Ricardo
Ainslie’s
work involves a hybrid methodology that draws from psychoanalysis, ethnography,
and documentary forms of inquiry. He has spent the last fifteen years
working in three small communities in Texas where ethnic and racial
conflicts have been salient. In No Dancin’
In Anson: An American Story of Race and Social Change
(Jason Aronson, 1995/The Other Press, 2002), he analyzed a small West
Texas town’s controversy over dancing to illustrate the social
transformation in the community following the Civil Rights Act in the
1960’s. In Hempstead, Texas, he used a documentary film format
(Crossover: A Story of Desegregation, 1999) to illustrate the bittersweet
legacy of school desegregation in our nation. His work in Jasper, Texas,
explores the impact of the murder of James Byrd on that community, and
has resulted in a collaboration with documentary photographer Sarah
Wilson to create Jasper, Texas: The healing of a community in crisis,
a traveling exhibit. He is currently working on two forthcoming books
related to the murder (University of Texas Press).
Ricardo
Ainslie is a native of Mexico City, Mexico. He earned his Bachelor’s
degree at the University of California at Berkeley, and his Ph.D. in
Clinical Psychology at the University of Michigan. He is currently a
Professor in the department of Educational Psychology at the University
of Texas at Austin. He is also an Affiliate Faculty of the Center for
Mexican American Studies (University of Texas), the American Studies
Program (University of Texas), and the Houston-Galveston Psychoanalytic
Institute. Ricardo Ainslie has also published extensively in scholarly
journals, on such topics as psychoanalysis and culture, the psychology
of immigration and acculturation. His publications also include The
Psychology of Twinship (Jason Aronson, 1997). Among the courses professor
Ainslie teaches at the University of Texas is a course titled: “Life
History and Documentary Approaches to Inquiry”. Ainslie received
the “Outstanding Contribution to Science” award from the
Texas Psychological Association in 2002.
Ricardo
Ainslie’s current work includes a study of the 1991 Crown Heights
riots in Brooklyn, New York, and a new documentary film, based on the
life of a Mexican immigrant. The latter explores the immigration experience
and its effect on both sides of the US-Mexico border.