01/09/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 01/10/2025 04:12
"We are thrilled to have the Mellon Foundation support the creation of the Transborder Digital Humanities Center-Consortium," said Glenn Martinez, dean of the UTSA College of Liberal and Fine Arts. "COLFA is taking a strong step forward in expanding our understanding of borderlands and the cultural complexities they represent. This is important work that supports UTSA's mission as a Hispanic Serving Institution."
The TBDH will explore and document borderlands' transgressive histories, beginning with the U.S.-Mexico border. Fernández-Quintanilla seeks to create digital knowledge spotlighting the lived experiences and counter stories of border and transborder communities by utilizing, modifying and developing digital and public humanities tools and methods.
This project aims to encourage communities globally to rethink and broaden the concept of borders across the Americas. It will explore ideas, practices and teaching methods to support impactful community research.
Fernández-Quintanilla has spent more than a decade researching borderlands cultures through archives, literature and language and developing internationally recognized multilingual digital humanities projects. She will lead a 10-person team of scholars and activists from a diverse group of institutions and across multiple disciplines, including critical border studies, ethnic and race studies, literatures and languages, and women, gender and sexuality studies.
TBDH started through the work of United Fronteras, an autonomous and collaborative project in 2019 that created the first transborder bilingual directory and had a transnational online symposium to engage with the creators of borderlands digital materials and projects that shed light to multiple stories and representations of the U.S.-Mexico border.
The UTSA TBDH currently includes contributors Sylvia Mendoza, assistant professor in the Department of Race, Ethnicity, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and Stephanie Gonzalez, assistant professor in the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures. Contributors include Carolina Alonso (Fort Lewis College), Laura Gonzales (University of Florida), Maira Alvarez (St. Mary's University), and Brian Rosenblum (University of Kansas).
The TBDH was awarded under the Mellon Foundation Higher Learning program, which creates opportunities for experiential learning. The consortium will enable students to apply theoretical knowledge to real-world issues while collaborating with faculty and library professionals to enhance transborder digital humanities research and professional development.
The TBDH will award fellowships to undergraduate and graduate students. Under the mentorship of Fernández-Quintanilla, Jessica Corona will be the first TBDH fellow. She currently is a master's student in the UTSA Spanish program, and her two-year fellowship will support her research on gender violence and feminicides in El Paso and San Antonio. This work will inform her thesis, contributing to a transborder bilingual database. She will also co-teach a course and present her research at conferences.
Additionally, the TBDH will serve as a vital resource for curricula addressing social justice issues across border regions. Researchers will create and strengthen a comprehensive multilingual platform that will feature datasets, archives, interactive visualizations, digital editions, podcasts, open educational resources (OERs), tutorials and other tools for community-engaged digital scholarship.
Starting in Spring 2025, the TBDH will host a speaker series in San Antonio that will culminate in the Transborder Digital Humanities Symposium at UTSA in May 2026. This event, co-organized with the Latin American and Caribbean DH Symposium, at the University of Florida, will feature keynote speakers and gather scholars, students and community members to discuss border and transborder studies at the intersection of digital and public humanities.