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Summer Institute Update: MALCSWear!

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The official MALCS Summer Institute 2012 t-shirts and tote bag are now available for pre-order. These v-neck, slim-cut t-shirts come in sizes from Small-XXL in both red and black. Each item features a beautiful full color design courtesy of artist Silvia Ji.

T-shirts are $20 individually and tote bags are $15 individually. However, when you purchase a Jefa Combo Pack you get your choice of T-shirt plus the tote bag for only $30, getting a $5 discount! To order, please click here to print the form and mail to Theresa Peña. You can pick up your order upon arriving to the Institute.

This message is also a quick reminder to reserve your Institute housing as soon as possible. Discounted dorm packages are available and running out quickly! Being one of the most attractive tourist cities in the country, Santa Barbara’s hotel costs rise during the summer months. Additionally, it is recommended that you take notice that hotel rates differ between weekdays and weekends. We encourage attendees who are looking to minimize travel costs to apply to stay in the dorms. Click here to view the housing application.

We are excited for your arrival and remind you that as a part of your registration you will receive a ticket to the Tortuga Awards Dinner ($25 value) where you can join in celebration of the accomplishments of fellow members. We are happy to announce that we will be conducting a raffle for an iPad and several other distinguished prizes during the dinner and winners must be present to win. If you would like more information on purchasing additional Tortuga Award Dinner tickets please email moc.liamgobfsctd-6e8e65@bscu2102sclam

Best,
Aida Hurtado, Chair

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Professor Maria Cotera: “Chicana por mi Raza” online archive project

Professor Maria Cotera presented a talk earlier this month at Stanford about her Online Chicana Feminist History Archive Project, created with documentary  filmmaker and producer Linda Garcia Merchant, of Voces Primeras. From the newsletter for the Clayman Center for Gender Research: "Chicana por mi Raza" artwork

“Today we talk about Chicana feminism almost exclusively in the academy,” Maria Cotera told an audience in Margaret Jacks Hall, “but in the 1970s, it was happening in the streets.”

The goal of Cotera’s ambitious online archive project, “Chicana por mi Raza,” is to recapture the once vibrant movement for the social, political, and economic justice of Mexican American, Chicana, and Hispanic women in the United States. When it launches later this year, the website will house a rich archive documenting the development of Chicana feminist thought and action from 1960 to 1990. The efforts of her and of the project’s co-founder, Linda Garcia Merchant, have amassed thousands of newspapers, reports, leaflets, out-of-print books, pieces of correspondence, and oral histories, most of which have been missing from mainstream archives.

Silence of the archive
In her recent talk, “Liberating the Feminist Archive: Mapping Chicana Feminisms in the Digital Age,” Cotera, Associate Professor at the University of Michigan, previewed some materials from the database. She hopes that the site will “bring the history of Chicana feminism to a whole new audience, from public school educators to college students to established scholars.”

Article continues here

College Board Offers Guide for Undoc. Students

From journalist Marisa Trevino at Latinalista:

In one of the strongest signals that the education community supports the DREAM Act — allowing undocumented students, who were brought to the US as children, attend college or enlist in the military and be put on a path to citizenship — the College Board released yesterday a state-specific resource guide for undocumented students.

The Repository of Resources for Undocumented Students lists information about admissions, financial aid, scholarships and support groups in 11 of the 14 states that have in-state tuition rates for undocumented students.

The author of the report, Alejandra Rincon, is an immigrant rights activist who holds a doctorate in education administration from the University of Texas. Dr. Rincon understands firsthand the challenges undocumented students and their families encounter in trying to find the necessary information if they live in one of the 11 states highlighted in the report: California, Illinois, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, Washington and Wisconsin.

In addition to breaking down the information state-by-state, the report also includes a General Resources section that lists various non-profit and corporate scholarships that are not state-specific, URLs to other in-depth guides to scholarships, financial aid information and other support-type literature.
Because the issue is still so fluid, the report’s author admits the report is not complete.

In 2011, three states passed their in-state tuition laws including Connecticut, Maryland and Rhode Island. Specific resources on those states are not included in this guide given the recent passage of the laws but the goal is to provide those in the near future.

In addition, last year saw two important developments in the area of financial aid as both California and Illinois passed laws to permit undocumented immigrant students’ greater access to such resources. Both laws are unique efforts that we hope inspire many more to follow suit.

See original article at Latina Lista and/or College Board Resource here

Dolores awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom

Dolores Huerta receives Presidential Medal of Freedom
“I’m deeply gratified in receiving the Medal of Freedom. The freedom of association means that people can come together in organization to fight for solutions to the problems they confront in their communities. The great social justice changes in our country have happened when people came together, organized, and took direct action. It is this right that sustains and nurtures our democracy today. the civil rights movement, the labor movement, the women’s movement, the equality movement for our LGBT brothers and sisters are all manifestations of these rights. I thank President Obama for raising the importance of organizing to the highest level of merit and honor. It is a unique honor and privilege to be included in this group of distinguished individuals being honored here today and the communities they represent.”

