I am interested in the relationship between art and ideology, political subjectivity and organization, and hegemony and national self-determination in the neo-imperial and post-colonial worlds. My writing engages with debates in the fields of political philosophy, art theory, and Latin American studies. I am currently at work on two book-length studies. The first, tentatively titled The Inorganic: Collective Life under Capitalism, examines the concept of property operative in the work of Latin American thinkers who considered the psychic, ethical, and political effects of capitalist expansion beginning in the second half of the twentieth century. The second, Toward a Popular Art, explores the relationship between art and hegemony in Chile during the country’s extensive period of popular front politics in the work of muralists, printmakers, and intellectuals invested in defining both art and the purportedly popular subject of politics.