Office Hours: Monday - Friday | 8:00am - 5:00pm
Hispanic Heritage Month
Our History is Your History
Texas State University observes National Hispanic Heritage Month from September 15 – October 15 which celebrates the histories, cultures, and contributions of Americans with Hispanic and Latine ancestry from Spain, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central and South America.
On September 17, 1968, Congress passed Public Law 90-48, officially authorizing and requesting the president to issue annual proclamations declaring September 15 and 16 to mark the beginning of National Hispanic Heritage Week and called upon the “people of the United States, especially the educational community, to observe such week with appropriate ceremonies and activities.” Our very own Texas State alumnus, President Lyndon B. Johnson, issued the first Hispanic Heritage Week presidential proclamation the same day in 1968.
Throughout the United States and the world, many communities participate in national celebrations, festivals, gatherings, conferences, and in honor of our those who fought for independence, liberty, and social justice. Chile, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua celebrate their independence in September.
Calendar of Events
- Location:
- Performing Arts Center; Recital Hall
- Cost:
- Public: $10 //TXST Students / Faculty / Staff: $7
- Contact:
- Eugene Lee
mreugenelee@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- Department of Theatre and Dance
- Location:
- Brazos Hall; Atrium
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Tammy Gonzales tammyg@txstate.edu
- Campus Sponsor:
- Center for the Study of the Southwest
Emmanual Ortega Rodriguez
Emmanuel Ortega is the Marilynn Thoma Scholar and Assistant Professor in Art of the Spanish Americas at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and a Scholar in Residence at the Newberry Library for 2022-2023. Ortega lectures nationally and internationally on Mexican landscape painting, and Novohispanic Franciscan martyr paintings. Ortega has curated in Mexico and the United States; his latest endeavor is the exhibition titled Contemporary Ex-Votos: Devotion Beyond Medium, which opened at the New Mexico State University Art Museum and will travel in 2023 and 2024. His book project, Visualizing Franciscan Anxiety and the Distortion of Native Resistance: The Domesticating Mission is under contract with Routledge. Click here for more information
- Location:
- LBJ Student Center; 3-14.1
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Dr. Gloria Martinez-Ramos
(512)- 245- 2470
gm21@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- Center for Diversity and Gender Studies
- Location:
- Avery Building; Avery Building 256
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Department of Organization, Workforce, and Leadership Studies (OWLS)
owls@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- HSI Community Council
Come hear from the President's HSI Community Council, the Vice President for TXST’s Round Rock Campus, and the Department of OWLS!
Somos Tejas State t-shirts, snacks, and refreshments will be provided, first-come, first-served. Click here for more information
- Location:
- LBJ Ballroom
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Karina Ogunlana
getinvolved@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- HSI Community Council and Student Involvement and Engagement
Free food and Somos Tejas State Shirts on a first-come, first-serve basis. Click here for more information
- Location:
- Flowers Hall; 231
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Tammy Gonzales tammyg@txstate.edu
- Campus Sponsor:
- Center for the Study of the Southwest
- Location:
- Bruce and Gloria Ingram Hall
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Kristina Ayala, gen_stem@txstate.edu
Lauren Ibarra, Director of Transfer Initiatives, transfercenter@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- Generación STEM
In addition to the opportunity to connect with your Transfer Ambassador at the Transfer Center table, the event will feature:
- Networking activities
- The opportunity to meet STEM student focused programs, student organizations and resources
- Networking with other students, post-docs, faculty, and staff, and
- Light refreshments
Advance registration is requested.
Click here for more information
- Location:
- Bruce and Gloria Ingram Hall; First Floor Lobby
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Kristina Ayala (gen_stem@txstate.edu)
- Campus Sponsor:
- Generación STEM
This event will feature:
- Networking activities
- Opportunity to meet STEM student focused programs, student organizations and resources
- Networking with other students, post-docs, faculty, and staff
- Light refreshments
Advance registration is requested.
