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Professor Lisa Sousa
Norman Bridge Professor, History
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., UCLA
Department Chair, Latino/a & Latin American Studies
Appointed In
1997
Office
Swan Hall #301
Hours
Fall 2024 Office Hours: Wednesdays 12:30pm-2:30pm and Fridays 1:30pm-2:30pm

Sousa specializes in the histories of colonial Latin America, indigenous peoples and languages of Mexico, and women, gender and sexuality.

 

Sousa鈥檚 research focuses on indigenous peoples, languages, and cultures of Mexico. She is the author of The Woman Who Turned Into a Jaguar, and Other Narratives of Native Women from Archives of Colonial Mexico (Stanford University Press, 2017). The book was awarded the American Historical Association鈥檚 prestigious Friedrich Katz Prize for Best Book in Latin American and Caribbean History, the American Society for Ethnohistory鈥檚 Erminie Wheeler-Voeglin Award for the Best Book in Ethnohistory, and Honorable Mention for the Conference on Latin American History鈥檚 Mar铆a Elena Mart铆nez Prize in Mexican History.

Sousa is co-translator and co-editor of The Story of Guadalupe: Luis Laso de la Vega's Huei Tlamahui莽oltica of 1649, a translation and analysis of the earliest Nahuatl-language account of the apparition of the Virgin of Guadalupe (Stanford University Press, 1998), and of Mesoamerican Voices, a volume of Nahuatl, Maya, and Mixtec writings from colonial Mexico and Guatemala (Cambridge University Press, 2005). In addition, she has published numerous articles and book chapters on women and crime, native marriage practices, deviance and morality, indigenous views of the conquest, and colonial Mixe writings.

Sousa鈥檚 current research project examines indigenous accounts and social memories of the destruction of religious and material culture as part of the military and 鈥渟piritual鈥 conquests of Mexico in the sixteenth century. She is also involved in several collaborative projects focused on the Florentine Codex, a twelve-volume manuscript written and illustrated by Nahua noblemen under the supervision of fray Bernardino de Sahag煤n between the 1540s and 1570s. Sousa鈥檚 research has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Getty Research Institute, where she was a Scholar in Residence in Spring 2018.

Sousa teaches courses in colonial and modern Latin American history, including: Colonial Latin America (H150/LLAS150); Nahuatl Language, Writing, and Culture (H251/CSLC251); Religion in Mexico (H252); Gender and Sexuality in Colonial Latin America (H300); Race in Latin America (H354); and Indians of Mexico (H355). She is committed to mentoring undergraduate research and to integrating her research methodologies and experience into her courses.