Roberta Fernández


Roberta Fernández is a Tejana novelist, scholar, critic and arts advocate. She is known for her novel Intaglio and for her work editing several award-winning women writers. She was a professor in Romance languages & literatures and women's studies at the University of Georgia.

Biography

Early life and education

Fernández is a fifth-generation tejana from Laredo, Texas. She earned her B.A. and an M.A. degrees at the University of Texas at Austin and her PhD in Romance Languages & Literatures from the University of California, Berkeley. Her dissertation, "Towards a Contextualization of José Carlos Mariátegui's Concept of Literary and Cultural Nationalism," examined the role of José Carlos Mariátegui in the early 20th century Peruvian cultural wars.
Fernandez held a post-doctoral fellowship at the Center for Mexican American Studies at UT Austin. She received a Rockefeller Fellowship from the Womanist Consortium of the Institute of African American Studies at University of Georgia to study Chicana literary feminism and nationalism.
She received a second Rockefeller Fellowship from the CRIM, a research center in Cuernavaca associated with the National University of Mexico. The seminar topic for 2005 was "The Empowerment of Women." Her own topic dealt with "The Role Played by Community-Based Organizations in the Transculturation Process & Empowerment of Mexican Women Recently Arrived in Georgia."

Art advocacy

  • Assistant to the Director, Mexican Museum in San Francisco
  • Director, Bilingual Arts Program, Oakland Unified School District
  • Founder, Prisma: A Multicultural, Multilingual Women's Literary Review at Mills College
  • Directed two major conferences: "The Cultural Roots of Chicana Literature, 1780-1980" and "Latinos in the United States: Cultural Roots and Diversity".

Editorial and curatorial work

  • Editor, Arte Público Press, from 1990 to 1994. Several of the writers whose manuscripts she edited received national awards for these works.
  • Curator, "Twenty-Five Years of Hispanic Literature of the United States, 1965-1990", sponsored by the Texas Humanities Resource Center.

Published works

  • An Autobiography of an Abused ChildIntaglio: A Novel in Six Stories Fronterizas: Una novela en seis cuentos In Other Words: Literature by Latinas of the United States, ed. Fiesta, Fe y Cultura: Religious Celebrations of the Mexican Community of Detroit,, Laurie Sommers, ed. Twenty-five Years of Hispanic Literature in the United States,.
  • Some of her short fiction and essays have appeared in Riding Low in the Streets of Gold, Judith Ortiz Cofer, ed.; Herencia: The Anthology of Hispanic Literature of the United States, Nicolas Kanellos, ed.; American 24-Karet Gold: Classic American Short Stories, Yvonne Colliud Sisko, ed.; Breve: Actualite de la Nouvelle, Martine Couderc, ed. & trans.; Barrios and Borderlands: Cultures of Latinos and Latinas in the United States, Denis Lynn Daly Heyck, ed.; Mascaras: Latina Writers on Their Own Work, Lucha Corpi, ed.; The Stories We Have Kept Secret, Carol Bruchac, ed.;The Massachusetts Review ; Cuentos: Stories by Latinas, Gomez, Moraga, Romo-Carmona, eds., and many more national and international publications.
  • Some of her scholarly articles have appeared in as The Routledge Companion to Latino/a Literature, Frances Aparicio & Suzanne Bost, eds. ; The Flannery O'Connor Review ; Encyclopedia of Ethnic American Literature, Emmanuel Nelson, gen. ed. ; 'Abriendo Caminos in the Brotherland: Chicana Feminism in El Grito ' in Chicana Leadership: The Frontier Reader, Sue Armitage et al., eds. ; 'La presencia de Jose Carlos Mariategui en el Repertorio Americano ' in Revista de Linguística y Filología de la Universidad de Costa Rica; Reconstructing American Literature, Paul Lauter ; Women's Studies and in other publications.

Awards for creative writing

  • Three-time DeWitt Wallace/Reader's Digest/MacDowell Fellow while a resident at the MacDowell Colony
  • Multicultural Publisher's Exchange award, Best Fiction, Intaglio: A Novel in Six Stories
  • Inducted into the Texas Institute of Letters
  • Finalist for the Schweitzer Fellowship in Creative Writing at SUNY Albany—Toni Morrison, judge, 1987
  • Finalist for the D.H. Lawrence Fellowship at the U of New Mexico, 1986
  • Finalist for the Dobie/Paisano Fellowship of the Graduate School at the University of Texas in Austin, 1983

Scholarly awards