025.

"El Dinero Apropiado para Hacer Dinero: Dólares Estadounidenses y Bitcoins en El Salvador del Siglo XXI" with David Pedersen, in A. Wilkis (ed.), Dolarizaciones: Historias nacionales de una moneda global. Buenos Aires: CALAS/CLACSO, pp. 267-312. 

"Honduras: Inequality and Social Crisis" in Harvey F. Kline and Christine J. Wade (eds.), Latin American Politics and Development, 10th Edition, 2022.

"Central America in Two Negatives" in Gloria E. Chacón and Mónica Albizúrez Gil, Teaching Central American Literature in a Global Context, 2022.

Select Public Writing

"Beyond the Iron Fist: Mining the New El Salvador" ReVista: Harvard Review of Latin America, Feb. 25, 2025.

"With Bukele Consolidated, Salvadorans Enter Uncharted Terrain" El Faro English, Feb. 7. 2024.

"La República del Bitcoin" Jacobin América Latina, June 25, 2022.

"No One is Safe in Bukele's Gang WarNACLA, June 23, 2022. [Italiano]

"Decolonial Groundwork: On Geo Maher's Anticolonial EruptionsNACLA, April 29, 2022.

"The Value of a VolcanoNACLA & El Faro, November 1, 2021.

"Bitcoin Sanctuaries" New Left Review: Sidecar, September 15, 2021. [Español] [Italiano]

"There Is No Democratic Tradition in El SalvadorEl Faro, May 8, 2021. [Italiano]

"Why Should the U.S. Election Matter to Central Americans?" El Faro, Oct. 30, 2020. [Español] [Italiano]

"La Crisis Hidrosocial de El SalvadorNACLA, September 23, 2020.

"Endless Coup, Permanent Struggle: On Nina Lakhani's Who Killed Berta Cáceres?Los Angeles Review of Books, Sept. 3, 2020.

"Pandemic statelessness in MesoamericaRouted Magazine, June 20, 2020. [Español] [Italiano]

"On Waving the White FlagSocial Text: Periscope, June 5, 2020.

"El Salvador's Two Pandemics: Maximum InsecurityReVista: Harvard Review of Latin America, May 8, 2020. [Español] [Italiano]

"El Salvador Needs More than Savvy Messaging" El Faro, April 9, 2020.

"Deportation ContagionsNACLA: Report on the Americas, March 26, 2020.


"Nayib Bukele and the Punitive Option in El SalvadorThe Abusable Past, March 2, 2020.

"Salvadoran Militarism and Bukele's Post-PostwarEl Faro, February 13, 2020.

Speaking Engagements

"Terrorism Containment Center in El Salvador" Al-Jazeera English, Feb. 3, 2023.

"The Shadow of D'Aubuisson, Part 2Latino Media Collective, Aug. 12, 2022.

"Crypto: People and PowerAl-Jazeera English, July 5, 2022.

"The Shadow of D'Aubuisson, Part 1Latino Media Collective, May 27, 2022.

"The CAFTA Template: Understanding Central American Migration in a Time of Dispossession, Repression, and Environmental CrisisThe Border Chronicle, May 26, 2022.

"Social Control in El Salvador" Latino Rebels Radio, April 7, 2022.

"Interview on El Salvador's Bitcoin experimentThe Crypto Syllabus, Dec. 20 2021.

"Entrevista sobre criptomonedas en América LatinaEl Salto Diario, Dec. 20, 2021.

"El Salvador: a legalização da Bitcoin e a fragilização da DemocraciaShifter, Nov. 29, 2021.

"Jorge E. Cuéllar on El Salvador and BitcoinA Correction Podcast, Nov. 23, 2021.

"Hasta Encontrarles: The Caravan of Mothers of Missing Migrants and Root Causes of Migration" Mahindra Center for the Humanities, Harvard University, Oct. 21, 2021

"El Salvador Becomes First Nation to Make Bitcoin Legal Tender Amid Growing AuthoritarianismDemocracy Now!, Sept. 16, 2021.

"El Salvador's Bitcoin Law" Al-Jazeera English, Sept. 7, 2021.

"How the Pandemic Made Us Even Less Equal: Challenges and Opportunities in Africa and the Americas," Drexel University, Feb. 26, 2021.

"On Disaster and the Future of Central America" Greater Philadelphia Latin American Studies Consortium Distinguished Lecture at Villanova University, The College of New Jersey, University of Pennsylvania, and Temple University, Feb. 22-26, 2021.

"As Pandemic Epicenter Shifts to Latin America, Gov'ts Use COVID-19 as Pretext for Police Repression" Democracy Now!, May 29, 2020. 

Contact

jorge.cuellar@dartmouth.edu
Winifred Raven, Room 219
HB 6026

Departments

Latin American, Latino & Caribbean Studies

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