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BRENDA SELENA LARA, PH.D.

Cultural Historian, Literary Theorist, Philosopher

Forest
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ABOUT ME

Ph.D. Chicana/o and Central American Studies UCLA

Brenda Selena Lara (she/they/ella) is a UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellow at UC Santa Cruz’s Literature Department. She received her doctoral degree from UCLA’s Cesar Chavez Department of Chicana/o and Central American Studies with an emphasis in Gender Studies and Critical Theory. Born and raised in South Los Angeles, her upbringing influences her historical, theoretical, and literary research analyzing LGBTQ+ Latinxs’ lives, knowledge, and deaths. Her projects have been awarded the IUPLR/UIC Mellon Dissertation Fellowship, UCLA’s Dissertation Year Fellowship, and the Center for Black, Brown, and Queer Studies Postdoctoral Fellowship.

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PUBLICATIONS

Selected Papers

HUESERAS, MESTIZAS, AND LLORONAS: SURVIVING DEADLY OCCUPANTS AND SÉANCING FEMINIST SPECTERS IN THE BORDERLANDS

This article intersects Chicana Feminism, Latinx folklore, and hauntology to analyze cultural production that centers on Chicana, Mexican, and Indigenous women's supernatural occupancy of women's bodies and homes. Utilizing borderlands theory alongside hauntology, I contend that Latina feminist writers and directors utilize specters to demonstrate the borderlands' violent and liberatory contradictions in the United States, Mexico, and Central America.

MUJERES Y MADNESS: DECONSTRUCTING CHICANA TEORIA ON LOCURA, QUEERNESS, AND LOVE

I explore the intersections of Chicanidad, queerness, and mental health as I navigate locura as a "typology in Borderlands." Drawing from queer Chicana feminist theorists, including Gloria Anzaldúa, Cherrie Moraga, and Alicia Gaspar de Alba, explicate locura teoria within Chicana scholarship.

CIGUANABAS, REFUGEES, AND OTHER HAUNTINGS: THREE SALVADORAN WOMEN'S RESISTANCE AGAINST HETEROPATRIARCHY

This article highlights the experiences, testimonies, and memories of three Salvadoran women refugees. Among these women is Reyna Marroquin, who migrated to the United States in the 1960s and who was murdered in New York City by her employer, who hid her body in a barrel for decades. Alongside Marroquin, I examine the lives of Jade Quintanilla and Francia Camila, two trans women who are currently residing in Tijuana, Mexico seeking asylum into the United States as a survival strategy against transphobic violence.

PRESENTATIONS

Selected Academic Conferences

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Ghostly Love in Academia: Dr. Lora Romero's Archival Justice, Activist Solidarity, and Public Haunting

American Studies Association

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Haunting Pedagogies: Teaching Hauntology as Feminist Praxis & Resistance

National Women's Studies Association

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Mis Ninos!: A Content Textual Analysis of La Llorona Oral Histories

National Chicana and Chicano Studies Association

INTERESTED IN LEARNING MORE

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