AnnouncementsOliver A. Rosales is Associate Professor of History at Bakersfield College and Visiting Faculty in the MAT program at Bard College
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Chicana/o & United States History
Ph.D. June 2012
B.A., University of California Berkeley; M.A., California State University Bakersfield
Advisor: Mario T. Garcia
"A new future requires a new past." (more...)Eric Foner
The history of race, politics, and civil rights in California’s Central Valley is an important yet understudied aspect of
multiracial history in the American West. Kern County and the city of Bakersfield were critical epicenters of civil rights activism during the twentieth century. Simultaneously, an equally active and sometimes hostile, conservative resistance toward labor and civil rights existed in the region. In the immediate post-World War II era, Mexican Americans built racial coalitions with African Americans and white liberals to challenge racial segregation and discrimination in housing and employment. In the ensuing decades, the war on poverty, farmworker, and Chicana/o power movements impacted racial coalition building and civil rights reform in complex ways, including struggles over increased political representation for racial minorities, expansion of rural-migrant health care, and school desegregation.
Since World War II through the rise of the modern political right, Mexican immigrants and their descendants shaped rural and urban civil rights reform in California’s interior. Referred to pejoratively as “Mississippi West”, given the county’s vibrant history of civil rights activism and anti-statist opposition toward civil rights, Kern County is ground-zero for a massive demographic transformation from a white to Hispanic majority; a trend other US regions will experience in the coming decades. The history of race relations, civil rights, and politics in the region sheds light on the importance of a burgeoning Latino population, as well as marks a bellwether for future US social and political trends in California and beyond.
Dissertation Title- "Mississippi West": Race, Politics, and Civil Rights in California’s Central Valley, 1947-1984
Teaching Fields- Chicana/o History
Civil Rights, Mexican Immigration to the United States, Mexican history, Mesoamerica
- American West
Urbanization, Rural History, Race Relations
- United States History
Colonial through Present, African American history, social movements
- World History since 1500
Comparative Race & Ethnicity, Decolonization, Peace and Conflict Studies
- Religious Studies
Latino Religions
Courses Taught- History 160C: The Southern Civil Rights Movement, 1930 to the Present (UCSB)
Jim Crow segregation in the 1930s, growing Black contention toward equality, 1954 supreme court declaration against Jim Crow, White massive resistance, Black mass protest, showdown in the 1960s, ironic aftermath and political realignment, the long death o
- Writing 2: Academic Writing (UCSB)
Writing 2 is students' initiation to the foundations of academic writing in the university. The work occurs in a small classroom setting where teachers interact intensively and creatively with students.
- History 468: Mexican American History (CSU Bakersfield)
A history of Mexican Americans from Spanish colonization to the recent past. Examines Indian and Spanish roots, the Mexican-American War and its consequences, the struggle for civil rights, and contributions to the development of the United States
- History 231/232: United States History (CSU Bakersfield)
History of the United States to 1865/History of the United States since 1865
- History 531: Global History: Latino History (Bard College Master of Arts in Teaching Program, Delano, CA)
Graduate Reading Seminar in Latino History
- History 533: World History since 1700 (Bard College Master of Arts in Teaching Program, Delano, CA)
Graduate Reading Seminar in World History theory and practice
- History 515: Teaching Lab (Bard College Master of Arts in Teaching Program, Delano, CA)
Graduate Reading Seminar in teaching pedagogy for secondary level social science credential students
- History 30AB: Early/Recent Chicano History (Bakersfield College)
Survey of the Mexican American borderlands from Pre-Columbian times until 1848/Survey of Mexican American history since 1848
- History 17AB: United States History (Bakersfield College)
United States History to 1865/Analysis of United States social, economic and institutional developments from 1865 to the present.
- History 102: United States since 1865 (Santa Barbara City College)
Analysis of United States social, economic and institutional developments from 1865 to the present.
Teaching Assistantships- History 17A (UCSB)
The American People: Colonial America through Jacksonian period
- History 17B (UCSB)
The American People: Jacksonian through Progressive Era
- History 17C (UCSB)
The American People: Progressive Era to Present
- History 4A (UCSB)
Western Civilization: Prehistory to 1050 AD
- History 4C (UCSB)
Western Civilization: 1715 CE to Present
- History 173 (UCSB)
American Environmental History
- Chicana/o Studies 1A (UCSB)
Introduction to Chicana/o Studies
- History 231 (CSU Bakersfield)
Early American History
- History 232 (CSU Bakersfield)
U.S. History since 1865
- History 102 (CSU Bakersfield)
Making of the Modern Western World
Publications- Review of Quest for Equality: The Failed Promise of Black-Brown Solidarity by Neil Foley
Left History Winter 2011
- Review of The Struggle in Black and Brown: African American and Mexican American Relations during the Civil Rights Era Edited by Brian Behnken
Western Historical Quarterly forthcoming 2012
- Encyclopedia of Politics in the American West.
Mesa Verde Publishing (forthcoming, contributor)
- "Why Walls Don't Work: The Ill-Fated U.S.-Mexico Border Fence Project."
United States Geography. 2008. ABC-CLIO. 16 Oct. 2008
- The Encyclopedia of the Sixties: A Decade of Culture and Counterculture.
ABC-CLIO, December 2011 (contributor)
Awards- The Chicano Studies Institute Graduate Student Research Award 2007-2010
- UC MEXUS Student Research Small Grant 2009
- Labor and Employment Research Fund Mini-Grant 2008-2009
- University of California Humanities Research Institute Research Grant 2008
- Historical Society of Southern California Haynes Award 2008
Selected Presentations- Panel Participant, "Multiracial and Multiregional Consideration in the History of School Desegregation, 1950-1984."
Organization of American Historians Annual Meeting, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, April 2012
- "Hoo-ray Gonzales!": Black-Brown Relations, Chicano Politics, and Civil Rights in Bakersfied, 1968-1974"
Chicano Power! A Conference on the Emerging Historiography of the Chicano Movement, University of California, Santa Barbara, February 17-18, 2012
- Panel Participant, "The Power of Western Grassroots Activism and Politics."
Western History Association Annual Meeting, Oakland, California, October 2011
- "The Rise and Fall of Urban Civil Rights Coalition Building: the Kern Council for Civic Unity, 1957-1968"
4th Annual Whitsett Graduate Seminar, California State University, Northridge, March 2009
- "Race & Law Enforcement on California's Racial Frontier: the Career of Robert S. Powers"
California Council for the Promotion of History, San Luis Obispo, October 2008
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