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Faculty, Staff & Administrators

  • Elizabeth Gregory, Director, Taylor Professor of Gender & Sexuality Studies and Professor of English, egregory@uh.edu
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      Professor Elizabeth Gregory
      Education
      Selected Publications

      Phone: 713.743.0932
      Email: egregory@uh.edu
      Office: 624 Agnes Arnold Hall 

      Elizabeth Gregory, Taylor Professor of Gender & Sexuality Studies and Professor of English, directs the WGSS Program and the UH Institute for Research on Women, Gender & Sexuality. She writes on Marianne Moore’s poetry and women’s work and fertility.

      Her 2021 book, “Apparition of Splendor: Marianne Moore Performing Democracy through Celebrity, 1952-1970,” argues for the brilliance and populist panache of the poems of Moore’s late phase, long ignored by critics. “AOS” offers in-depth readings of these multi-layered poems and of Moore’s daring and innovative use of her late-life celebrity to activate long-held egalitarian principles. Cross-dressed as George Washington in cape and tricorne and writing about accessible topics like sports, TV, holidays, love, activism, mortality and celebrity, Moore reached a wide cross-section of Americans, engaging them in consideration of what democracy meant in their daily lives, around issues of gender/ race/ sexuality/ high-low dynamics/ immigration/ aging/ and more.

      For more information, click here.


  • Guillermo De Los Reyes, Associate Director LGBT Studies, Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies,  jdelosreyes@uh.edu
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      Dr. Guillermo De Los ReyesDr. Guillermo De Los Reyes is an Associate Professor of Latin American Cultures and Literatures and Director of Undergraduate Studies. He also serves as Associate Director of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and he is a Faculty-in-Residence since 2011. He holds a Ph.D. and a M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania (2004, 1999) and a M.A. and B.A. from the Universidad de las Américas-Puebla (1997, 1994). Dr. De Los Reyes’ research interests are: Colonial Mesoamerica; gender, sexuality, and queer theory; Latin American cultural studies; secret and fraternal societies; and policy studies.

      Dr. De Los Reyes is the author of Herencias Secretas: Masonería, política y sociedad en México (2009: Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla) and is currently working on a book-length project entitled: “El pecado nefando:” Rethinking Gender and Sexuality in Colonial Mexico.

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  • Rachel Afi Quinn, Associate Director, Associate Professor of Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies and Comparative Cultural Studies, raquinn@uh.edu
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      Rachel Afi Quinn

      Rachel Afi Quinn received her Ph.D. from the Program in American Culture at the University of Michigan in 2012. Her scholarship focuses on race, mixed race identities, gender, and sexuality in the African Diaspora and she employs tools of transnational feminist theory, including ethnography and visual culture in her research. Her first book, "Being La Dominicana: Race and Identity in the Visual Culture of Santo Domingo," is an interdisciplinary cultural studies project that explores the impact of neoliberal development and U.S. popular media on Dominican women's identities. 

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  • Zelma L. Oyarvide Tuthill, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies,  zloyarvi@central.uh.edu
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      Zelma Tuthill

      Zelma Oyarvide Tuthill is an assistant professor of Sociology at the University of Houston. She is also the director of Undergraduate Studies in the department of Sociology, and a joint faculty member with the Women, Gender and Sexuality program. She received her PhD. From Rice University in 2020.

      Her research examines how health inequality is reproduced across the intersections of race/ethnicity, nativity, gender identity and sexual orientation. As a health scholar her qualitative, quantitative and theoretical work examines various axis of wellbeing including health status, health behaviors and healthcare utilization among population groups.  In order to more accurately capture processes of inequality among marginalized groups, her research agenda highlights how racism, sexism and heterosexism structure and reproduce poorer health outcomes and health environments.

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  • Zach Hough, Researcher, Institute for Research on Women, Gender & Sexuality, zwhough@cougarnet.uh.edu
  • Itzel Martinez, Researcher, Institute for Research on Women, Gender & Sexuality, iamarti6@central.uh.edu
  • Annamaria Milazzo, Research Asst. Professor, Institute for Research on Women, Gender & Sexuality,  amilazzo@Central.UH.EDU
  • Hannah Barker, Senior Director of Advancement, hmbarker@central.uh.edu 
  • Sue Schindler, Academic Advisor, bschindl@central.uh.edu
  • Leanne Prendergast, Graduate Office Assistant, wgss@uh.edu 

Lecturers

FALL 2024 + Spring 2025:

  • Introduction to Women's Studies
    • Anneliese Bustillo, M.A.
    • Melissa DeRemer, M.A.
    • Bridget Fernandes, Ph.D.
    • Devan Ford-McCartney, Ph.D.
    • Itzel Martinez, M.Ed.
    • Andrew Joseph Pegoda, Ph.D.
    • Brittany Slatton, Ph.D.
  • Introduction to LGBT Studies
    • Trevor Boffone, Ph.D.
    • Andrew Joseph Pegoda, Ph.D.
    • Liam Stone, Ph.D.

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