Soares
Associate Professor, Department of Women & Gender Studies
Women and Gender Studies

Pronouns: She/her/hers andThey/them/theirs

Kristie Soares is an Associate Professor of Women & Gender Studies and a performance artist. Both her performance work and her research explore queerness in Caribbean and Latinx communities. She earned a PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of California, Santa Barbara, an MA in Comparative Literature from the University of Colorado, Boulder, and a BA in English and Women’s Studies from the University of Florida.

Professor Soares’ forthcoming book,, investigateshow Latinx creators resist the idea that joy only exists outside politics and activist struggle. It argues that joy is a politicized form of pleasure that goes beyond gratification to challenge norms of gender, sexuality, race, and class. Soares focuses on the diasporic media of Puerto Rico and Cuba to examine how music, public activist demonstrations, social media, sitcoms, and other areas of culture resist the dominant stories told about Latinx joy. As she shows, Latinx creators compose versions of joy central to social and political struggle and at odds with colonialist and imperialist narratives that equate joy with political docility and a lack of intelligence. Soares builds her analysis around chapters that delve intogozandoin salsa music, precise joy among the New Young Lords Party,choteoin the comedy¿Qué Pasa U.S.A.?,úin the life and death of Celia Cruz,daleas Pitbull’s signature affect, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s use of silliness to take seriously political violence.

Professor Soares is also currently working on an oral history project that explores the role of Latinx disc jockeys in the development of disco and dance music in 1970s New York. Her work has been published inSigns, Feminist Studies, Meridians, Frontiers, Letras Femeninas, Revista de Estudios Hispánicos,Remezcla, LatinxSpaces, Latino Rebels,andThe Los Angeles Review of Books.

Professor Soares’ teaching draws heavily on queer and performance methodologies. She encourages students to “try out” intellectual concepts using their bodies, through decolonial pedagogies such as Theatre of the Oppressed. She also facilitates performance poetry workshops in schools and juvenile detention facilities. Her own performance work is invested in making political statements in and through the body. Her most recent performance project is a play she co-wrote with her writing partner, Katrina Ruiz, entitledArroz con Mango. The play offers a humorous but poignant depiction of growing up queer and Cuban in Miami.

Featured Publications:

"Joy, Rage, and Activism: The Gendered Politics of Affect in the Young Lords Party.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 46.4. (2021)

“Reflections on Anti-Racist Feminist Pedagogy & Organizing: This Bridge, 40 Years Later.” Forthcoming in a special issue of Feminist Studies. (2021)

“Dominican Futurism: The Speculative Use of Negative Aesthetics in the Work of Rita Indiana.” Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism 19.2. (2020)

“Latin Lovers, Chismosas, and Gendered Discourses of Power”: The Role of the Subjective Narrator in Jane the Virgin.Decolonizing Latinx Masculinity. Eds. Arturo Aldama and Frederick Aldama. Tuscon: U of Arizona P. (2019)

"Incomodando: On the Role of Bothering in Rita Indiana’s Speculative Work.” ASAP/J special cluster on Latinx Speculative Fiction. (2019)

“The Cuban Missile Crisis of White Masculinity: Tito Bonito and the Burlesque Butt.”The Routledge Companion to Gender, Sex and Pop Culture in Latin America. Routledge (2017)

Garzona Nationalism: The Confluence of Gender, Sexuality and Citizenship in the Cuban Republic.” Frontiers: A Journal of Women’s Studies 35.3 (2014)

“The Political Implications of Playing Hopefully: A Negotiation of the Present and the Utopic in Queer Theory.” The Un/Making of Latina/o Citizenship: Culture, Politics and Aesthetics. Ed. Ellie D. Hernández and Eliza Rodriguez y Gibson. New York: Palgrave Macmillan (2014)

“’Who Do I Have to Forgive to Move On From This Place?’: Meditations from a Third World Feminist Lesbian.” Queer Girls in the Class: Lesbian Teachers and Students Tell Their Classroom Stories. Ed. Lori Horvitz. New York: Peter Lang (2011)

“Traveling Queer Subjects: Homosexuality in the Cuban Diaspora.” Revista de Estudios Hispánicos 45.3 (2011)

"From Canary Birds to Suffrage: Lavinia’s Feminist Role in Who Would Have Thought It?Letras Femeninas 35.2: 211-229 (2009)