Robinson Herrera

Associate Professor of History

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About

Robinson Herrera did his graduate work at UCLA. Herrera has done field work in Guatemala, Mexico and Spain. His early work primarily concentrated on the first century of Spanish colonial rule. Herrera's first book, titled Natives, Europeans, and Africans in Sixteenth-Century Santiago de Guatemala, (University of Texas Press, December 2003) is a social, cultural and economic history of Central America's colonial capital. Herrera has also published articles and book reviews in national and international journals. His second book, tentatively titled The Traveling Head: Social Deviancy and Challenges to The Ethnic State, (in progress) covers late colonial to modern Guatemala and analyzes issues of deviant sexuality, social memory, and the manipulation of historical events by the state.

Latin America

Robinson Herrera teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on Latin American social and cultural history, more specialized courses on history through film, and race and class in the colonial period.


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