Events

Fabric

Upcoming:

With Our Bodies and Our Souls: Thinking Feminism from the Andes

Julieta Paredes

Friday, April 25, 2008
1:30pm-3:30pm
Fireside Room

(2nd floor of the Arch Building at 3601 Locust Walk)

There has been a long debate about the politics of feminisms and the tensions within this movement spanning issues of race, class and colonial legacies. Between and within these movements, indigenous women have often been spoken for/about, but seldom our bodies, our voices, our struggles, our thoughts, our hopes have been taken into account. In my presentation I want to discuss our efforts to decolonize feminism, decolonize our bodies, and share our experiences of how we are working towards forging progressive feminist agendas in Bolivia. These experiences are taking place in the context of the hopes and promises for radical change since the election of the first indigenous president of Bolivia. We see this as an opportunity to forge critical alliances across borders in a manner that we can learn from our differences and our desires.

Puerto Ricans and the Problem of Recognition

Dr. Lorrin Thomas
Rutgers University

Friday, April 18th, 2008
12:00pm
3401 Walnut Street-Suite 330A

Lorrin Thomas is writing a book called "Puerto Rican Citizen", which examines Puerto Ricans political identities and political projects in the United States in the twentieth century. In this talk she will explore some of the ways that recent debates in history and political theory might be used to illuminate Puerto Ricans exceptional position as forced citizens of the United States.

Anthropological Collaborations in Colombia

Joanne Rappaport
Georgetown University

Friday, April 11th, 2008
12:00 noon
Graduate School of Education-Room 203

Sponsored by: Educational Linguistics Forum and the Center for Native American Studies

Domesticating the Pachuca

Catherine Ramirez
Assistant Professor
Department of American Studies
University of California, Santa Cruz

April 4th, 2008
12:00 noon
3401 Walnut Street-Suite 330A

Drawing from archival sources and oral history, this paper explores the myriad meanings that Mexican-American women have ascribed to the figures of the pachuca and pachuco (female and male zoot-suiter). It also offers evidence of the participation of Mexican-American girls and women in the Sleepy Lagoon incident and trial, Zoot Suit Riots, and World War II-era zoot subculture. As it renarrates the familiar tales of these important events, it removes Mexican-American women from the margins of Chicano historiography and foregrounds their redefinitions of contested cultural categories.

Recent Events:

Whenever Wednesday:
Carlos Motta & Ann Farnsworth-Alvear

Whenever Wednesday: Carlos Motta & Ann Farnsworth-AlveaHistorian Ann Farnsworth-Alvear, Director of Penn's Program in Latin American & Latino Studies, and artist Carlos Motta discuss their respective explorations of Latin American history and politics.

Wednesday, February 27
7:00 pm
Institute of Contemporary Art
University of Pennsylvania
118 S. 36th St. Philadelphia, PA 19104-3289
Telephone: 215.898.7108


This event is co-sponsored by the Latin American & Latino Studies Program at the University of Pennsylvania.

Liliana Angulo

Liliana Angulo is a Colombian-born photographer whose works were recently shown for the first time in the United States at Brookline's GASP Gallery.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008
12:00 noon
3401 Walnut Street - Suite 330A


Co-sponsored by: The Romance Language Department, Women's Studies Program, Penn Visual Studies, and the Du Bois College House.

Cave, City and Eagle's Nest: An Interpretive Journey Through the Rediscovered Mexican Codex-Mapa de Cuauhtinchan

David Carrasco, Harvard Divinity School Rainey
Hosted by DuBois College House and the Office of the Chaplain

December 5, 2007 at 4:30 p.m.
Reception: 5:30 p.m.

Rainey Auditorium

Research Presentation

'He outfitted his family in notable decency': Slavery, Honor, and Dress in Eighteenth-Century Lima, Peru

Tamara Walker
Mellon Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow
Department of History

December 4, 2007 4:00pm
3401 Walnut Street
Suite 330A

For elite men in eighteenth-century Lima, elegant clothing provided a language for expressing their wealth, status, and honor. By outfitting their wives and children in impressive finery, elite men showcased their patriarchal authority over all the goods and people in their households. Their authority extended in many cases to servants and slaves, who formed part of the public pageantry that was in service to these masculine ideals. By mapping the study of material culture onto the study of slavery, this paper brings into relief the social meanings clothing contained for slaves and the individuals who sought to control them, and highlights the possibilities urban life contained for the creation of social identities that fell outside the social lines and color lines drawn by the colonial state.

Coco Fusco

Coco FuscoCoco Fusco is a New York-based interdisciplinary artist and writer. She has performed, lectured, exhibited and curated around the world since 1988. She is the author of English is Broken Here, The Bodies That Were Not Ours and Other Writings and the editor of Corpus Delecti: Performance Art of the Americas and Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self. Fusco is a recipient of a 2003 Herb Alpert Award in the Arts. She is an associate professor in the Visual Arts Division of Columbia University's School of the Arts.

November 16, 2007
12:00 noon-College Hall 209

DARICE  POLO
Assistant Professor and
Coordinator of the Drawing Program at Kent State University
“Casting a Shadow”

Darice Polo will speak about her recent paintings and drawings as well as chronicle her development as an artist.  Her current work is based on a collection of black-and-white family photographs that document the years following her ancestors move from Puerto Rico to New York in 1927.  She will talk about growing up hispanic and how it has affected her professional development and life.

