Edwin Murillo is associate professor of Spanish at the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga.
"""A well-researched book claiming a space long overdue to the significance of existentialism in the Latin American cannon. Murillo, a devoted scholar with a fine intellectual thread, analyses the works of authors like Machado de Assis, Labrador Ruiz and Bombal to reshape our understanding of existentialism since the nineteenth century and claim its importance in the Latin American letters.""-- ""Belén Rodríguez Mourelo, professor of Spanish, Penn State Berks"" ""This is an enriching work that takes readers on a journey through the realms of Latin American literature and existentialism, presenting an in-depth analysis of how Latin American existentialism is misconstrued in the canon ... Effortlessly weaving together literature and philosophical insights, creating an engaging exploration of the existential themes that permeate many Latin American literary works from the 1860s to the late 1930s, Murillo brings to light the profound sense of existential questioning embedded within the literary works of these key literary figures.""-- ""Dr Maria R. Matz, University of Massachusetts Lowell"" ""In Latin America and Existentialism, Murillo presents readers with a hemispheric archive spanning the late-nineteenth century through the 1930s ... This study produces a carefully woven and nuanced argument that takes readers on a literary-philosophical journey that adeptly moves from Brazil and Colombia to Cuba and Chile, an indispensable reference for those interested in the convergence of Latin American literature and philosophy.""-- ""Juan G. Ramos, professor of Spanish at the College of the Holy Cross (USA)"""