Ana Paulina Lee
Assistant Professor of Writing and Digital Humanities
- Department: Comp. Literature, English, and Creative Writing

Professor Lee joined the American University of Paris in 2025. She previously taught Latin American literature and culture at Columbia University for eight years and was a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana. Her research moves between literature and history, examining how storiesâarchival, fictional, oralâshape the legal imagination, social life, and urban experience in the Americas. Working across genres and geographies, Lee traces how narrative functions as both a record and a force of social transformation.
As a scholar working at the crossroads of literature and history, Professor Lee takes an interdisciplinary approach, weaving together literary analysis with histories of labor and migration, law, performance, and urban studies. She is the author of Mandarin Brazil (Stanford University Press), which won the 2019 Best Book in the Humanities from the Latin American Studies Association. Her current book project,ÌęBlack Magic City, forthcoming with Duke University Press, explores the logic of magic in shaping Brazilian republican law and literature. Her work has received the support of the National Endowment for the Humanities, the David Larson Fellowship from the Kluge Center at the Library of Congress, the Social Sciences Research Council, and the Fulbright. Lee has published non-fiction narratives, research articles, essays, and translations in the Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies,ÌęThe Drama Review, Asian Diasporic Visual Cultures,ÌęThe Blackwell Companion to Luis Buñuel, The Global Studies Journal, e-misfĂ©rica, and Transmodernity: Journal of Peripheral Cultural Production of the Luso-Hispanic World.
Education/Degrees
Ph.D. University of Southern California
M.A. New York University
B.A. Binghamton University
Publications
Books:
- Black Magic City: A Legal History of Spells in Modern Brazil (Duke University Press, forthcoming)
- Mandarin Brazil: Race, Representation, and Memory (Stanford University Press, 2018)
Articles:
- âThe Yellow Peril in Brazilian Popular Music.â Vraies Couleurs et Cultures,Ìęedited by Samuel Ludwig.
- âUrban Sorcery, Segregation, and Spectacle in Twentieth-Century Rio de Janeiro.â Luso-Brazilian Review, 58, no. 2 (2022): 118-143.
- âSocially Engaged Oral History Pedagogy Amid the COVID-19 Pandemic.â Oral History Review (2020): DOI: 10.1080/00940798.2020.1793678
- âA estĂ©tica da exclusĂŁo: imigrantes chineses em culturas visuais brasileiras na virada do sĂ©culo XX.Â ŽĄŽÚ°ùŽÇ-ĂČőŸ±ČčÌę60 (2020): 149-187.
- âMemory and Non-Place: Visual Testimonies of Japanese Latin American Internment during WWII.â Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies 27, no. 3 (2019): 1-15.
- âMemoryscapes of Race: Black Radical Parading Cultures of New Orleans.â The Drama Review 61, no. 2 (Summer 2017): 71-86.
- âThe Afterlives of Chico Rei.â Transmodernity,ÌęJournal of Peripheral Cultural Production of the Luso Hispanic World 2, no. 1 (2012): 1-13.
- âLiterary Diplomacy in 19th Century Portuguese-Chinese Relations.â Connections Across the Spanish Pacific to the 1800s: Asia, Iberia, and Latin America,Ìęedited by Ana Rodriguez
- Rodriguez and Leo J. Garofalo. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
- âTranspacific Relations and Chinese Labor in the AmĂ©ricas.â Routledge Companion to Nineteenth Century Latin America,Ìęedited by Graciela Montaldo and Agnes Lugo-Ortiz.  New York: Routledge, 2024.
- âGlobal South Feminisms in Maxine Hong Kingstonâs The Woman Warrior and Patricia GalvĂŁoâs Parque Industrial.â Chinese Texts in the World,Ìęedited by Stephen Roddy and Cai Zong- qi,Ìę 223-241. Leiden: Brill, 2022.
Research Areas
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Literature and the social imagination in the Americas
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Slavery, emancipation, and the legacies of colonialism
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Magic and the state in Latin American cultural texts
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Asian and African diasporas in Latin America
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Memory, architecture, and the afterlives of colonial cities
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Magical realism, speculative fiction, and occult logics
Awards, Fellowships and Grants
- David B. Larson Fellowship in Health and Spirituality, Kluge Center, United States Library of Congress (2025-2026)
- National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship (2025)
- Social Sciences Research Council, Inaugural Recipient of Interdisciplinary Projects in the Social Sciences (2020-2023)
- Institute for Ideas and Imagination Fellowship, Columbia University in Paris, France (2021-2022)
- Provostâs Tsunoda Senior Fellowship, Visiting Scholar, Waseda University,ÌęTokyo, Japan (2019)
- Heyman Center Fellow, The Heyman Center for the Humanities, Columbia University (2017-2018)Â Â Â Â Â Â
- Fulbright, Lisbon, Portugal (2013-2014)Â Â Â Â Â