Janel Pineda

Janel Pineda

Graduate Student

Cohort 2022-23

Email: jdpineda@ucla.edu

Biography

Janel Pineda is a Salvadoran poet, educator, and scholar of U.S. Central American Literature. Her research conceptualizes contemporary global Salvadoran poetics and investigates the ways that poetry can be used to counteract narrative silencing and to reclaim familial and cultural (hi)stories. Her research is invested in documenting the liberatory capacities of poetry, both through traditional literary analysis and qualitative research on poetry’s active role in Salvadoran communities. In 2023, Janel was awarded a Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans to support her studies at UCLA.

A first-generation college graduate, Janel earned a BA in English from Dickinson College, where she was a Posse Scholar. While at Dickinson, Janel co-founded a Latina Discussion Group to support the experience and retention of Latina students on a predominantly white, elite campus. Janel spent her junior year at the University of Oxford, as a recipient of the Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship. She returned to the UK in 2019 to begin her graduate studies on a Marshall Scholarship. Janel obtained an MA in Creative Writing and Education from Goldsmiths, University of London, where her research presented liberatory approaches to poetic pedagogies for young people of color, and an MPhil in Latin American Studies from the University of Cambridge, through which she analyzed memory and intergenerational dynamics within literary representations of Salvadorans in the U.S., El Salvador, and France.

Janel’s debut poetry book, Lineage of Rain, was published by Haymarket Books in 2021. Her poetry explores Salvadoran cultural memory, intergenerational family narratives, and diasporic joy. Janel is a part of the editorial team that founded La Piscucha Magazine, a multilingual art, literature, and culture magazine created by Salvadoran writers. Since her involvement with the 2018 Radical Roots Delegation, a group of Salvadoran diasporic organizers who met with social movement leaders across El Salvador, Janel is also a member of the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES). As a 2025 Writing Freedom Fellow, Janel is currently working on poetry that explores the relationship between the
Salvadoran Civil War and mass incarceration.

Education

  • University of Cambridge – Master of Philosophy in Latin American Studies
  • Goldsmiths, University of London – Master of Arts in Creative Writing and Education
  • Dickinson College, Bachelor of Arts in English, Minor in Creative Writing
  • University of Oxford, Mansfield Visiting Student Programme

Research

  • “(Re)Memory, Recovery, and Resistance: Towards a Process of Collective Healing in Post-War Global Salvadoran Literature” (University of Cambridge, 2022)
  • “Teaching Poetry to Young People of Color for a Liberation-Oriented Pedagogy.” (Goldsmiths, University of London, 2020)
  • “The War Is Or Isn’t Over, But Coffee Still Brews’: The Salvadoran Civil War, Transnational Migration, and Navigating Legacies of Trauma in Javier Zamora’s Unaccompanied.” (Dickinson College, 2018)
  • “Resistance and Resilience in Salvadoran Storytelling: Responses to the Salvadoran Civil War.” (Dickinson College, 2018)

Selected Publications

  • Lineage of Rain. Haymarket Books, 2021. (Poetry)

Honors & Awards

  • Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans 2023-2025
  • National Association of Latino Arts and Cultures (NALAC) NFA Grantee 2023
  • Eugene V. Cota Robles Fellowship 2022-2025
  • Institute for the Recruitment of Teachers Fellow, Phillips Andover Academy 2021
  • Marshall Scholarship 2019-2022
  • Macondo Writers Workshop Fellow 2019
  • Mentoring Underrepresented Scholars in English (MUSE) Scholar, Michigan State University 2018
  • The William G. And Elke F. Durden International Initiative Fund: Global Research Grantee 2018
  • Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship Program Recipient 2016 Excellence in the Advancement of Diversity and Social Justice, Dickinson College (2016, 2018)
  • Posse Scholarship 2014-2018