
Jessica Buckle, Sierra Sampson, Helen Yoshida (all history M.A. graduate students at CSU, Fullerton), and Katelyn York (a December 2018 History B.A. graduate) present with the purpose of the panel to highlight specific groups and showcase women in those groups. The first presentation will look at the evolution of female activism in Orange County. The second presentation will look at the way that gender roles “shape” women environmental activists. The third presentation will look at the role of gender and the history of the LGBT activism movement in Southern California. The final presentation will look at the activities and contributions of Chicanas in art, education, and literature from the Chicano Civil Rights Movement to today. These four presentations show unity and resilience in the fact that women have to face struggles and difficulties in everything they do. They are part of Women, Politics, and Activism since Suffrage, a project directed by Dr. Natalie Fousekis at California State University, Fullerton.

Juan Coronado (Post Doctoral Scholar, Julian Samora Research Institute, Michigan State University; Co-President, SOHA) and Tomas Summers Sandoval (Associate Professor of History and Chicano/Latino Studies at Pomona College) bring needed attention to ignored or distorted groups of people who are marginalized due to war and confinement. The untold histories of Mexican Americans and their communities during the Vietnam War mean that they too have been denied the chance to tell their own truths. Yet their stories provide valuable insight into lived experiences.

Adrienne Cain (Assistant Director and Lecturer, Institute for Oral History at Baylor University), Erikca Brown, Ph.D. (Credit Recovery Teacher, Rancho Cucamonga High School, California), and Nina Cole (Doctoral Candidate, University of California, Davis) present a look at “Black Voices.” The first presentation centers on a series of interviews of young African Americanstudents as the minority at a predominantly white institution (PWI) and documents their journey to getting National Panhellenic Council organizations (also known as BGLOs—Black Greek Letter Organizations) on campus, including the challenges, triumphs, and bonds formed with one another. The second presentation delves into the experiences of African American teachers in K-12 public schools and argues that by documenting the oral histories of African American teachers andgiving a living voice to their words, we hear firsthand the role racism plays in the professional interactions of these teachers by highlighting their experiences with racial microaggressions. The third presentation explores the role of 1960s-era Jamaican music as a center of community formation.











