MALCS Archive

(MALCS) Women Active in Letters and Social Change

  • Home
  • Blog
  • History
  • Leadership
  • Membership
  • Forums
  • Institute
  • Journal
  • Giving
  • Contact Us

Postdoc Fellowship: Reproductive Politics in the Americas

Hampshire College invites applications for a three-year postdoctoral fellowship in Comparative Reproductive Politics of the Americas.  This Mellon-funded position is one of five to be filled in 2012-13 in cooperation with the Five College Consortium (Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, Smith colleges and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst).  Hampshire College encourages inter-disciplinary teaching and research.  While in residence at Hampshire, the Fellow will participate fully in one of the nation’s most vibrant academic collaborations, including the Five College Reproductive Politics Group comprised of faculty and graduate students working in global reproductive politics, and the annual conference for students and community activists, From Abortion Rights to Social Justice: Building the Movement for Reproductive Freedom.  There is related support from colleagues and library and research facilities at all five campuses, each located within a twenty-minute drive of the others.  Over three years the Fellow will teach six courses, two at Hampshire College, two at Mount Holyoke College, and two at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.  The Fellow will be provided research and teaching mentors on each campus in coordination with Hampshire College which will host the fellowship.

The candidate should have expertise in comparative reproductive politics in the western hemisphere, including the countries of the Americas, with a particular interest in political and juridical aspects of reproductive and sexual rights movements.  Applicants should have research and teaching interests in one or more of the following themes:  transnational social movements that seek to achieve as well as to contest sexual and reproductive rights; factors that facilitate or impede policy reform, legislative action, and grassroots social movements; comparative methodologies; the relationship of political parties and NGOs to reproductive and sexual rights movements; and new forms of social activism that emerge in the wake of civil war and military dictatorship.

The successful candidate must have completed all requirements for a PhD before assuming the fellowship.

Position begins fall 2012.  Review of applications begins March 16, 2012 and will continue until the position is filled.  Hampshire College is committed to building a culturally diverse intellectual community and strongly encourages applications from women and minority candidates.  We offer a competitive salary and comprehensive benefit program, including support for research.  Applicants should send a letter of interest, CV, writing sample, and two letters of reference to via our website at https://jobs.hampshire.edu/

www.hampshire.edu

Hampshire College is an equal opportunity institution, committed to diversity in education and employment

The Border Book Festival April 19-22 in Mesilla, New Mexico

PRESS RELEASE
CONTACT
Denise Chávez
The Border Book Festival
575-523-3988
moc.lavitsefkoobredrobobfsctd-227f2d@fbb

THE SHAMANIC JOURNEY/LA JORNADA CHAMÁNICA

2012.  Year of Healing and Transformation.  The Completion of a 26,000 year
cycle according to the Mayan and Aztec calendars.  The Border Book Festival (BBF) is making plans for its 18th annual book festival, The Shamanic Journey, which will take place April 19-22 in Mesilla, New Mexico.

Invited presenters include Curandera/healer/herbalist/midwife Doña Enriqueta Contreras from Oaxaca, México, Dr. Marta Moreno Vega, Yoruba priestess from New York, Catalina Delgado Trunk, Papel Picado and altar artist, and Esther Yazzie-Lewis, Navajo Earth Activist, founder of the Diné Spiritual Land Recovery Project.  Navajo Medicine Man, Ben Willie, will give the final blessing of the festival on Sunday, April 22

A special Oaxacan Mole Fest Festival Fundraiser will take place on Thursday, April 19 with Oaxacan chef, Pilar Cabrera.  Ms. Cabrera runs the world famous La Olla Restaurant in Oaxaca, México.

The Festival artists/writers/healers are deeply involved with their communities and its healing.  They will join us to share their vision of a world united.

The Border Book Festival is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit literary, literacy and arts organization that is housed in the historic Frietze  Store in Mesilla that dates from the mid 1800s.

New Mexico’s longest running book fair began over 20 years ago with readings, book signings and a small literary festival at the Holy Cross Retreat House.  The event evolved into the nationally renowned and much loved Border Book Festival, which moved to Mesilla in 2004. Since then the BBF has opened the Cultural Center de Mesilla and Galería Tepín, a multicultural gallery space.

