Luis E. Coronado Guel

Director, SBS Mexico Initiatives
Adjunct Professor, Department of History
Affiliate, Mexican American Studies Department
Affiliate Faculty, Binational Migration Institute
Affiliate Research Associate, Southwest Center
Luis Coronado

Geronimo Building, Room 102

Luis E. Coronado Guel is the Director of SBS Mexico Initiatives. He holds a doctorate in Latin American History. He received a bachelor’s degree in law from the Autonomous University of San Luis Potosí and a master’s degree in history from El Colegio de San Luis. His research interests include the cultural and intellectual history of nineteenth and twentieth century Mexico, specifically, its nation-state building processes by analyzing patriotic celebrations and public rituals. He is also interested in the history of mass media and technology's development in Mexico as a result of 1910 Cultural Revolution. His first book, La Alameda Potosina ante la llegada del ferrocarril (2009, 2015) is an intellectual and cultural history on the impact the railway had in the region of San Luis Potosí. Coronado’s teaching experience includes a variety of survey, upper-level, and graduate courses in Mexico and the United States in the fields of history, law, Mexican American Studies, Latin American Studies, and Cultural Heritage Studies, both in English and Spanish. 

His research interest and interdisciplinary training in law, history, ethnomusicology, and film studies have consistently focused on the cultural and intellectual history of independent Mexico. Its convoluted processes of nation-state building, national identity formation, and quest for modernity have become central to his understanding of the country’s history. Besides cultural and intellectual history, he has worked extensively on themes related to law and society combined with a focus on culture, heritage, and historical preservation. His research interests also include the cultural dimensions of transnational migration and interdisciplinary approaches to the concept of border. He has published articles, books and book chapters in Spanish related to Mexican history, law, historiography, legal philosophy, film studies, and cultural heritage. His current research and public scholarship focus on the shared popular culture and heritages between Mexico and the U.S.A. As a teacher, he enjoys helping students understand the legal ramifications of political decisions and their resulting cultural, economic, and social effects in history.