Sonia Cristina Suárez
Interdisciplinary social science methods, transdisciplinary methods, (Afro-)Latinx mental health, psychopathology, transnational women of color feminisms
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Bio & Research Interests
Sonia’s research finds that mainstream psychiatric modes of diagnosing people who are identified as Latinx carry racialized, gendered, and sexualized notions of psychopathology among people of color. In particular, this work looks at “cultural concepts of distress” (CCDs), such as Ataque de Nervios, and documents gendered anti-Black and anti-Indigenous stereotypes carried within the literature on CCDs and related topics. She formulates a cross-disciplinary archive of race, gender, science, and psychopathology to reveal how concepts of brujería (Spanish for ‘magic’, or often, ‘witchcraft’) and other examples of non-Western knowledge become pathologized in the existing research and training literature.
Sonia is a Hellman Foundation fellow for her work on race and gender in biomedical systems of psychopathology. Along her path toward Ethnic Studies, Sonia published research in social, organizational, and clinical psychology and studied counseling psychology at the doctoral level. She completed her Bachelor of Science at Northwestern University, not terribly far from her hometown of Cicero, Illinois.
Advisor:
Ramon Grosfoguel
Courses Taught or Assisted
Taught:
Reading and Composition in Native American Studies
Reading and Composition in Asian American Studies
Reading and Composition in Chicano/a Studies
Qualitative and Quantitative Research Methods in Psychology
Assisted:
Intro to Chicano/a History
Intro to Theories of Ethnic Studies
International Immigration in Western Europe and US before and after 9/11
Asian American Community Health
Indigenous Peoples in Global Inequality
Islamophobia and Constructing Otherness
Muslims in America