ArturoAldama

  • Associate Professor
  • CHICANX / LATINX STUDIES
Address

Pronouns: he / him / his

Office Hours

Education

Ph.D.,听University of California, Berkeley - Ethnic Studies, 1996
M.A., University of California, Berkeley - Ethnic Studies, 1993
B.A., Evergreen State College - English-American Studies, 1988

Research Interests

US/M茅xico border studies, immigration; Chicanx popular culture, film, music, performativity, and indigeneity. US Latinx cultural studies, and Latin American subaltern studies, decolonial theories of identity, race, and gender.


Dr. Arturo J. Aldama, born in Mexico City and grew up in Sacramento, California, serves as an Associate Professor and served as Associate Chair of Ethnic Studies at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 and recently served as Director of CSERA (Center for Studies in Ethnicity and Race in the Americas). He received an听MA and PhD in Ethnic Studies from UC Berkeley in 1996.听


What's New

As we are in 2025, the work we do in critical Ethnic Studies is even more vital given how white supremacy, toxic masculinities, transphobia, xenophobia and misogynoir continues to be a determinative force in electoral politics in the US settler colonialist nation state. It is beyond outrageous how much an antisemitic theory of the Great Replacement has been deployed by the growing fascism in the United States to drive the demonization of BIPOC migrants as 鈥渞eplacers鈥 for white Christian Americans. A May 2022 shooting of African American shoppers in Buffalo, New York, evinces the impact and influence of these white supremacist discourses. According to reports, the eighteen-year-old shooter鈥檚 180-page manifesto has recognizable tropes of replacement theory. 听The shooter felt compelled to murder the shoppers to stop the 鈥渞eplacement鈥 of white Christian families and鈥攇iven the huge support of these racist conspiracy theories in the Republican Party鈥攚hite Christian Republican voters. The replacement theory parallels the ongoing racist hype of protecting the southern border from 鈥渋nvasion鈥 by nonwhite folks, a refrain heard in Trump鈥檚 political rallies and from many elected officials. Replacement theory and the racist hype of 鈥渋nvasion鈥 were also seen motivators in the horrific mass murder of Latinx people in El Paso, Texas, on August 3, 2019.

The time for community, solidarity and coalition building is never more present challenge the ever-growing archipelago of white supremacist, transphobic, xenophobic, and misogynistic laws and statutes at state and federal levels. Republican-led states feel emboldened to outlaw critical race theory, pass transphobic legislation, abolish attempts at gender inclusivity in schools and public offices, and pass extreme anti-abortion legalization that criminalizes women鈥檚 right to choose and doctors' Hippocratic oaths. We welcome all students to take out classes that center BIPOC lives, histories, epistemologies and world views with an intersectional frame.

Here is the url for the most recent book that was a collaboration with another ethnic studies faculty and featured some Ethnic Studies/兔子先生传媒文化作品 scholars

Here is an excerpt of the CFP for the current book project titled,Towards Educational Liberation for Latine/x/o Youth: An Intersectional Approach.鈥 This refereed, edited volume seeks to build a scholarly and activist community of folx committed to liberatory educational practices for Latine/x/o youth grounded in an intersectional episteme that considers the categories of race, gender, class, sexuality, and dis/ability justice. Latinx youth make up the largest population in the US after non-Hispanic whites (almost 30% in 2023). However, one must question if the social and cultural needs of Latinx youth are being supported in the classroom and within school experiences. Do Latinx youth see themselves, their assets, imaginaries, and social justice needs reflected in the ever-shifting curriculum and pedagogical practices?

Additionally, it is also important to examine whether schools view Latinx families and communities as co-partners in a child鈥檚 educational journey and as assets to the school environment. This perspective not only fosters educational empowerment but also decolonizes white supremacist understandings of identity, community, and education.

"What's New" updated February听2025


Selected Publications

Books

Aldama, Arturo.听,听Duke University Press (Latin American Otherwise Series).

Aldama, Arturo.听, Indiana University Press, 2003.

Edited Volumes

Aldama, Arturo J., and Aldama, Frederick Luis,听eds.听, The University of Arizona Press, 2020.

Aldama, Arturo.听Ed,听, Indiana University Press, 2003.

Aldama, Arturo, Lourdes Gutierrez-Najera, and M. Bianet Castellanos, eds.听. Introduction (co-author) and a single author chapter in book, not a reprint on US nativism and criminalization of immigrants. The University of Arizona Press, 2012. Inaugural book in Critical Indigenous Studies.

Aldama, Arturo.听.听Principal Editor. Indiana University Press (2012). 听Introduction and a single chapter will be published in this book.

Refereed Articles

Aldama, Arturo.听鈥淐ognition, Fear and Praxis: A Response to Children of Men.: World Narrative Fiction. Austin. UT Press, appeared in print October 30, 2011.

Other Editorial Experience

He served as the popular culture, art and film editor of听听(Greenwood, 2004), a 400,000 word, multi-volume project that is the first of its kind.

He served as Editor for CU press book,听(2011).

Special issue,听听and beyond. Bad Subjects (UC Berkeley). Lead Editor and contributor. July 2011.

He also served as an associate contributing editor for听.听Executive Editor. Gary Keller. Bilingual Review Press, 2003.