Writing and artwork will be gathered for JORNADA, a bilingual English/Spanish book that will feature poetry, essays, stories and artwork from our featured presenters as well as various invited writers and artists whose work resonates with our theme.  A special exhibition of Catalina Delgado Trunk’s papel picado will take place at Galería Tepín during the festival.  Her art piece, Dancing at the Portal, will be featured on the festival poster.

Festival highlights include An Afternoon Gathering for Women/Sanación con Sabiduría/Una Tardeada Para Mujeres with Doña Enriqueta Contreras who will
offer a look at Zapotec Principles of Living.  She will also offer a workshop called Home Remedies and the Importance of a Basic Herbal Home Kit/Remedios Caseros y La Importancia de Una Canasta Básica en Nuestros Hogares. In this 3-hour workshop with Doña Enriqueta Contreras, we will learn how to assemble a home remedy kit.

Dr. Marta Moreno Vega will offer a workshop on Yoruba teaching and the festival will screen her documentary,”Cuando los Espíritus Bailan Mambo”/”When the Spirits Dance Mambo.”  A triumphant voyage of faith and power, the film traces the role of sacred African thought and practices in the formation of Cuban society, culture and music in a 90-minute documentary is a tribute to the spiritual energy that traveled from West Africa to Cuba and New York.  In addition, she will be giving a reading on Saturday, April 21 with music and a dance following.

The “Picasso of Paper,“ Catalina Delgado Trunk, who is considered one of the top world paper artists will offer present a Talk/Plática on The History & Evolution of Día de Muertos in México & Its Healing & Cultural Traditions as well as a Papel Picado workshop during the festival weekend.

A panel of artists/healers and scholars will discuss the Future of Our Shared Journey and What Lies Ahead.  Invited featured scholars are Dr. Arturo Madrid, Professor of Literature at Trinity University, author of In The Country of Empty Crosses:  The Story of A Hispano Protestant Family in Catholic New Mexico, Margarita Návar, healer and author of Zapotec Woman of the Clouds, a biography of Doña Enriqueta Contreras and  Dr. Antonia Castañeda, Professor Emeritus in the Department of History at St. Mary’s University and editor of Gender on the Borderlands:  A Frontier Reader.  Special guests include Diana Campoamor, Director and CEO of H.I.P., Hispanics In Philanthropy, based in San Francisco and Lourdes Portillo, documentary filmmaker, whose film, Señorita Extraviada, won the Ariel, the equivalent of an Academy Award, in México. It is the story of the disappeared young women in Juárez, México.

As ever, music interacts with powerful workshops, stellar readings, and good food at the festival. The BBF will feature the music of The Plateros, a unique hybrid of blues rock musicians, only comparable to artists like Los Lonely Boys from the Tohajiilee Indian Reservation near Albuquerque NM.  In 2099 they were invited to The 11th American Indian Inaugural Ball for President Obama, in Washington DC. Other featured music includes Oussa Bossa, a Brazilian Jazz group, and traditional Yoruba music and chanting.

A Plant exchange will take place during the weekend in front of Galería Tepín.  If you want to donate seeds or plants, please contact the BBF.

The festival will end Sunday, April 22 with a Blessing of the Spirits:  A Gathering of the Healers and a Talk/Plática by Esther Yazzie Lewis on her work with the Diné Sacred Land Recovery Project and her book, The Navajo People and Uranium Mining. Ben Willie, a Navajo medicine man, from Tohijille, New Mexico, will offer the final festival ceremony.

The festival is looking for Volunteers—Spirit Teams—to work on aspects of the festival and with particular healers.  A community Volunteer meeting will take place Thursday, February 16, at the Cultural Center de Mesilla, 2231 Calle de Parian, Mesilla, NM.  575-523-3988.  bbf@borderbookfestival.  If you can’t make it, we will be meeting on a regular basis.  Please call for more information.

Please visit the Festival participants websites at:
https://donaenriquetacontreras.com/
https://www.martamorenovega.com/
https://www.calaca-arts.com/artist.htm
https://www.laolla.com.mx/chef.html

Please contact us for information on how YOU can get involved in the festival work.  Join a Spirit Team and help us sponsor a particular featured participant.
575-523-3988.  moc.lavisefkoobredrobobfsctd-356ff9@fbb

JOB: Director of Alliance for Community Transformation

 DIRECTOR OF THE UMASS ALLIANCE FOR COMMUNITY TRANSFORMATION

The Department of Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst seeks a Director for the UMass Alliance for Community Transformation (UACT), the University’s curricular alternative spring break program. The position is a 9-month lectureship, three-year appointment, possibility for renewal.

