Tiffany González


Tiffany González
  • Assistant Professor, History
she/her/hers

Contact Info

Wescoe Hall, room 3617

Biography

Dr. Tiffany González's research centers on 20th-century U.S., emphasizing U.S. politics, Chicana-Latina/o history, women’s history and social movements. Her current book manuscript-in-progress, Representation of Change: How Chicanas Reshaped the American Political Process in the Late 20th Century, is under contract with UNC Press with the Latinx Histories Series. Her forthcoming book examines how Chicanas fought for the ERA and self-determination, as well as for participation and representation in U.S. politics during the Chicana/o and Women’s Movement. This book is a revised version of her dissertation, which won the OAH Lerner-Scott Prize for best Ph.D. dissertation in U.S. women’s history in 2022. Her second book project will center the life of former Texas State Representative Irma Rangel, the first Mexican American woman feminist legislator, who served in office from 1977 to 2003. Rangel is most remembered for her legislative activism on behalf of women and the working-class, as well as her stance on welfare reform, equity in higher education and labor rights.

Education

Ph.D. in U.S. History, Texas A&M University, 2020, College Station, TX
Mexican American and Latina/o Studies graduate certificate, Texas A&M University, 2020, College Station, TX
M.A. in History, Texas Tech University, 2014, Lubbock, TX
B.A. in History, Texas Tech University, 2009, Lubbock, TX

Teaching

Dr. González teaches courses on U.S. history such as Latina/o/x history, Mexican American history, histories of women in politics, modern American politics, oral history, podcasts and public history, social movements, and borderlands.

Recent Courses:

  • HIST 355 U.S. Borderlands Since 1848
  • HIST 380 Introduction to Public History
  • HIST 384 Chicana/Latina Women's History 
  • HIST 311 Gender & Power U.S. Politics 
  • HIST 208 Latina/o/x Civil Rights 

Selected Publications

“Rabble-Rousers of the Community: Chicana Activism in Austin and the Mexican American Business and Professional Women's Association” (under review with WHQ).

"Pathways to Political Office: María Cárdenas and the Creation of Single-Member Districts in San Angelo." US Latina & Latino Oral History Journal 1 (2017): 98-116.

“Irma Rangel: Public Servant, Feminist Veterana, and Persistent Crusader,” Latina Magazine, https://latina.com/irma-rangel-public-servant-feminist-veterana-and-persistent-crusader/

Inheriting a Path: Rosie Castro’s Influence on Julián and Joaquin,” Latinx Talk (May 2019). https://latinxtalk.org