–Dolores Huerta, 5/30/2012

Dolores Huerta

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

  

 
 

 

 

 

First photo: AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster
Second photo: American Latino Museum

New by Josefina Lopez: Detained in the Desert

From NBCLatino, by Adrian Carrasquillo

Josefina Lopez is best known for authoring “Real Women Have Curves,” a play turned movie which challenged cultural assumptions on beauty, marriage and a woman’s role in society. Her latest effort could be described as even more personal – “Detained in the Desert,” a movie from her and director Iliana Sosa, is an uncompromising look at the topic of immigration in the U.S. — something they feel has been completely ignored in the powerful film medium.

“I was undocumented for 13 years,” Lopez says. “As a little girl it really damaged me. You don’t feel human, you internalize this invisibility and really feel like you are an alien.” The movie is centered on Sandi, a second-generation dark skinned Latina and Lou Becker, a controversial talk show radio host. “They get stranded in the desert and have to help each other out,” Sosa says. “They have to set their political differences aside – they become like the undocumented immigrants who die out there, trapped.”

Lopez gained firsthand knowledge of the plight of undocumented immigrants who attempt to cross the desert to enter the U.S. when she was given a tour of the areas in Arizona by Enrique Morones, who founded Border Angels. The non-profit organizations works to “stop the unnecessary deaths of individuals in the desert by delivering water in key points where migrants cross the desert.”

Morones, who will play himself in the movie, tells unbelievable stories of his experiences as a border angel. He says he has had confrontations with militiamen in Arizona who poke holes in the water gallons he leaves for migrants. He also told Lopez he puts down crosses when he comes across a body in the desert and says he has seen the spirits of those who perished sitting in the back of his truck.

During her tour with him, Lopez was eventually taken to a cemetery with 700 unmarked graves of undocumented immigrants who died making the fateful trip. It is because of this “haunting” experience that she decided to donate the proceeds from the movie, which begins filming on June 21, to Border Angels.

There is also a campaign online to help pay for the post-production costs for the movie, which is on a tight and low budget. Story continues at NBCLatino

Entre Mujeres: a translocal music composition project

My name is Martha Gonzalez and I am a Chicana artivista, singer and songwriter for East LA based Quetzal. I want to invite you all to support a very important project that I have been working on.

Entre Mujeres is a translocal music composition project between Chicanas/Latinas in the U.S. and Jarochas/Mexican female musicians in Mexico. This project seeks to make the voices, ideas and translocal dialogues between Chicanas and Jarochas visible through the medium of song.

A song as a sonic and literary manifestation is life’s sound-scape, a unique cathartic memento, as well as a powerful political Entre Mujeres tool. Without question a song is also an important historical text. A person’s testimonio (testimony), life views, triumphs, and struggles can be expressed into song lyrics. In the end a song, like a testimonio is what stands as moment lived. Multiplied by community this can be an active exercise in consensus and knowledge production. As a collaborator in various songwriting moments I have witnessed time and again how this method and process creates space, builds community, challenges multiple patriarchal systems, and can potentially produce knowledge that is accessible.

Throughout this project there has been convivencia, trust, testimonios that have generated important moments of healing, and knowledge production. In these ways Entre Mujeres Project is a testament to the kind of collective knowledge generated across U.S. Mexican borders. [Read more…] about Entre Mujeres: a translocal music composition project

Chicana/Latina Studies names two new editors

From MALCS Chair Monica Torres:

Colegas,

Some good news from the journal. Chicana/Latina Studies: the Journal of Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social has appointed two new editors to its staff.

Elisa Rodriguez y Gibson has been named co-editor. Rodriguez y Gibson is an assistant professor at Loyola Marymount University. She teaches courses on Chicana/o literature, Cultural Studies, and feminist theory. She has written on the work of Lorna Dee Cervantes, Elizabeth Martinez, Carmen Tafolla, Naomi Quiñonez, Josefina Lopez, Joy Harjo, and Helena Maria Viramontes. She is the editor of Lorna Dee Cervantes: A Critical Anthology (forthcoming Wings Press, 2011) and has contributed to various reference works, including the Oxford Encyclopedia of Latino and Latina History in the U.S. and the Encyclopedia of Ethnic American Literatures published by Greenwood Press.

Linda Heidenreich, Associate Professor at Washington State University, has been named book review editor. Heidenreich teaches in the Department of Critical Culture, Gender, and Race Studies. Her research and teaching interests include Chicana/Chicano studies and history, Queer studies, and the history and culture of 19th-century west, especially California history.

Congratulations to Josie and the national board of Chicana/Latina Studies for bringing these selection processes to a successful close.  –Monica

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