- Location:
- Flowers Hall; 230
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Tammy Gonzales
tammyg@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- Center for the Study of the Southwest
- Location:
- Flowers Hall; 230
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Tammy Gonzales tammyg@txstate.edu
- Campus Sponsor:
- Center for the Study of the Southwest
- Location:
- Flowers Hall; 230
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Tammy Gonzales tammyg@txstate.edu
- Campus Sponsor:
- Center for the Study of the Southwest
- Location:
- Flowers Hall; 230
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Tammy Gonzales Tammyg@txstate.edu
- Campus Sponsor:
- Center for the Study of the Southwest
- Location:
- Music Building; MUS 236 (Recital Hall)
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Daveda Karanas, Voice Area Coordinator
512 245-3378 - Campus Sponsor:
- School of Music
She has released eleven albums and published numerous scholarly editions of scores and books, including The Latin American Art Song: Sounds of the Imagined Nations, the go-to history on its subject.
Patricia has led a crusade to include underrepresented repertoires and creators in music curricula and concert venues, having performed worldwide and founding and directing the Barcelona Festival of Song, which focuses on studying art songs in Spanish, Catalan, and Portuguese.
Her interdisciplinary training as a musician, musicologist, and physician and her interest in technology led her to develop numerous creative projects and collaborations with artists and scientists worldwide. An example of this is her newest book: We are what we listen to: the impact of music on individual and social health.
Patricia holds a Ph.D. in musicology from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and a Medical Doctor’s degree from the Escuela Colombiana de Medicina. Click here for more information
- Location:
- Music Building; MUS 236 (Recital Hall)
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Daveda Karanas, Voice Area Coordinator
512 245-3378 - Campus Sponsor:
- School of Music
She has released eleven albums and published numerous scholarly editions of scores and books, including The Latin American Art Song: Sounds of the Imagined Nations, the go-to history on its subject.
Patricia has led a crusade to include underrepresented repertoires and creators in music curricula and concert venues, having performed worldwide and founding and directing the Barcelona Festival of Song, which focuses on studying art songs in Spanish, Catalan, and Portuguese.
Her interdisciplinary training as a musician, musicologist, and physician and her interest in technology led her to develop numerous creative projects and collaborations with artists and scientists worldwide. An example of this is her newest book: We are what we listen to: the impact of music on individual and social health.
Patricia holds a Ph.D. in musicology from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and a Medical Doctor’s degree from the Escuela Colombiana de Medicina. Click here for more information
- Location:
- LBJ Student Center Amphitheater
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Monica Flores, ozv6@txstate.edu
- Campus Sponsor:
- SACA
- Location:
- Music Building; MUS 236 (Recital Hall)
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Daveda Karanas, Voice Area Coordinator
512 245-3378 - Campus Sponsor:
- School of Music
She has released eleven albums and published numerous scholarly editions of scores and books, including The Latin American Art Song: Sounds of the Imagined Nations, the go-to history on its subject.
Patricia has led a crusade to include underrepresented repertoires and creators in music curricula and concert venues, having performed worldwide and founding and directing the Barcelona Festival of Song, which focuses on studying art songs in Spanish, Catalan, and Portuguese.
Her interdisciplinary training as a musician, musicologist, and physician and her interest in technology led her to develop numerous creative projects and collaborations with artists and scientists worldwide. An example of this is her newest book: We are what we listen to: the impact of music on individual and social health.
Patricia holds a Ph.D. in musicology from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and a Medical Doctor’s degree from the Escuela Colombiana de Medicina. Click here for more information
- Location:
- LBJ Student Center; LBJSC Teaching Theatre
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Karina Ogunlana
getinvolved@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- Student Involvement and Engagement, Department of Housing and Residential Life, Student Association for Campus Activities, Residence Hall Association
Summary for "Hailing Cesar":
Hailing Cesar is a film about my journey to understand the legacy and struggle of my grandfather, the civil rights activist Cesar Chavez.
I was only three years old when Cesar passed away. Growing up comfortably in the Bay Area, where my father Fernando was a lawyer, I had difficulty connecting with my grandfather’s life.
