Imagining Latinidades cover logo
RSS Feed Apple Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts
English
Non-explicit
transistor.fm
5.00 stars
41:20

It looks like this podcast has ended some time ago. This means that no new episodes have been added some time ago. If you're the host of this podcast, you can check whether your RSS file is reachable for podcast clients.

Imagining Latinidades

by Darrel Wanzer-Serrano, Ariana Ruiz, & Rene Rocha

Three Latina/o professors discuss topics and interview guests central to Latina/Latino/Latinx Studies today.

Copyright: ©️2021 Imagining Latinidades

Episodes

Roundtable Discussion with Frederick Luis Aldama, Adrian Burgos, Jr., and Ed Morales

47m · Published 17 Mar 18:00

At the conclusion of the Imagining Latinidades “Cultural Citizenships and Popular Belonging” Symposium held virtually as Episode 19 of this podcast, co-host and co-director of the Sawyer Seminar, Darrel Wanzer-Serrano sits down with the three invited guests to discuss their paths in the field. Questions included:

  • What’s your Latina/o/x Studies origin story?
  • What does Latina/o/x Studies offer your scholarship that disciplinary perspectives/methods might not?
  • What’s the value of Latina/o/x Studies to students and higher ed institutions?
  • What’s the value of Latina/o/x Studies to communities outside of academia?
  • What’s your message to a Latina/o/x listener at a PWI?

Check out the chapter markers if you want to skip to a specific question or answer. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Show notes:

  • The full description and list of speakers for the Latina/o/x Cultural Citizenships and Popular Belonging Symposium that can be found at: Latina/o/x Cultural Citizenships & Popular Belonging – Imagining Latinidades
  • Bios for all of the presenters can be found on our website at:  Presenters – Imagining Latinidades
  • Episode 19 of the podcast is here: Latina/o/x Cultural Citizenships and Popular Belonging | Imagining Latinidades


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.

Latina/o/x Cultural Citizenships and Popular Belonging

46m · Published 05 Mar 21:12

Today, we have a very special program  planned for you. A year ago, we were supposed to host my guests for a one-day Symposium in Iowa City on the topic of LATINA/O/X CULTURAL CITIZENSHIPS & POPULAR BELONGING. After having addressed issues surrounding formal citizenship and national belonging in the Fall 2019 semester, this one-day symposium was supposed to bring subject area experts (our guests, today) to discuss modalities of popular belonging (television, sports, music, literature, and more) in Latina/o/x contexts in the U.S. Alas, that symposium was the first thing we had to cancel due to the emerging coronavirus pandemic. So after Ariana and I had a chance to start settling into our new locations after our moves, we realized that one of the best ways we could make up the symposium was with a couple of episodes of this podcast. In this episode, we’ll be sticking to the subject matter of the symposium.  After I introduce them, each of my guests will have a chance to offer short opening statements and then we’ll proceed into some questions about cultural citizenship and popular belonging. In the NEXT episode, we’ll do our traditional “roundtable” format and dive into what we’ve called their “origin stories” as well as their thoughts on the importance of Latinx Studies education. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Show notes:

Our guests today included…

  • Frederick Luis Aldama is an academic and award-winning author of over 40 books, including the International Latino Book Award and Eisner Award for Latinx Superheroes in Mainstream Comics. He is editor of the trade press, Latinographix, creator of the first documentary on the history of Latinx superheroes, and co-founder & director of SÕL-CON: Brown, Black, & Indigenous Comix Expo & Symposium. This fall, Frederick will publish a Spanish translation of his kid’s book The Adventures of Chupacabra Charlie (2020) as well as join UT Austin as the Jacob & Frances Sanger Mossiker Chair in the Humanities and launch his Latinx Pop Lab.
  • Adrian Burgos, Jr., is Professor of History at the University of Illinois, specializing in US Latino history, sport history, and urban history. He is the author of Cuban Star: How One Negro League Owner Changed the Face of Baseball (2011) and Playing America’s Game: Baseball, Latinos, and the Color Line (2007), which won the Latina/o Book Award from the Latin American Studies Association and was a Seymour Medal finalist from the Society of American Baseball Research. He has consulted on the National Baseball Hall of Fame’s Viva Baseball exhibit, Smithsonian’s Latinos and Baseball exhibit, and on numerous documentaries. He was founding editor-in-chief of La Vida Baseball, a multiplatform digital brand in partnership with the Baseball Hall of Fame that produces daily content on Latinos and baseball through a cultural lifestyle perspective.
  • Ed Morales is an author and journalist who has written for The Nation, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Rolling Stone, and the Guardian. He was staff writer at The Village Voice and columnist at Newsday. He is the author of Latinx: The New Force in Politics and Culture (Verso Books 2018), and Living in Spanglish (St. Martins 2002). And most recently, he saw publication of his book Fantasy Island: Colonialism, Exploitation, and the betrayal of Puerto Rico — I book I’m very excited to read as it’s close to some of my current research interests.  Morales wrote and directed *Whose Barrio? (*2009) an award-winning documentary about the gentrification of East Harlem. Morales is a lecturer at Columbia University’s Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race and the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism.


