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April 29, 2002
Nájera-Ramírez named codirector of CLRC
By Jennifer McNulty
Olga Nájera-Ramírez's appointment this spring as codirector of the
UC Santa Cruz Chicano/Latino Research Center (CLRC) is the latest milestone for this
Santa Cruz County native.
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| As a child, Nájera-Ramírez and her five siblings picked peas at
Cascade Ranch each summer to help her mother make ends meet. Photo:
Willis Preston Campbell |
Nájera-Ramírez, an associate professor of anthropology who specializes
in Mexican folklore, is eager to strengthen connections between the university and
the community in her new position as codirector of the CLRC. Established in 1992,
the center has fostered collaborative work among scholars in the United States, Mexico,
Central America, and South America.
"We are doing wonderful, innovative work, and I want to reach out to community
members," she said. "People in Mexico City know what we're doing, but do
people in Santa Cruz and Watsonville know?"
Much of the center's work focuses on transborder issues that reflect the movement
of populations back and forth across the borders of North, Central, and South America.
"We're responding to reality," said Nájera-Ramírez. Some
of the other research likely to be of interest to the Central Coast region includes
in-depth interviews with Watsonville workers in the post-NAFTA era; research on the
impacts of globalization; gender, ethnicity, and sexuality; border studies; and media
and popular culture.
Nájera-Ramírez's academic work has been informed by her life experience.
Before becoming an anthropologist, fieldwork had an entirely different meaning for
this daughter of Mexican immigrants who was born and raised in Davenport, 10 miles
north of Santa Cruz. As a child, Nájera-Ramírez and her five siblings
picked peas at Cascade Ranch each summer to help her mother make ends meet. Her father
had died of cancer when Nájera-Ramírez was eight. She recalls her mother
admonishing the six youngsters to "get a good education" to escape work
in the fields.
Nájera-Ramírez and her siblings took the message to heart. All attended
college, and three earned advanced degrees, including a law degree from Harvard University.
While an undergraduate at UCSC, Nájera-Ramírez joined the Mexican
folklorico dance group, Los Mejicas, which became an outlet through which she integrated
her interests in folklore, social history, Mexico, and education. After completing
a double major in history and Latin American studies with honors, she pursued her
interest in dance at the Universidad de Guadalajara.
Inspired to continue her studies at the University of Texas at Austin, Nájera-Ramírez
earned a master's in Latin American studies and a doctorate in anthropology with
a concentration in folklore. She returned to Santa Cruz as an assistant professor
of anthropology at UCSC in 1989. The author of La Fiesta de los Tastoanes: Critical
Encounters in Mexican Festival Performance, Nájera-Ramírez conducts
research on Mexican cultural traditions. A member of the Chicana/Latina Feminisms
Research Cluster, Nájera-Ramírez is coeditor of the forthcoming anthology,
"Chicana Feminisms: Disruption in Dialogue," which includes innovative
interdisciplinary scholarship. With Norma E. Cantú, she has just published
Chicana Traditions: Continuity and Change.
At UCSC, Nájera-Ramírez has helped shape the Latin American and
Latino Studies Department and the CLRC. Over the years, the CLRC has gained international
recognition for transdisciplinary and cross-border scholarship on Chicano and Latino
issues. Sixty-three UCSC faculty members and 16 graduate students in the fields of
sociology, literature, education, anthropology, and history of consciousness are
doing work on Chicano/Latino themes under the auspices of CLRC, said Nájera-Ramírez,
who codirects the center with Patricia Zavella, a professor of Latin American and
Latino studies at UCSC.
The center sponsors many cultural events that are open to the public, including
film screenings, lectures, and workshops. For a schedule of events, visit the CLRC
web site.
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