After a turning point in my life, I began to explore the places, learn about the people, and carry out the activities that were so important to Cesar. My journey included working in the fields, picking grapes, as both my grandfather and father once did.
My goal is to share Cesar's message with a new generation. This film is my first step in honoring his legacy
- Location:
- Performing Arts Center; Recital Hall
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Daveda Karanas, Voice Area Coordinator
512 245-3378 - Campus Sponsor:
- School of Music
She has released eleven albums and published numerous scholarly editions of scores and books, including The Latin American Art Song: Sounds of the Imagined Nations, the go-to history on its subject.
Patricia has led a crusade to include underrepresented repertoires and creators in music curricula and concert venues, having performed worldwide and founding and directing the Barcelona Festival of Song, which focuses on studying art songs in Spanish, Catalan, and Portuguese.
Her interdisciplinary training as a musician, musicologist, and physician and her interest in technology led her to develop numerous creative projects and collaborations with artists and scientists worldwide. An example of this is her newest book: We are what we listen to: the impact of music on individual and social health.
Patricia holds a Ph.D. in musicology from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and a Medical Doctor’s degree from the Escuela Colombiana de Medicina. Click here for more information
- Location:
- Music Building; MUS 236 (Recital Hall)
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Daveda Karanas, Voice Area Coordinator
512 245-3378 - Campus Sponsor:
- School of Music
She has released eleven albums and published numerous scholarly editions of scores and books, including The Latin American Art Song: Sounds of the Imagined Nations, the go-to history on its subject.
Patricia has led a crusade to include underrepresented repertoires and creators in music curricula and concert venues, having performed worldwide and founding and directing the Barcelona Festival of Song, which focuses on studying art songs in Spanish, Catalan, and Portuguese.
Her interdisciplinary training as a musician, musicologist, and physician and her interest in technology led her to develop numerous creative projects and collaborations with artists and scientists worldwide. An example of this is her newest book: We are what we listen to: the impact of music on individual and social health.
Patricia holds a Ph.D. in musicology from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and a Medical Doctor’s degree from the Escuela Colombiana de Medicina. Click here for more information
- Location:
- Music Building; MUS 236 (Recital Hall)
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Daveda Karanas, Voice Area Coordinator
512 245-3378 - Campus Sponsor:
- School of Music
She has released eleven albums and published numerous scholarly editions of scores and books, including The Latin American Art Song: Sounds of the Imagined Nations, the go-to history on its subject.
Patricia has led a crusade to include underrepresented repertoires and creators in music curricula and concert venues, having performed worldwide and founding and directing the Barcelona Festival of Song, which focuses on studying art songs in Spanish, Catalan, and Portuguese.
Her interdisciplinary training as a musician, musicologist, and physician and her interest in technology led her to develop numerous creative projects and collaborations with artists and scientists worldwide. An example of this is her newest book: We are what we listen to: the impact of music on individual and social health.
Patricia holds a Ph.D. in musicology from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and a Medical Doctor’s degree from the Escuela Colombiana de Medicina. Click here for more information
- Location:
- Alkek Library; Alkek One technology studios on the first floor of Alkek
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Dr. Shannon Weigum
Co-Director
TXST Center for Innovation + Entrepreneurship
sweigum@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- Center for Innovation + Entrepreneurship
Produced in partnership with the Texas State Center for Innovation + Entrepreneurship, the first Future Maker Accelerator is being hosted at Alkek One on the first floor of the Alkek Library. Alkek One offers a wide variety of creative technologies that program participants can use to create or develop business ideas.
Whether you are looking to create an individual side hustle or get VC funded and build the next world-changing corporation, this program will help you assess the pros and cons of entrepreneurship, evaluate next best steps, and prepare to pitch potential customers and investors. This program is open to all members of the community thanks to a generous grant from the Alkek Foundation.
The flexible structure of the program allows participants to start on any workshop date, pick up wherever they leave off, and attend weekly support sessions for small group and individual coaching.
