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Currently, I split my time between teaching creative writing and developing collaborative arts programs through the digital humanities, which includes community-based partnerships with local universities and learning how to code-switch this work into Wikipedia.{{dashboard.wikiedu.org student editor | slug = Wiki_Education/250_by_2026-6_(Fall_2025) | type = scholars-and-scientists }} |
Currently, I split my time between teaching creative writing and developing collaborative arts programs through the digital humanities, which includes community-based partnerships with local universities and learning how to code-switch this work into Wikipedia.{{dashboard.wikiedu.org student editor | slug = Wiki_Education/250_by_2026-6_(Fall_2025) | type = scholars-and-scientists }} |
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[[Category:Chicana feminists]] |
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[[Category:Chicano art]] |
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[[Category:Chicano and Mexican neighborhoods in California]] |
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Latest revision as of 14:20, 22 November 2025
I am a community-based digital archivist and scholar, who also happens to be a bookstore owner and author. I teach digital humanities through creative writing and literature, prioritizing the histories of Black, Indigenous, and people of color in Southern California.
My work in digital humanities (DH) started as a 2020 USLDH-Mellon Grantee with the University of Houston & Arte Público Press’ US Latino Digital Humanities Center. It includes virtual timelines, Mapping Santa Ana, the Modesta Ávila archives, and Mapping QBIPOC Bookstores in California, as well as DH training for and by the community and undergraduate courses.
Currently, I split my time between teaching creative writing and developing collaborative arts programs through the digital humanities, which includes community-based partnerships with local universities and learning how to code-switch this work into Wikipedia.