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.


Sporadic Episodes and Hiatus

10m · Published 24 Apr 19:00

Co-hosts Darrel Wanzer-Serrano and Ariana Ruiz meet up on Zoom to talk about where we've been and what the plan is going forward since coronavirus has kind of limited our ability to have in-person conferences and symposia. We lay out the plan for the remaining events and associated podcasts. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.

Links and things:

  • The cancelled symposium, which will become interviews on the podcast is: Latina/o/x Cultural Citizenships & Popular Belonging – Imagining Latinidades
  • The closing conference should happen in September 2020 — stay tuned for more information.

You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 

Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.


Borderlands History and Reproductive Justice: An Interview with Lina-Maria Murillo

47m · Published 10 Mar 08:00

Darrel Wanzer-Serrano sits down with Dr. Lina-Maria Murillo to talk about her research, her connections to Latina/o/x Studies, and more. Check the chapter markers (will be uploaded later) to see all of the topics that are discussed. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Links and things:

  • Dr. Murillo’s faculty profile at Iowa: Lina-Maria Murillo | Gender, Women’s and Sexuality Studies
  • For more information about Latina/o Studies at Iowa, check out Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts & Sciences | The University of Iowa
  • For more info about where Dr. Murillo got her degree, see Ph.D. in  Borderlands History < UTEP
  • The blog that was discussed: Borderlands History
  • The Braceros oral history stuff that Dr. Murillo discussed: Bracero Oral History Project | Institute of Oral History | University of Texas at El Paso


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.

Students' Perspectives on Latina/o/x Studies

43m · Published 25 Feb 09:00

Co-hosts Darrel Wanzer-Serrano and Rene Rocha sit down with two Iowa Latina/o Studies undergraduate students to talk about how they found the field and why they think it’s important. Bianca Robles-Muñoz is junior majoring in Speech and Hearing Sciences and minoring in American Sign Language and Latina/o Studies. Naomi Marroquin is a senior majoring in Global Heath Studies, minoring in Latina/o Studies, and is President of the Association of Latinos Moving Ahead student organization. Check the chapter markers to see all of the topics that are discussed. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Links and things:

  • For more information about the program at Iowa, check out Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts & Sciences | The University of Iowa
  • Info about the new Latinx LLC called Unidos can be found here: Unidos | Housing
  • The book Darrel can’t think of the title of when talking about the Unidos LLC is Citizens but Not Americans: Race and Belonging among Latino Millennials (Latina/o Sociology): Nilda Flores-González: 9781479840779: Amazon.com: Books


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.

Roundtable Discussion with Lilia Fernández, Sujey Vega, and Theresa Delgadillo

45m · Published 11 Feb 09:00

At the conclusion of the Imagining Latinidades “Imagining the Latina/o/x Midwest” Symposium in Iowa City, Iowa, co-host and co-director of the Sawyer Seminar, Darrel Wanzer-Serrano sits down with the three invited lecturers to discuss their paths in the field. Questions included:

  • What’s your Latina/o/x Studies origin story?
  • What does Latina/o/x Studies offer your scholarship that disciplinary perspectives/methods might not?
  • What’s the value of Latina/o/x Studies to students and higher ed institutions?
  • What’s the value of Latina/o/x Studies to communities outside of academia?
  • What’s your message to a Latina/o/x listener at a PWI?

Check out the chapter markers if you want to skip to a specific question or answer. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Show notes:

  • The full description and list of speakers (and, eventually, links to video recordings of their talks) for the Imagining the Latina/o/x Midwest Symposium that took place January 31, 2020, can be found at: Imagining the Latina/o/x Midwest – Imagining Latinidades
  • Bios for all of the presenters can be found on our website at:  Presenters – Imagining Latinidades
  • For the project mentioned by Dr. Fernández, see: The Latino New Jersey History Project


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.

Previewing the Latina/o/x Midwest

30m · Published 28 Jan 09:00

Darrel, Ariana, and Rene sit down to catch up at the start of the semester and discuss themes related to the upcoming Latina/o/x Midwest Symposium. After Rene leaves, Darrel and Ariana talk about archival research and the willingness to discuss your “finds” before you publish about them.  

