Catherine Sue Ramirez

User Catherine Sue Ramirez

User Professor

User831-459-3020

User cathysue@ucsc.edu

she, her, her, hers, herself

Social Sciences Division

Professor

Faculty

Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas
History of Art/Visual Culture

Catherine
Catherine
Catherine
University

Merrill College Academic Building
108

On leave 2025-2026

Merrill/Crown Faculty Services

I'm Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies (LALS) at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

From 2021 until 2025, I chaired the LALS Department. Previously, I directed UC Santa Cruz’s Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas (formerly the Chicano Latino Research Center).

In addition to UC Santa Cruz's Excellence in Teaching Award, I've won awards from the Ford Foundation, the Mellon Foundation, the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University, and the Phi Beta Kappa Society. 

A first-generation college graduate, I have a PhD in ethnic studies and a BA in English from the University of California, Berkeley. 

For my CV and more information about me and my work, please visit my website.

  • Latinx literature, history, visual culture, and performance
  • Immigration and assimilation 
  • Zoot suits and style politics
  • Historical memory
  • Latinxfuturism 

I'm the author of Assimilation: An Alternative History (University of California Press, 2020) and The Woman in the Zoot Suit: Gender, Nationalism, and the Cultural Politics of Memory (Duke University Press, 2009).

With Sylvanna M. Falcón, Steven C. McKay, Juan Poblete, and Felicity Amaya Schaeffer, I'm coeditor of Precarity and Belonging: Labor, Migration, and Noncitizenship (Rutgers University Press, 2021). With A. Naomi Paik, I co-edit the Borderlands Section of Public Books

Since 2002, I've published more than a dozen essays about Latinx speculative fiction, a field I helped build with my catalytic 2004 article, "Deus Ex Machina: Tradition, Technology, and the Chicanafuturist Art of Marion C. Martinez."

With Jonathan X. Inda and the support of a Crossing Latinidades grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, I'm coediting a volume titled Bioprecarity: Latinx Migrants, Embodied Vulnerability, and Lived Experience

I'm also studying the life and work of Czarina Wilpert (née Huerta), an extraordinary and prescient scholar of migration, labor, and race in Germany.

In addition to my academic publications, I've written for The New York TimesThe Atlantic, The Washington Post, and Zócalo Public Square


 


  • Latinx literature
  • Immigrant storytelling
  • Speculative fiction, Afrofuturism and Latinxfuturism
  • Immigration and assimilation
  • Introduction to Latin American and Latinx studies
  • Comparison as method in the humanities and qualitative social sciences
  • Research in Practice 
  • Global Internship (Barcelona, Spain, and Buenos Aires, Argentina)
  • Latin American Spain (Madrid, Spain)

 

Last modified: Feb 12, 2025