Natalia Molina
American academic
Natalia Molina's Degrees
- PhD American Studies New York University
- Masters American Studies New York University
- Bachelors American Studies University of California, Santa Cruz
Why Is Natalia Molina Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Natalia Molina is an American historian and Distinguished Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California. She is the author of Fit To Be Citizens? Public Health and Race in Los Angeles, 1879-1939, How Race Is Made in America: Immigration, Citizenship, and the Historical Power of Racial Scripts, and A Place at the Nayarit: How a Mexican Restaurant Nourished a Community. In 2019, Molina co-edited a series of essays on the formation of race in the United States, Relational Formations of Race: Theory, Method, and Practice, in collaboration with Daniel Martínez Hosang and Ramón Gutiérrez. She has also published numerous articles in scholarly journals and contributes op-eds in nationally circulated newspapers. She received a 2020 MacArthur Fellowship for her work on race and citizenship. Molina is currently serving as the Interim Director of Research at The Huntington Library.
Natalia Molina's Published Works
Published Works
- Fit to Be Citizens?: Public Health and Race in Los Angeles, 1879-1939 (2006) (136)
- How Race Is Made in America (2019) (81)
- Racial transformations : Latinos and Asians remaking the United States (2006) (34)
- Modification of the Electrochemical Properties of Nile Blue through Covalent Attachment to Gold As Revealed by Electrochemistry and SERS (2016) (33)
- "In a Race All Their Own": The Quest to Make Mexicans Ineligible for U.S. Citizenship (2010) (28)
- Borders, laborers, and racialized medicalization Mexican immigration and US public health practices in the 20th century. (2011) (27)
- The power of racial scripts: What the history of Mexican immigration to the United States teaches us about relational notions of race (2010) (27)
- Medicalizing the Mexican: Immigration, Race, and Disability in the Early-Twentieth-Century United States (2006) (25)
- In the name of public health. (2005) (24)
- 2. Examining Chicana/o History through a Relational Lens (2013) (9)
- Introduction:: TOWARD A RELATIONAL CONSCIOUSNESS OF RACE (2019) (8)
- The Importance of Place and Place-Makers in the Life of a Los Angeles Community: What Gentrification Erases from Echo Park (2015) (7)
- Borders, Laborers, and Racialized Medicalization (2014) (6)
- Constructing Mexicans as Deportable Immigrants: Race, Disease, and the Meaning of “Public Charge” (2010) (5)
- Farmers’ Participation in Operational Groups to Foster Innovation in the Agricultural Sector: An Italian Case Study (2021) (5)
- Deportation in the Americas: Histories of Exclusion and Resistance (2018) (3)
- Inverting Racial Logic: How Public Health Discourse and Standards Racialized the Meanings of Japanese and Mexican in Los Angeles, 1910-1924 (2006) (3)
- The Long Arc of Dispossession: Racial Capitalism and Contested Notions of Citizenship in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands in the Early Twentieth Century (2014) (3)
- Understanding Race as a Relational Concept (2018) (3)
- 1. Race as a Relational Theory: A Roundtable Discussion (2019) (1)
- 5. The Fight For “Health, Morality, And Decent Living Standards”: Mexican Americans And The Struggle For Public Housing In 1930S Los Angeles (2019) (0)
- Chicano/a History: Looking Forward after Forty Years (2013) (0)
- The Battle for Los Angeles: Racial Ideology and World War II (2008) (0)
- 4. “We Can No Longer Ignore The Problem Of The Mexican”: Depression-Era Public Health Policies In Los Angeles (2019) (0)
- Regulating Borders and Bodies: U.S. Immigration and Public Health Policy (2014) (0)
- 2. Caught Between Discourses Of Disease, Health, And Nation: Public Health Attitudes Toward Japanese And Mexican Laborers In Progressive-Era Los Angeles (2019) (0)
- Review: Grounds for Dreaming: Mexican Americans, Mexican Immigrants, and the California Farmworker Movement by Lori A. Flores (2017) (0)
- City of Inmates: Conquest, Rebellion, and the Rise of Human Caging in Los Angeles, 1771–1965 by Kelly Lytle Hernandez (review) (2018) (0)
- Epilogue: Genealogies Of Racial Discourses And Practices (2019) (0)
- Review Of Rivera, The Emergence of Mexican America: Recovering Stories of Mexican Peoplehood in U.S. Culture. (2007) (0)
- MEXICAN-ORIGIN PEOPLE IN THE UNITED STATES: A Topical History Oscar J. Martínez (2003) (0)
- Collisions at the Crossroads: How Place and Mobility Make Race by Genevieve Carpio (review) (2022) (0)
- From Coveralls To Zoot Suits: The Lives of Mexican American Women on the World War II Home Front (2014) (0)
- 3. Institutionalizing Public Health In Ethnic Los Angeles In The 1920S (2019) (0)
- Rachel Buff, Against the Deportation Terror: Organizing for Immigrant Rights in the Twentieth Century (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2017, $29.95). Pp. 298. isbn 978 1 4399 1533 2. (2020) (0)
- Writing Significant Scholarship, Helping Others, and Making an Impact in Your Field: Lessons from a Senior Scholar (2017) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Natalia Molina?
Natalia Molina is affiliated with the following schools: