CMASR director plans new initiative, speaker series

Professor, novelist, poet and scholar, Christopher Carmona, PhD, now adds a new title to an impressive resume: Director of OLLU’s Center for Mexican American Studies and Research (CMASR).

His plans for CMASR include launching an exciting speaker series and helping OLLU implement a bilingual, biliterate, bicultural and binational (B4) initiative. 

The B4 Initiative is a university-wide effort that facilitates OLLU becoming a bicultural, bilingual, biliterate and binational Hispanic Serving Institution through curricular approaches, community engagement, and relevant research initiatives.

“Having a B4 initiative would certainly set us apart from any university in the country because we would be the first to implement it,” said Dr. Carmona, an Associate Professor of Mexican American Studies. “With this initiative the university would embrace its Latino majority student body and make the Spanish languages, as well as Mexican American and Latino cultures, accessible and embraced.”

Dr. Carmona also aims to launch a speaker series this fall that coincides with the start of Hispanic Heritage Month. On Tuesday, Sept. 17, two days after the start of Hispanic Heritage Month, the CMASR will host scholars from “Refusing To Forget,” a nonprofit that raises awareness about state sanctioned violence on the Texas-Mexico border between 1910-1920.

Though no date has been set, San Antonio native and U.S. Census Bureau Director Robert Santos will also speak at OLLU. “He’s from the West Side of San Antonio,” Dr. Carmona said. “I’m excited.”

The Speaker Series will be held at the CMASR, which is housed in Moye 214, across  from Dr. Carmona’s office. “It is important for students, faculty and community to be exposed to Latinx peoples working in the world and changing it for the better in the various fields, from the sciences to education,” he said. 

An accomplished writer, Carmona is the author of “El Rinche: The Ghost Ranger of the Rio Grande.” Last year, he was inducted into the Texas Institute of Letters, which comprises the state’s most recognized and serious writers of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, journalism and scholarship.

Before arriving at OLLU in 2022, Dr. Carmona taught at the University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley and served as Interim Director of the Mexican American Studies Program.

OLLU Marketing Sept. 2022

Dr. Carmona inducted into Texas Institute of Letters for 2023

Dr. Christopher Carmona, Visiting Associate Professor of English and Mexican American Studies, was recently inducted into the Texas Institute of Letters (TIL). TIL members are comprised of the state’s most recognized and serious writers of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, journalism, and scholarship.

Dr. Carmona serves as a board member of the national award-winning organization, Refusing To Forget, which researches the history of violence against Mexican Americans and Latinos in the early 20th Century and beyond. Carmona is also the author of “El Rinche: The Ghost Ranger of the Rio Grande,” which was a finalist for the 2019 Best Young Adult Novel for the Texas Institute of Letters. Currently, he is working on finishing this series of novels. Book two is out now. His short story collection, “The Road to Llorona Park,” won the 2016 NACCS Tejas Best Fiction Award and was listed as one of the top eight Latinx books in 2016 by NBCNews.

Nan Cuba elected to the Texas Institute of Letters

OLLU Writer in Residence Nan Cuba has been elected to the prestigious Texas Institute of Letters (TIL). The TIL is a statewide organization that recognizes distinctive literary achievement.

Professor Cuba, who founded Gemini Ink, was recognized by TIL in 2014 for best first novel for her book “Body and Bread.”

“I am proud and humbled to join this group of writers, whose work I’ve long admired,” said Professor Cuba.

TIL President Andres Tijerina said: “For nearly 80 years, TIL has been recognizing outstanding writers with a Texas connection.”

Other TIL members include Larry McMurtry, Rick Riordan, Jan Jarboe Russell and Dagoberto Gilb.