
MANAGEMENT
Assistant Professor, Ethnic Studies
mgmontalvo@csusm.edu | SBSB 3204
Dr. Marcelo Garzo Montalvo (he/they) is a musician, dancer, and Ethnic Studies scholar-activist. He is a first-generation Chilean-Canadian-American of Mapuche and Spanish descent. They hold a B.A., M.A. and PhD in Comparative Ethnic Studies from UC Berkeley, and were a community college transfer student from Mira Costa, Cabrillo and San Diego City Colleges. Their teaching and research focus on comparative and critical approaches to Black, Indigenous, Latinx and Xicanx Studies as well as Dance and Performance Studies. Before coming to 大发, Dr. Garzo Montalvo served as Visiting Assistant Professor of Latinx Studies in Harvard University鈥檚 Committee on Ethnicity, Migration and Rights, and as the Coordinator of Indigenous Technologies at the Berkeley Center for New Media. They have published articles on abolition, decoloniality and social movements for food, healing and ecological justice. His current book project, Armas Milagrosas/Miraculous Weapons, is a study of embodied knowledge, cultural decolonization and Xicanx indigeneities in the practice of Anahuacan ceremonial dance (Danza Azteca, Danza Mexica, Danza Chichimeca-Tolteca). They are also working on an experimental and collaborative research project called Conversations con Xochipilli, exploring questions of creativity, sexuality, science and consciousness through Queer and Two Spirit ceremonial knowledge.
Lecturer, Ethnic Studies
mirwin@csusm.edu | SBSB 2130
Dr. Matthew Irwin (he/they) is a writer, editor, scholar, and parent. He鈥檚 a third-generation settler of Irish and German descent, born on Anishinaabe land along Great Black Swamp in the postindustrial zone of Toledo, Ohio. Dr. Irwin holds an MFA in Creative Writing from San Diego State University and a PhD in American Studies from the University of New Mexico. They received a BA in English from Miami University (Ohio). Their teaching and research focus on visuality and urban aesthetics through the lenses of critical ethnic studies and critical Indigenous studies. This work appears in numerous peer-reviewed articles, reviews, and commercial publications, including Capitalism Nature Socialism, InVisible Culture, Momus, and Hyperallergic. Their dissertation project, 鈥(S墨藞t沫ng) Detroit: Vision and Dispossession in a Midwest Bordertown,鈥 examines news reports, films, maps, advertisements, murals, graffiti, landscapes, and architecture to demonstrate the ways in which the visual, rhetorical, and built environment of Detroit鈥檚 main thoroughfare, Woodward Avenue, upholds and renews the logics of white possession. Dr. Irwin also contributed to a chapter on multimodal writing and rhetoric in the book Bridging the Multimodal Gap: From Theory to Practice, edited by Santosh Khadka and J.C. Lee for the University Press of Colorado. He previously taught American Studies, Native Studies, Cultural Studies, and Writing at San Diego State University, the University of Wyoming, Minneapolis College of Art and Design, Central New Mexico Community College, and the University of New Mexico.
2020 鈥淪evering Union: The Queer Performance of Steven Paul Judd鈥檚 鈥楽top the DAPL鈥欌 Hemisphere: Visual Culture of the Americas, University of New Mexico, 7,424 words
2020 鈥淟ifesaving and Abolitionism: Shifting the Frame on Prison Art鈥 Momus, online, 1,826 words
2020 鈥淔ronteristxs Against Private Prisons鈥 Santa Fe Reporter, online, 839 words
2019 鈥淭he Legacy of Mary Sully: Early Indigenous Feminism and the 鈥楢merican Indian Abstract,鈥欌 Momus, online, 1,909 words
2018 鈥淭he New Jail: Profit and Social Control" Riverwise Magazine, James and Grace Lee Boggs Center, 6
2018 鈥淧uerto Rico: Defying Darkness,鈥 caareviews.org, College Art Association of America, online, 1,594 words
2017 鈥溾榊our Wilderness鈥: The White Possession of Detroit in Jim Jarmusch鈥檚 Only Lovers Left Alive,鈥 Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, Taylor & Francis, 78-95
2017 鈥淪uturing the Borderlands: Postcommodity and Indigenous Presence on the U.S.-Mexico Border,鈥 InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture, University of Rochester, online, 9,787 words
Associate Professor, Ethnic Studies Program Director
(760) 750-8258 | jmperez@csusm.edu | SBSB 3201
Lecturer, Ethnic Studies
pnie@csusm.edu | SBSB 3203
Assistant Professor, Ethnic Studies
cassefa@csusm.edu | SBSB 3202
Lecturer, Ethnic Studies
tlancaster@csusm.edu | SBSB 2130
Lecturer, Ethnic Studies
tcamacho@csusm.edu | SBSB 2130
Lecturer, Ethnic Studies
kvilla@csusm.edu | SBSB 2130
Assistant Professor, Ethnic Studies
rosoria@csusm.edu | SBSB 3203
Hemans, P., Lewis, P., & Osoria, R. (2020). The dual invisibility of mother-scholars of color. About Campus, 25(2), 24-27.
Osoria, R. (2024). From institutional exclusion to internalized worth: Latina immigrant mothers鈥 experiences in the K-12 education system. Literature Reviews in Education and Human Services, 3(1), 1-18.
Osoria, R. (2024). Weaving In and Out of Ourselves: Syllabus Formation and Assignment Development Through the Centering of Intersectionality. In Intersectionality and Higher Education: Theory, Research, and Praxis (3rd ed.). Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers.
Osoria, R. (2023). (De)constructing the Latina immigrant mother narrative and challenging the
dichotomist perspective of marianismo and 鈥渢he unfit鈥 immigrant mother. In M.J. Villasenor
& H. Jimenez (Eds.), The Latinx Experience: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. SAGE Publications.
Osoria, R. (2020, September 8). How Systemic Educational Beliefs and Practices Limit the Inclusion
of Latinx Immigrant Parents in Schools. In Latino Rebels [Op-ed]. Retrieved from
Ramirez, B. and Osoria, R. (2023). Recognizing embodied histories and intersectionality of students of color in language. In A. Esmail, A. Pitre, A.D. Ross, J, Blakely, & H. Prentice Baptiste (Eds.), English Language Learners the Power of Culturally Relevant Pedagogies (pp.47-52). Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
Salgado, H., Haviland, I., Hernandez, M., Lozano, D., Osoria, R., Keyes, D., ... & Z煤帽iga, M. L. (2014). Perceived discrimination and religiosity as
potential mediating factors between migration and depressive symptoms: A transnational
study of an indigenous Mayan population. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, 16(3), 340-347.
Administrative Coordinator, Ethnic Studies
jquirozavila@csusm.edu
(760)750-8649 | SBSB 3129