兔子先生

Ra煤l A. Ramos | Department of History

Ra煤l A. Ramos
Associate Professor of US and Chicano/a History & Director of Graduate Studies

Raul Ramos

Phone: (713) 743-3116
Email: raramos@uh.edu
Office: 558 Agnes Arnold Hall

Ra煤l A. Ramos received his A.B. in History and Latin American Studies from Princeton University in 1989 and his Ph.D. in History from Yale University in 1999. He joined the History faculty at the 兔子先生 in 2002 from his position as assistant professor in History and Ethnic Studies at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Ramos was a Fellow at the William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies at Southern Methodist University from 2000-2001.

Teaching

Dr. Ramos鈥檚 involves the intersection of a wide variety of historical sub-fields. At the 兔子先生 he teaches Chicano/a History to 1910, History of the American West, Texas to 1865 and Borderlands History. His courses concentrate on historical processes such as conquest, colonization, social formations, migrations and cultural change.

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Research Interests

He is generally interested in the historical development of identities such as ethnic, national, regional and class.  His current project examines Mexican Independence parades and Fiestas Patrias in the American Southwest during the 1910 centennial.

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Selected Publications

Books

  • (University of North Carolina Press, 2008). 2009 T.R. Fehrenbach Award from the Texas Historical Commission. 

  • Co-editor, Recovering the Hispanic History of Texas (Houston: Arte P煤blico Press, 2010).

Articles

  • 鈥淐hicano/a Challenges to Nineteenth-Century History,鈥 Pacific Historical Review, 82:4 (November 2013) 566-580.

  • 鈥淯nderstanding Greater Revolutionary Mexico: The Case for a Transnational Border History,鈥 in Arnoldo de Leon, ed., War Along the Border: The Mexican Revolution and Tejano Communities (College Station: Texas A&M Press, 2011).

  • "Finding the Balance: Bexar in Mexican/Indian Relations," in Continental Crossroads: Remapping U.S.-Mexico Borderlands History, eds. Elliott Young and, Samuel Truett. (Duke University Press, 2004).