UACT is a 15-year-old collaboration of faculty, students, and community partners that serves to promote social justice and cross cultural collaboration through alternative curricular breaks and other experiential learning opportunities that focus on grassroots community development and grassroots community organizing (www.umass.edu/uact).  UACT employs peer teaching and critical and experiential pedagogies to promote civic leadership skills among its students.

The Director is responsible for the oversight of all components of UACT including teaching or supervising a minimum of 4 academic courses/year, oversight of student thesis research, planning UACT’S 5 annual leadership retreats, oversight and training of UACT’s student staff, facilitation of community partnerships including their associated alternative spring break trips and advising students within the Department and the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences on experiential learning opportunities.

Requirements: PhD in anthropology or related field, demonstrated record of teaching excellence, demonstrated experience in critical or engaged pedagogy, and previous experience with community organizing are essential.  Previous experience with community service learning, alternative spring breaks, and grantsmanship are desirable.  We seek candidates who will complement departmental strengths in issues of power and structural inequality and help us expand our curricular commitment to experiential learning. The Department of Anthropology at UMass Amherst is committed to developing a more diverse faculty, student body, and curriculum.

The University of Massachusetts Amherst is the flagship campus of the 5-campus publicly funded UMass system. It is located in the Connecticut River Valley, 90 miles west of Boston and 180 miles northeast of New York City. UMass Amherst hosts nearly 19,000 undergraduate students and 5,600 graduate students, and nearly 900 tenure system faculty. The Department of Anthropology has 21 faculty, 175 majors in the BA program and 82 graduate students working on MA and/or PhD programs.

UMass Amherst anthropology faculty work closely with their counterparts in the area private colleges (Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith) in curricular planning. The faculty is unionized, and the University of Massachusetts offers an excellent benefits package. UMass Amherst prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and other protected categories.

We strongly prefer that applications be submitted online at https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/1420.  Please include a letter describing interests and qualifications, a CV, and list of 3 referees. Alternatively, applications may be mailed to “UACT DIRECTOR SEARCH, Anthropology Department, 240 Hicks Way, Amherst MA 01003.” Application screening commences on February 15, 2012. No applications will be accepted after March 15, 2012.

 

The University of Massachusetts is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.  Women and members of minority groups are encouraged to apply.

—

Prof. Mari Castañeda / Dept of Communication / UMass Amherst / 413-545-1307

Book Release Party for Earth Wisdom: A California Chumash Woman

DR. YOLANDA BROYLES-GONZÁLEZ BOOK RELEASE & SIGNING

The University of Arizona’s Native American Red Ink Magazine is proud to host the launch event of Professor Yolanda Broyles-González’s new book Earth Wisdom: A California Chumash Woman, written in collaboration with Chumash native elder Pilulaw Khus. The event will take place 7:00 p.m., Friday, February 3, 2012 at Antigone Book Store located at 311 N. 4th Avenue in Tucson, Arizona.

Broyles-González gathered the oral history of Pilulaw Khus for over ten years. This book provides a new vision of California history and an important vision for the survival of our planet. This is a groundbreaking Indigenous women’s history volume.

In Earth Wisdom: A California Chumash Woman, Khus narrates the history of California and of the state’s Indigenous peoples’ from a native woman’s perspective. She includes her personal story of over four decades of activism in tribal, environmental, and human rights issues. That powerful history is both deeply spiritual and political; it constitutes an important segment of the Civil Rights Movement.

Yolanda Broyles-González provides an extensive introduction, carefully providing context to Khus’s narrative, as well as to the periods before, during, and after European colonization of California. She challenges many of the widely held assumptions put forward by anthropologists and historians, as she unfolds an Indigenous understanding of gender, of history, of the universe. The book is the first to document 20th Century Chumash re-emergence struggles, such as the yearlong Point Conception Occupation (1978).

