background 0background 1background 2background 3

Immigration Rights and Resources for the Campus Community

Karen Zurita

Breadcrumb

Karen Zurita, 2022

Thesis:

I’m Karen Zurita, and I’m a proud first generation Mixtec Xicanx. I grew up in Sylmar, where I attended Los Angeles Mission College and transferred to Humboldt State to complete my Bachelor’s. During that time, I discovered my love for spoken-word poetry and being an essayist. My passion grew, and when I graduated in 2016, it influenced me to enroll in Humboldt State’s english graduate program, focusing on Literature and Cultural Studies. Over the course of my graduate studies, my professors introduced me to many Queer Xicanx writers, which helped me articulate my ideas and decolonize my writing. Living in Humboldt for several years, I had the honor to get to know the Yurok and Hupa community, and they helped me understand how to start healing my writing and how to put my identity into words. In all, I found the language to empower myself and my community, and became a poet who knows how to wield it.

Justin Egan

Breadcrumb

Portrait of Justin Egan

Advisor

Lisa Tremain

Justin Egan, 2019

Thesis:

Currently, I am working for Papa and Barkley Social, a dispensary, spa, and cannabis lounge. In my present role, I am responsible for customer service and dispensary sales. I hope to grow within the company into a more creative role and spend less time on the floor. I will be taking on a part-time teaching position in composition at College of the Redwoods next semester, and I am very excited. My patience and resilience have finally led me to the role I have been seeking since graduation. I do my best to keep myself engaged with reading and writing, and sometimes publish reviews of books and video games on Medium. I have been outlining and conceptualizing a science fiction novel, tentatively titled Pseudo-Real, which I plan to begin formally writing in 2022. I see great value in the graduate program at HSU. Not only have I been instructed by incredible teachers and advisors, but also I was given the privilege and great learning opportunity to teach my own composition courses. These experiences confirmed for me that teaching college-level composition was the most rewarding work I had done and that it was the career path I wanted to pursue. Studying and discussing language, systems of power, and the ways power can be subverted have focused my interpretive and critical perspectives. My political education would not be complete without my time in this program. Language is power, and learning to read and use language effectively is valuable--often dangerous–work.

Kim Sisu

Breadcrumb

Portrait of Kim Sisu

Advisor

Lisa Tremain

Kim Sisu, 2023

Thesis:

I grew up in Eugene, Oregon and received my BA in Sociology and minor in Creative Writing from the University of Oregon. I am now in my second year in the Applied English graduate program at HSU. My research asks how language used in online memes (memetic language) contributes to or exemplifies counter-hegemonic rhetorics. Other research interests include: Gender/Sexuality studies, Critical Theory, Digital Humanities, Queer Theory, Feminist Theory, and many others. Outside of school and research, I enjoy cycling, scrapbooking, baking, card games (cribbage is my favorite), and having as many plants as possible in my living space. I am still undecided on whether I will continue on to a PhD program or begin work in the editing and publishing field following graduation, but either way, I am excited to apply the knowledge and skills I am gaining in this program to ways of thinking and doing research.

Amanda Alexander

Breadcrumb

Portrait of Amanda Alexander

Amanda Alexander, 2013

Thesis:

Read more about Amanda on her Alumni Profile listing. 

Stephanie G. Cowherd, San Carlos Apache"

Breadcrumb

Stephanie G. Cowherd, San Carlos Apache", 2014

Thesis:

I am Forests and Community Program Director at Ecotrust. I lead projects related to forestry and natural resource planning, education, and community outreach and engagement. My most recent work taps into my lived and professional experience in working alongside Tribes and Indigenous communities to apply Indigenous Knowledge System frameworks to forest and natural resource planning that centers the community’s values, needs, and goals. I enjoy working with communities to bring vibrant storytelling about forests, foods, and fire to life through a variety of mediums including videos and experiential field tours. My work grounds itself in authentic relationships and accountability between organizations, Tribes, and other BIPOC communities and organizations. I dream of cultivating spaces for healing in community with all our relations. I am at heart a writer, and you can find my work published in places such as Toyon, Osiyo, Journal of Forestry, Tlaa: A Collective of Indigenous Expression. I am working on a small chapbook of poetry named Salt. I utilize a variety of skills I learned through the MA program in my current role. In particular, the critical race and gender studies courses I took through the program have been extremely helpful the past two years. I’ve worked together alongside my work’s Equity Working Group to develop racial equity frameworks and lenses to evaluate projects, internal policies, and funding priorities. I also draw on the skills I learned as a student teacher to co-develop with university instructors an intergenerational mentorship program between Native undergraduate students and Native high school students. Together, we co-developed and delivered lesson plans and guided students and mentors through a series of forestry-related topics. On a day-to-day basis, I utilize my research skills to research requests for proposals that align with the values and goals of the communities we work with and our organization’s strategic plan. If an RFP seems in alignment and we believe we’d be competitive, as a Program Director I most often lead or co-lead writing and work collaboratively to write a competitive proposal with internal and external collaborators. Just like a writing assignment, the RFP has genres, audiences, context, languages, and prompts you need to take into consideration to be effective. Sometimes a literature review is involved as well, and I write these too. More recently, I have been using skills I acquired through conducting qualitative research, developing a methodology for collecting, analyzing, meaning making, and sharing out data and our findings. The last skill set I’ll share about is around storytelling. The skills I learned through creative writing courses enabled me to grow as a storyteller. I get to work with amazing digital, print, visual, and other creative artists to elevate authentic, engaging, and compelling stories of community partnerships and our work together. My last word of advice is that the program is what you make of it, push yourself, take care of yourself, build and hold yourself accountable to community, you got this!
Subscribe to