PROGRAM DETAILS
Saturday Workshops Topics Include:
- Creating or Refining Your Value Proposition
- Developing Your Business Model
- Building Your Team
- Pitching Your Business
Summer/Fall PROGRAM SCHEDULE
4-hour Weekly Workshops will be held on select Saturdays at Alkek One from 1pm – 5pm, based on the university’s Academic Calendar.
Here are the currently scheduled workshops for 2023:
- July 15 – Creating or Refining Your Value Proposition
- July 22 – Developing Your Business Model
- Sep 30 – Building Your Team
- Oct 7 – Perfecting Your Pitch
- Nov 11 – Creating or Refining Your Value Proposition
- Nov 18 – Developing Your Business Model
Pitch Practice will be from 3pm – 5pm on the Thursday afternoon following each Saturday Workshop. Click here for more information
- Location:
- Alkek Library; Alkek One technology studios on the first floor of Alkek
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Dr. Shannon Weigum
Co-Director
TXST Center for Innovation + Entrepreneurship
sweigum@txstate.edu - Campus Sponsor:
- Center for Innovation + Entrepreneurship
Produced in partnership with the Texas State Center for Innovation + Entrepreneurship, the first Future Maker Accelerator is being hosted at Alkek One on the first floor of the Alkek Library. Alkek One offers a wide variety of creative technologies that program participants can use to create or develop business ideas.
Whether you are looking to create an individual side hustle or get VC funded and build the next world-changing corporation, this program will help you assess the pros and cons of entrepreneurship, evaluate next best steps, and prepare to pitch potential customers and investors. This program is open to all members of the community thanks to a generous grant from the Alkek Foundation.
The flexible structure of the program allows participants to start on any workshop date, pick up wherever they leave off, and attend weekly support sessions for small group and individual coaching.
PROGRAM DETAILS
Saturday Workshops Topics Include:
- Creating or Refining Your Value Proposition
- Developing Your Business Model
- Building Your Team
- Pitching Your Business
Summer/Fall PROGRAM SCHEDULE
4-hour Weekly Workshops will be held on select Saturdays at Alkek One from 1pm – 5pm, based on the university’s Academic Calendar.
Here are the currently scheduled workshops for 2023:
- July 15 – Creating or Refining Your Value Proposition
- July 22 – Developing Your Business Model
- Sep 30 – Building Your Team
- Oct 7 – Perfecting Your Pitch
- Nov 11 – Creating or Refining Your Value Proposition
- Nov 18 – Developing Your Business Model
Pitch Practice will be from 3pm – 5pm on the Thursday afternoon following each Saturday Workshop. Click here for more information
- Location:
- Brazos Hall; Atrium
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- tammy Gonzales tammyg@txstate.edu
- Campus Sponsor:
- Center for the Study of the Southwest
The Atascosa Highlands are an area of incredible biological and cultural diversity. These mountains are at the crossroads of several ecological zones and harbor a unique flora. Despite being somewhat lower in elevation than other sky island ranges, the Highlands include many different micro-climates that create habitats for species from temperate, tropical, and arid regions of North America.
The hills and valleys which make up the Tumacacori Ecosystem Management Area of the Coronado National Forest have been inhabited by humans for thousands of years, but over the last few centuries human activity has had a profound impact on the landscape. Jack will tell us the story of this fascinating borderlands region. He will highlight the climatic, biogeographical, and historical factors which have influenced the modern ecology of the Atascosa Highlands. Jack will also introduce us to the flora of this Arizona/Sonora borderland region, including species representative of the dominant biomes and unusual denizens of this botanical wonderland.
Luke Swenson
Luke Swenson is a documentary photographer and visual storyteller and a graduate of Pratt Institute’s BFA Photography program in Brooklyn.
