Overview
Debra Castillo is Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow, Emerson Hinchliff Chair of Hispanic Studies, Professor of Comparative Literature, and director of the Cornell Migration Studies minor. She is past president of the international, interdisciplinary Latin American Studies Association.
She is the holder of a Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellowship, which is Cornell University’s highest teaching award, and is granted for excellence in undergraduate teaching. She regularly teaches courses on Latinx, Border Studies, and Migration issues for both graduate and undergraduate students.
Debra Castillo is the author, co-author, translator, or editor of a couple of dozen books and approximately 150 scholarly articles. She specializes in contemporary narrative from the Spanish-speaking world (including the United States), gender studies, and cultural theory. Her most recent books include South of the Future: Speculative Biotechnologies and Care Markets in South Asia and Latin America (with Anindita Banerjee) and The Scholar as Human(with Anna Sims Bartel), Centering Borders: Narrative Explorations in South Asia and Latin America (with Kavita Panjabi and Debaroti Chakraborty), Latin American Literature in Transition (with Mónica Szurmuk) and forthcoming books with Liliana Colanzi (on horror in Latin America) and with Melissa Castillo-Planas (on public engagement in COVID times).
She is an active member of the editorial boards of many journals, and is also Editor of the Latin American Literary Review, past editor of Diacritics, and the former Book Review editor for Letras Femeninas. She is past president of the the Latin American Studies Association and of the Asociación Internacional de Literatura y Cultura Femenina Hispánica (now the Asociación de Estudios de Género y Sexualidades), serves or has recently served on the boards of the Cornell University Press (where she co-edits a series on Publicly Engaged Scholars), the North Carolina Series in Romance Languages and Literatures, and the State University of New York Press (where she co-edits a series on Genders in the Global South).
She is deeply involved with community engagement projects and courses, especially in collaboration with the local organizations, Cultura Ithaca and No más lágrimas and has regularly taught a profoundly engaged course, “Cultures and Communities” in collaboration with these and other partners in the Ithaca community. The mission of all this work is to share Latin American and U.S. Latino/a/x culture with community members of all ages through educational artistic activities. Internationally, her engagement work includes collaboration with partners in several Latin American countries, especially Mexico, as in the recent example of the multimedia, interdisciplinary performance installation and collaborative research project on our relationship to water, Aguakinesis.
One of the courses with which she has been most identified over the years is “Hispanic Theater Production,” which, under the troupe name “Teatrotaller,”has regularly produced high quality theatre since 1993. Graduate and undergraduate students, as well as core community members participate. The group focuses on theatre from the Spanish, Latin American, or US Latino/a/x traditions or—increasingly—develops original plays through a collective creation process. We then bring the plays to full production (generally presented in August/September, November, and April). The group has achieved an international reputation for excellence, and has accepted invitations to present their plays in various regional universities (Tufts, Penn State, Barnard, Syracuse, Texas-El Paso, Kansas State) in festivals in Mexico, Canada, Israel, Ecuador, Romania, and Belgium, and has toured in the USA, Mexico, and India. COVID forced us to defer our 2020-2021 projects. However, we were able to reboot our popular Christmas “Pastorela”in December 2021, and are now touring our the original play, "Diamantina rosa", by Ana Florencia López Ulloa. We are also developing new plays for live performance in 2022-23.
Debra is profoundly committed to mentoring at all levels, and is amply compensated through sustained dialogue with exciting young scholars. She has enjoyed the privilege of working closely with over one hundred graduate students (mostly PhD), and has been the chair or co-chair of a little over sixty graduate student committees. While not everyone has chosen an academic career, most of her former students have ended up teaching and doing research in some combination. Some of them are located in far-flung sites like Kolkata, Seoul, or Buenos Aires; most are in Spanish programs in the United States, including people at liberal arts colleges, state universities, and distinguished private research institutions.
Research Focus
- Contemporary narrative of the Americas
- Gender Studies
- culture studies
- theater, film, performance
- community engagement studies
Publications
Books:
The Translated World: A Postmodern Tour of Libraries in Literature. Tallahassee: Florida State UP, l984.
Talking Back: Toward a Latin American Feminist Literary Criticism. Ithaca: Cornell UP, l992.
Trans. and Intro., Tijuana: Stories on the Border by Federico Campbell. Berkeley: U of California P., l995.
Easy Women: Sex and Gender in Modern Mexican Fiction. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P., l998.
ed., with Mary Jo Dudley. Transforming Cultures in the Americas. Ithaca: Latin American Studies Program, 2000.
ed., with Mary Jo Dudley and Breny Mendoza. Rethinking Feminisms in the Americas. Ithaca: Latin American Studies Program, 2000.
ed., with José Edmundo Paz Soldán. Beyond the Lettered City: Latin American Literature and Mass Media. Hispanic Issues series. Garland, 2000.
Border Women: Writing from La Frontera (with María Socorro Tabuenca Córdoba) Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 2002.
Re-dreaming America: Toward a Bilingual Understanding of American Literature. (Albany: SUNY, 2004.)
ed, with Kavita Panjabi. Cartographies of Affect: Across Borders in South Asia and the Americas. Kolkata: Worldview Press, 2011.
ed, with Christine Henseler. Hybrid Storyspaces Companion version online as part of the Cornell Latin American Studies Program working paper series, 2010. Revised, peer reviewed English language Volume published at: Hispanic Issues series: University of Minnesota, 2012.
ed, with Anindita Banerjee. Gender, Violence, Dislocation. Cornell Latin American Studies Program working paper volume, 2011.
co-editor with Stuart Day, Mexican Public Intellectuals. Palgrave, 2013.
co-editor with Andrés Lema Hincapié, Despite all Adversities: Spanish American Queer Cinema Latin America. SUNY, 2015.
co-editor with Shalini Puri, Theorizing Fieldwork in the Humanities Palgrave MacMillan 2016.
co-editor with Kavita Panjabi and Debaroti Chakravoty, Centering Borders. Routledge, 2022.
Co-editor with Anindita Banerjee, South of the Future. SUNY, 2020.
Co-editor with Anna Sims Bartel, The Scholar as Human, Cornell University Press, 2020. open access book.
Co-editor with with Mónica Szurmuk, Latin American Literature in Transition Vol 5. Cambridge University Press. 2021.
Co-editor with Melissa Castillo Planas. Engaged scholarship and teaching in COVID times, CUP.
Co-editorwith Liliana Colanzi, Horror in Latin America, for Hispanic Issues Online.
In the news
- Undergraduates celebrate Latinx history through Rockefeller Hall exhibition
- Book reexamines scholarship, teaching in the era of COVID-19
- Wondering what to read in 2023? A&S faculty offer ideas
- Alumni return to celebrate theatre troupe’s 30th anniversary
- DACA decision greeted with cautious optimism
- First Rural Humanities showcase spotlights Cornell-community projects
- Mellon-funded Rural Humanities initiative launches
- Border Angels leader to visit campus, speak downtown
- Engaged Cornell's Spirit Grows
- New provost's task force continues push for a diverse Cornell faculty
- Castillo on Glickman's "Una tal Raquel"