Daniela Gutiérrez Flores

A woman with a striped shirt and sweater

Position Title
Assistant Professor of Spanish

she/ella
607 Sproul
Office Hours
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 3:30pm - 4:30pm.
Bio

Daniela Gutiérrez Flores specializes in early modern Spanish and colonial Latin American studies, with an emphasis on the relations between texts, food, and the culture of labor. She is interested in tracing the cultural meanings of food through textual and social practices, visual and material culture, focusing on the different forms of embodied and intellectual labor implicated in food culture. Her current book project, A Century of Cooks: The Birth of Modern Cooking and the Making of the Spanish Empire, argues that early modernity marked the emergence of the modern notion of cooking as a socially respectable and culturally valuable occupation, akin to an art and form of knowledge. It demonstrates that, while this view of cooking challenged preceding epistemological frameworks that relegated it to an insignificant activity,  such a dignification was only possible through a politics of exclusion rooted in gender, race, and social class.

In addition to her book manuscript, she is currently developing two new research projects. At the intersection of Food and Animal Studies, the first examines the presence of cats in early modern Spanish cultural imagination. It poses the kitchen as a porous space of interspecies and interclass relations through an understanding of the cat as an animal worker intimately tied to the underclasses. She is also developing a micro cultural history of mondongo, a popular tripe stew with origins dating back to the sixteenth century, situating it within the broader context of Afro-Hispanic foodways. Professor Gutiérrez Flores is also interested in using food and sensorial engagement as pedagogical tools in teaching early modern culture and history. 

Daniela is currently the lead Principal Investigator of the Mellon-funded Sawyer Seminar Thinking Food at the Intersections: Justice and Critical Food Studies, an interdisciplinary research initiative that unearths the systemic roots of food inequity through humanities-based programs.

 

Education and Degree(s)
  • 2022 - Ph.D. in Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian Studies, University of Chicago
  • 2012 - B.A. Hispanic Languages/Literatures. Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, México
Honors and Awards
  • 2024-2025. Lead Principal Investigator. "Thinking Food @ the Intersections: Justice and Critical Food Studies". Mellon-Sawyer Seminar
  • 2024-2025. Faculty Research Fellowship. UC Davis Humanities Institute.
  • 2024-2025. Short-Term Research Fellow. John Carter Brown Library, Brown University.
  • 2024. Summer Faculty Research Funding. UC Humanities Research Institute.
  • 2023. University Instructional Improvement Mini-Grant for “Food, Writing and Culture in the Early Modern Spanish Atlantic,” University of California Davis, 2023.
  • 2022. Diversity Grant, Renaissance Society of America.
  • 2021. Dissertation Completion Fellowship, The Mellon Foundation.
  • 2021. Stuart Tave Teaching Fellowship, The College. University of Chicago.
  • 2020. Culinary Historians of New York Association Scholar’s Grant, funded by the Julia Child Foundation for Gastronomy and the Culinary Arts.
  • 2018. Tinker Foundation Field Research Grant.
Courses
  • SPA 100 Principles of Hispanic Literature and Criticism
  • SPA 159 Food, Writing and Culture in the Early Modern Spanish Atlantic
  • SPA 133N Golden Age Spanish Literature
  • SPA 159 Brujas y hechicheras
  • SPA 130 Literatura española hasta 1700
  • SPA 274 Critical Approaches to Food in Early Modern Hispanic Studies
  • SPA 224 The Five Senses and the Early Modern Spanish Atlantic
  • HUM 180 Women and Food in Latin America
Research Interests & Expertise
  • Early Modern Spanish Literature and Culture
  • Colonial Latin American Literatre and Culture
  • Food Studies
  • Critical Race Studies
  • Gender and Sexuality Studies
  • History of the Senses
  • Experiential Pedagogies
Publications
  • "Tales of the Kitchen Underbelly: the Picaresque Discourse of Cooking.” La Corónica: A Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages/Literatures/Cultures. Vol. 49, Number 3, Summer 2021: 181-210.
  • “In laudem Serenissimi Ferdinandi Hispaniarum regis (1494)”. Catalogue Entry. In Seeing Race Before Race: Visual Culture and the Racial Matrix in the Premodern World. Edited by Noémie Ndiaye and Lika Markey. Tempe, Arizona: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Press, 2023.
  • "Dietas transatlánticas: El descubrimiento europeo de los alimentos americanos.” Ciencia Hoy, Vol. 29 núm. 170, mayo - junio 2020
  • “The Culinary Devotion of Sor Marianita de San José: Writing and Cooking in 18th c. Mexico.” Beyond Cooking: Global Histories of Food-making and Gender across the Early Modern World. Edited by Melissa Calaresu and Marta Manzanares. Amsterdam University Press. In press.
  • “Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz y el neobarroco cubano.” Parte y contraparte: cultura colonial e imaginación latinoamericana. Edited by Francisco Hernández and Isaac Cantón. Editorial Iberoamericana-Vervuert. In press.
Membership and Service
  • Executive Committee, LLC 16th- and 17th-Century Spanish and Iberian Poetry and Prose Forum. Modern Languages Association.
  • Medieval and Early Modern Studies Committee. UC Davis.
  • 2023-2024. Job Placement Committee. Spanish and Portuguese Department.
  • Association for the Study of Food and Society
  • Renaissance Society of America