Jack Dash
Jack Dash is a horticulturalist at Desert Survivors Native Plant Nursery in Tucson, and Vice President of the Tucson Chapter of the Arizona Native Plant Society. He is passionate about the flora and ecology of the Sky Islands of Southern Arizona, and their relationships to the broader ecologies of North America. He is working on a Click here for more information
- Location:
- Flowers Hall; 230
- Cost:
- Free
- Contact:
- Tammy Gonzales tammyg@txstate.edu
- Campus Sponsor:
- Center for the Study of the Southwest
Professor Bernadine Hernández
Associate Professor
American Literary Studies
Department of English
Faculty Affiliate in Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies
Faculty Affiliate in the Latin American And Iberian Institute
University of New Mexico
Thursday, October 19, 2023
11:00 am
Brazos Hall and Online via Zoom
Registration Required
Register
Book Talk: Sexual Capital and Racialized Sexuality on the U.S. Mexico Borderlands
Building from federal court transcripts in late 19th century New Mexico and Arizona, Dr. Bernadine Hernández demonstrates the deep interconnections across oral testimony, literary writing and autobiography across 19th century Mexicana, Nuevomexicana, Californiana, and Tejana lives. The interconnections follow from the way sexual capital was remade in the anchoring of U.S. authority in the Southwest. The analysis here highlights (1) how pivotal Mexicanas, Nuevomexicanas, Californianas, and Tejanas were to the exercise of power in what is now the Southwest, and (2) how their presence has been obscured by subsequent stories of the peopling of this region.
In the book Border Bodies, Dr. Hernández has completed a theoretically rich, historically inflected study of sex, gender, sexual violence, and power in the making of the American Southwest. Dr. Bernadine Marie Hernández anchors the analysis through under-heard stories of women who lived in the United States after the 1846 occupation of northern Mexico. Elaborating on the concept of sexual capital and building from traces in little-known newspapers and periodicals, letters, testimonios, court cases, short stories, photographs and fully published novels, Hernandez tracks moments when Mexicanas troubled emerging anti-Mexican narratives. The analysis highlights how sex, violence, and capital conspired to govern not only women’s bodies but their role in the changing American Southwest. Hernández focuses on a time when the borderlands saw a rapid influx of white settlers who encountered elite landholding Californios, Hispanos, and Tejanos. Sex was inseparable from power in the borderlands, and women were integral to the stabilization of that power.
In drawing these stories from the archive, Hernández illuminates contemporary ideas of sexuality through the lens of the borderland’s history of expansionist, violent, and gendered conquest. By extension, Hernández argues that Mexicana, Nuevomexicana, Californiana, and Tejana women were key actors in the formation of the western United States, even as they are too often erased from the region’s story.
For access to the most recent book, visit Border Bodies: Racialized Sexuality, Sexual Capital and Racial Violence in the Nineteenth-Century Borderlands (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 2022).
Bernadine Hernández
Dr. Bernadine Hernández is an associate professor in the Department of English at the University of New Mexico. She is also a Faculty Affiliate in Women of Gender & Sexuality Studies and a Faculty Affiliate in the Latin American and Iberian Institute. She specializes in transnational feminism and sexual economies of the US-Mexico borderlands, along with American Literary Studies and Empire, border and migration history, and Chicana/Latina Literature and Sexualities. Her book with UNC press is titled Border Bodies: Racialized Sexuality, Sexual Capital, and Violence in the Nineteenth Century Borderlands and is the first book length study that focuses on sexual capital and gender and sexual violence in the borderlands in the nineteenth and early twentieth-centuries through recovered archival work. She is also the co-editor of the first edited collection on Ana Castillo titled New Transnational Chicanx Perspectives on Ana Castillo, published with University of Pittsburg Press in Spring 2021. Her other publications appear in Comparative Literature and Culture, Transgender Studies Quarterly, Women’s Studies Quarterly, among others.
She is also a public facing scholar and works with the artist and writer collective fronteristxs, a collective of artists and writers in New Mexico working to end migrant detention and abolish the prison industrial complex through creative activism. Fronteristxs provides free political education for community and youth throughout New Mexico on transformative justice and abolition. She sits on the City of Albuquerque Public Arts Board and the Working Classroom Board. Click here for more information