MARIA C GONZALEZ: SCHOLAR ACTIVIST María C. González is a professor in the English Department at the University of Houston, a feminist, political activist, and LGBT advocate. Her experiences growing up in El Paso, Texas were difficult and since then she has been working to make life a more welcoming and encouraging place for all. She joined
the University of Houston faculty in 1991 and became involved in local
politics almost immediately. Always a feminist activist, her work in
Houston became an extension of her scholarship. She met amazing feminist
activists in Houston in the local women's choice community and in the
late 90's became active with projects created by Annise Parker and Grant
Martin, as well as becoming involved with the Houston Gay and Lesbian
Political Caucus, as it was known at that time. González
has a long history of political activism and advocacy for the LGBTQ
community. It begins with being a positive role model for others. "Texas
can be a tough state for the LGBT community," González said.
"We still have a long way to go. I get students who come from all
parts of Texas and say, 'You are the first positive role model of an
out person I've ever met.'" González
is an authority on Mexican-American literature, Chicana writers, and
feminist and queer theory, and is the author of Contemporary Mexican
American Women Novelists: Toward a Feminist Identity. She is the
co-editor of Voices Breaking Boundaries' three-volume series
collection of transnational art and essays, Borderlines. She is one
of the founders of the GLBT Studies Minor and the LGBT Resource Center
at the University of Houston and a longtime member of the Faculty Senate.
González is a political activist and has been president, vice-president,
and screening chair of the Houston GLBT Political Caucus as well as
being a member of the board. She was honored as female Grand Marshal
at the 2007 Houston Pride Festivities; the theme was "Lone Star
Pride."
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