Meet Our 2022 Visions After Violence Fellows!

We are delighted to introduce to you our 2022 Visions After Violence Fellows! With support from the Institute for Museum and Library Services, we created the Visions After Violence Fellowship Program as an opportunity for people who have been directly impacted by state violence to contribute to our community-based documentation and archival work. In 2017, we launched Life and Death in a Carceral State, a project that included training for directly affected people to conduct and record interviews with their fellow community members. Interviewers with lived experience bring unique insight and experience to our  work. The Visions After Violence Fellowship Program continues our commitment to centering the experiences, perspectives, and visions of people directly impacted by state violence. 

When we began accepting applications last fall, we were humbled by the field of strong candidates. Although we had originally planned to select two fellows, thanks to additional funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, we are grateful to be able to have three fellows for the first year of the program!

Alexa Garza’s passion for advocacy is rooted in her personal experience of incarceration and the stigma she faced in her community upon release. On the day she entered the criminal justice system, she promised herself that she would never look back or waste a moment of time. It is a promise she continues to keep. Alexa has a BA in business administration from Tarleton State University and is certified as a braille transcriber through the Library of Congress. She hopes to use storytelling to change the narrative about system involvement. She also hopes that lending her unique perspective as a formerly incarcerated woman of color will help elevate the often neglected voices of other currently and formerly incarcerated women of color.

A native of Detroit, Lovinah Igbani-Perkins has spent most of her life in Houston and considers herself a true Houstonian. After going to prison for the second time, she came to know her purpose in life. Lovinah has a BSW from the University of Houston, and works full-time as a Licensed Chemical Dependency Counselor at Healthcare for the Homeless in Houston. She is currently studying for her Master of Social Work Program, and is scheduled to graduate in May of 2022. Lovinah has been a collaborator with Texas After Violence since 2020, when she contributed an oral history to our Sheltering Justice Project. Since then, she has been a member of our Community Advisory Council, and was a panelist for Sheltering Justice in 2021: A Conversation. (Photo credit: Kevin Bruno; Houston, Texas.)

Juania Sueños is a Chicanx cursi. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Texas State, and is a cofounder and editor of the Infrarrealista Review. Juania is currently working on a novel based on her family in hopes of highlighting the West’s impacts on Mexico. She first collaborated with Texas After Violence in 2021, as part of our Unmute Yourself lineup. (Photo credit: Liz Moskowitz; Austin, Texas.) 

We are thrilled to welcome Alexa, Lovinah, and Juania to the team, and look forward eagerly to the work they will create.