Reviewers of Earth Wisdom sing its praises:

      “This is one of the most extraordinary collaborations between a scholar and Indigenous activist      that I have read.” –Prof. Greg Cajete, Director of Native American Studies at the University of        New Mexico

“Yolanda Broyles-González’s book on the Chumash of Santa Barbara is superb.” –Rudy Acuña,    author of Occupied America and professor at California State University Northridge

“Exemplary meeting of activism and scholarship brings the reader a wealth of accessible     information that penetrates well beyond surface gleam (. . .) Partake in the earth wisdom of a       people who revolted and revolutionize still.” –Allison Hedge Coke, author of Blood Run

Dr. Yolanda Broyles-González is an elder of the Yaqui Barrio Libre ceremonial community in Tucson, Arizona and Professor of Mexican American Studies at the University of Arizona. Pilulaw Khus is a Chumash ceremonial elder and clan mother of the northern Chumash Bear Clan.Eart

Call for Nominations, Lead Editor, Chicana/Latina Studies

MALCS invites nominations and self-nominations for lead editor to serve five-year term, and provide institutional home for same five-year term for its flagship, interdisciplinary journal, Chicana/Latina Studies: The Journal of Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social beginning May 15, 2014–June 15, 2019.

Scope of Chicana/Latina Studies:The flagship journal of MALCS is published twice yearly in fall and spring of the academic calendar. Chicana/Latina Studies is the only interdisciplinary Latino studies journal of a national organization. Originally housed at the Chicana/Latina Research Center, University of California, Davis, MALCS published Voces between 1996 and 2001. Adaljiza Sosa Ridell managed the journal and coordinated the collective editorial board.
[Read more…] about Call for Nominations, Lead Editor, Chicana/Latina Studies

Call for Nominations: Editors for creative Writing, Book Reviews, Chicana/Latina Studies

MALCS invites nominations and self-nominations for creative writing editor and book review editor to serve five-year term for its flagship, interdisciplinary journal, Chicana/Latina Studies: The Journal of Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social.

Creative Writing Co-Editor
MALCS invites nominations and self-nominations for one individual to serve as Creative Writing Co-Editor of Chicana/Latina Studies for a five-year term: May 15, 2012—June 15, 2017. [Read more…] about Call for Nominations: Editors for creative Writing, Book Reviews, Chicana/Latina Studies

JOB: Latino/a and/or LatAm Studies, U of I Chicago

The Latin American and Latino Studies at the University of Illinois at
Chicago invites applications for a tenure-track position in media and film
studies at the rank of Assistant Professor beginning August 16, 2012,
pending budgetary approval. We seek a dynamic and creative scholar of
Latin American and/or Latino studies with expertise in any of the
following areas from a global or transnational perspective: the cultural
study of media and multimedia forms; relations between media and space;
film and moving image; photography and other forms of visual expression;
and/or internet and new cybertechnologies. [Read more…] about JOB: Latino/a and/or LatAm Studies, U of I Chicago

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Give Ten in Two!

Donate ten dollars in two minutes with MALCS' new Paypal Donate (That's barely a movie ticket)



Recent Posts

  • Statement from the Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social (MALCS) regarding the abolishment of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) Program
  • Postdoc in Xican@ Art (Deadline April 7, 2017)
  • 2017 MALCS Summer Institute
  • 2017 Summer Institute Dates Announced!
  • Unas Palabras from the MALCS Leadership to the Membership

Recent Comments

  • la Webjefa on Deadline Extended!: MALCS 2016 Summer Institute Call for Papers
  • Amore Alvarenga on Deadline Extended!: MALCS 2016 Summer Institute Call for Papers
  • la Webjefa on CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS: CLS Writing Workshop
  • Nancy Carvajal Medina on CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS: CLS Writing Workshop
  • Seline on Pioneering Chicana Historian Honored by Obama, NEH

Allies

  • Chicana/Latina Foundation
  • Dolores Huerta Foundation
  • Latina Institute for Repro Health
  • Latina Lista
  • MexMigration
  • National Association for Chicana & Chicano Studies
  • Society for the Study of Gloria Anzaldua

News / Noticias

  • CIMAC Noticias
  • La Bloga

Recommended Publications

  • Chicana Matters series @UTPress
  • Latin America Otherwise @Duke Univ Press
  • Latinas in History website

Student Resources

  • Latina/o Scholarship Directory
  • Latinas in History website
  • Scholarships That Don't Require SocialSec Numbers

Archives

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social, 1404 66th St., Berkeley, CA 94702

Copyright © MALCS 2005-2025 · Email: chicanas@malcs.org · Sitemap