September 14, 2007
12:00 noon-College Hall 209
Co-sponsor by the History Department

LUNCH BOX SERIES 2006-2007 « more info »

January 17 - April 18 2007

January 17th, 2007
Johny Irizarry - Lighthouse
Maria Mills-Torres - Department of Education
Stanton Wortham - University of Pennsylvania

Lunch Box Series
12:00 pm
3401 Walnut Street Suite 331A

Title: "Learning from the Challenges: Latino Youth and Education in the Philadelphia Area "
Sponsored by: The Latin American and Latino Studies Program
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February 21st, 2007
Ana Maria Ochoa
New York University
Associate Professor of Music

Lunch Box Series
12:00 pm
3401 Walnut Street Suite 331A

Title: “Latin America Aurality and the Lettered City"
Sponsored by: The Latin American and Latino Studies Program
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March 23, 2007
Gloria D. Prosper-Sanchez
University of Puerto Rico - Rio Piedras

12:00 pm
Carriage House, 3907 Spruce St

Title: “Transing the Standard: The Case of Puerto Rican Spanish "
Co-sponsored by: Department of Romance Lamguages, Penn's Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Center, Festival Latino, La Casa Latina, QPenn, the Linguistic Consortium and The Latin American and Latino Studies Program
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March 26th, 2007
Dr. Raphael Reygadas
Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana in Mexico City

10:00 am
100 Arch Building

Title: “Democratic Processes, Activism, and Civil Society in Mexico"
Sponsored by: The Greater Philadelphia Latin American Studies Consortium and The Latin American and Latino Studies Program
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April 3rd, 2007
Film screening
7:00 pm
Class of 55 Conference Room
Van Pelt Library

Title: “Scars of Memory (Cicatriz de la Memoria) ”
Sponsored by: The Latin American and Latino Studies Program
Co-sponsored by: History Department
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April 18th, 2007
Amparo Yolanda Padilla
University of Pennsylvania
English Department

Lunch Box Series
12:00 pm
3401 Walnut Street Suite 331A

Title: “The Genres of Ambivalence: Revolution, Assimilation, and the Cold War in Luis Perez's ‘El Coyote, the Rebel’ ”
Sponsored by: The Latin American and Latino Studies Program
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September 20 - December 31 2006

Philadelphia Museum of Art

Title: "Tesoros/Treasures/Tesouros: the Arts in Latin America, 1492-1821"

For more info: http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/special/109.html
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September 20, 2006
Robert Smith
Baruch College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York (CUNY)
Associate Professor, Sociology, Immigration Studies and Public Affairs

Lunch Box Series
12:00pm
3401 Walnut Street Suite 331A

Title: “Transnational Life among Children of Immigrants”
Sponsored by: The Latin American and Latino Studies Program
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September 23 - February 26

University of Pennsylvania Museum

Title: "Under European Eyes: Conquistadors and Indigenous Arts of Latin
America"

For more info: http://www.museum.upenn.edu/new/exhibits/exhibits_looking.shtml
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September 22, 2006
James Mahoney
Northwestern University
James Mahoney is a comparative-historical researcher with interests in national development, qualitative methodology, and macro theory.

12:00pm Stiteler Hall Forum, 208 S. 37th Street 

Title: "Colonialism and Economic Development: Spanish America in Comparative Perspective."
Sponsored by: Comparative Politics Workshop
Co-sponsored by: The Latin America and Latino Studies Program
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October 10th, 2006
Achy Obejas University of Chicago

4:30 pm
Carriage House (3907 Spruce Street)

Title: "Identity and Dislocation"
Sponsored by: Romance Language Department
Co-sponsored by: the Latin America and Latino Studies Program
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October 17th, 2006
Alejandro de la Fuente
University of Pittsburgh

5:00 pm
Stephanie Grauman Wolf Room, McNeil
Center for Early American Studies, 3355 Woodland Walk

Title: “Slaves and the Creation of Legal Rights in Cuba: Coartacion and Papel”
Sponsored by: the Interdisciplinary Seminar in Atlantic Studies
Co-sponsored by: the Latin America and Latino Studies Program
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October 17, 2006
Robin D. Moore

5:15pm
Music Building
201 S. 34th Street, Room 302

Title: "Music and Revolution: Cultural Change in Socialist Cuba (Music of the
African Diaspora)"
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November 9-11, 2006

Time and Location: TBA

Title: “Power of Images Symposium”
Sponsored by: History Department
Co-sponsored by: the Latin America and Latino Studies Program
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November 15th, 2006
Adriana Brodsky
St. Mary’s College of Maryland
Assistant Professor of History

Lunch Box Series
12:00 pm
3401 Walnut Street Suite 331A

Title: “Celebrating the State: Sephardim and the uses of "lo Argentino" in intra-community politics”
Sponsored by: The Latin American and Latino Studies Program
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December 6th, 2006
Licia Fiol - Matta
Associate Professor
Department of Latin American & Puerto Rican Studies
Lehman College New York

Lunch Box Series
12:00 pm
3401 Walnut Street Suite 331A

Title: "Chencha's Gait: Latin Popular Music and Normativity in Mirta Silva"
Sponsored by: The Latin American and Latino Studies Program