Image of Daniel Santiago Sáenz, M.Phil

Daniel Santiago Sáenz, M.Phil

Predoctoral Fellow

Main Focus

  • History of Education 
  • Preaching and Evangelization
  • Early Modern Art Theory
  • Transatlantic Studies
  • Indigenous and Postcolonial Theories and Methods

Research Project

“quitar la raíz de tan mala memoria”: Polygraphic Dynamics of Education and Colonization in New Spain, 1521–1600

Curriculum Vitae

Daniel Santiago Sáenz holds a BA in Religion and an MA in Art History from Concordia University and is currently completing a PhD in Latin American and Iberian Cultures and Comparative Literature at Columbia University in the City of New York. His dissertation examines Franciscan pedagogical practices and visual innovations in New Spain, with particular attention to Diego Valadés’s Rhetorica Christiana (1579). Central to this project are the reshaping of word–image relations, the emphasis on the body as a locus of proselytizing and legal discourses, and the role of alphabetization as both a space of conquest and a site of survivance. He has received fellowships from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Société et culture. In 2024, he was awarded Columbia’s Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, the University’s highest recognition for innovation in pedagogy and design.

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