Hector Amaya

Professor of Communication and American Studies and Ethnicity

Research & Practice Areas

Transnationalism; Latinx Studies; Immigration and Culture; Nativism and Violence; Media and Ethnicity; Publicity, Citizenship and Ethnicity; Materialities, Identity, and New Media

Biography

Hector Amaya is a professor of American Studies and Ethnicty (ASE), and professor and Director of the Annenberg School of Communication. He has authored three books and has published dozens of articles on the issues of globalization, Latin American media, comparative media studies, immigration, and Latinx media studies.

A leader in his intellectual community, Amaya is the past chair of the Latina/o Communication Studies Division of the National Communication Association (NCA), the past chair of NCA’s La Raza Caucus, and the past chair of the Latino Caucus of the Society of Cinema and Media Studies. His most recent work, Trafficking: Narcoculture in Mexico and the United States (Duke University Press, 2020), analyzes the way Mexico’s criminal drug violence and new media technologies structure publicness in Mexico and the United States. His previous book, Citizenship Excess: Latinas/os, Media and the Nation (NYU Press, 2013), examines the mainstreaming after 9/11 of anti-Latino nativism in politics and in media. His first book, Screening Cuba: Film Criticism as Political Performance During the Cold War (University of Illinois Press, 2010), is a comparative study of film reception of Cuban film, cultural criticism, and citizenship in Cuba and the USA from the 1960s to 1985.

Amaya was born and raised in Mexico and began his education at the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana (Mexico City). He has advanced degrees from the University of Calgary and the University of Texas at Austin. Prior to joining USC Annenberg, Amaya was a professor of media studies at the University of Virginia. He is a past member of the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) at Princeton in the School of Social Science.


  • Research Specialties

    Transnationalism; Latinx Studies; Immigration and Culture; Nativism and Violence; Media and Ethnicity; Publicity, Citizenship and Ethnicity; Materialities, Identity, and New Media

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