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Show notes:

  • Subscribe to this podcast, please! 
  •  * Livestream of the upcoming symposium will be here: University of Iowa Latina/o Studies Program - Home | Facebook
  • Read all about the upcoming symposium, which is Friday 1/31/20 at the Iowa City Public Library, here: Imagining the Latina/o/x Midwest – Imagining Latinidades.
  • Lilia Fernandez – Imagining Latinidades Transient Pasts: Theorizing the History of Latinos/as in the Midwest – Imagining Latinidades
  • Sujey Vega – Imagining Latinidades  Of Borders and Belonging: Addressing the meaning of home and belonging in Latinx Midwestern Imagined Comunidades – Imagining Latinidades
  • Theresa Delgadillo – Imagining Latinidades Environmental Sustainability and Alternative Place-Times in Midwest Latinx Literature – Imagining Latinidades
  • The 2012 Symposium info can be found here: The Latino Midwest | Obermann Center for Advanced Studies
  • UI Press | Edited by Omar Valerio-Jiménez, Santiago Vaquera-Vásquez, and Claire F. Fox Afterword by Frances R. Aparicio | The Latina/o Midwest Reader
  • La Bloga: CSUCI Houses the Works and Archives of Michele Serros


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.

Palante: An Interview with Iris Morales

45m · Published 14 Jan 09:00

Darrel Wanzer-Serrano sits down with the legendary Iris Morales to talk about the emergence of Puerto Rican studies, student organization and activism from the 1960s to today, and more. Recorded in December 2019 while Morales was at Iowa for a screening of her film and discussions with students and faculty. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Show notes:

  • Subscribe to this podcast, please! 
  • IRIS MORALES | the official website
  • Red Sugarcane Press Inc. - Red Sugarcane Press
  • Watch ¡Palante, Siempre Palante! The Young Lords Online | Vimeo On Demand on Vimeo


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.


Holding it Together at the End of Term

49m · Published 17 Dec 09:00

Darrel Wanzer-Serrano and Ariana Ruiz meet up for a bit of a retrospective on 2019. They have a little podcast discussion about the podcast and the first semester of programming for Imagining Latinidades. They then ponder some of their favorite readings of the year so far and talk about how to productively (and unproductively) deal with end of term stress for students. The podcast will be on hiatus until we return with an interview with Iris Morales on January 14, 2020. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Show notes:

  • Subscribe to this podcast, please! 
  • Amazon.com: Terrorizing Latina/o Immigrants: Race, Gender, and Immigration Policy Post-9/11 (9781439912867): Anna Sampaio: Books
  • In Search of Belonging: Latinas, Media, and Citizenship (Latinos in Chicago and Midwest): Jillian M Baez: 9780252083419: Amazon.com: Books
  • Citizens but Not Americans
  • Karma R. Chávez, “Remapping Latinidad: A Performance Cartography of Latina/o Identity in Rural Nebraska,” Text & Performance Quarterly
  • Chapter Four: Migrations Through Academia: Reflections of a Tenured Latina Professor on JSTOR


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.

Latina/o/x Education at PWIs (Live from the Latinx Excellence in the Midwest Conference)

44m · Published 03 Dec 09:00

Darrel Wanzer-Serrano, Ariana Ruiz, and Rene Rocha get together again! In this live recorded event at the 2019 Latinx Excellence in the Midwest Conference at the University of Iowa, the three co-hosts discuss the history of Latina/o Studies at Iowa, the demographics of Latina/o/x folks in the state, and their own practices of teaching Latina/o/x Studies in the Midwestern context. Check the chapter markers for a breakdown of the specific topics. 

★ Thanks to our sponsors ★

  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s generous support through its Sawyer Seminar program allowed “Imagining Latinidades: Articulations of National Belonging” to launch at the University of Iowa. This podcast was born from the Sawyer Seminar and we hope it will continue on afterward.
  • The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, at Iowa, was the birthplace of our Seminar theme, which gave rise to this podcast.


Show notes:

  • Latinx Excellence in the Midwest Conference - 2019 | College of Education | University of Iowa
  • Directors – Imagining Latinidades
  • Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts & Sciences | The University of Iowa


You can reply to this podcast here:

  • Twitter, Instagram, Facebook: @ImaginingLat
  • Hosts on Twitter: Darrel is @DoctorDWS, Ariana is @aryruiz710, Rene is @rene5311
  • Email: [email protected] 


Credits

  • Our cover art, a photo of an installation titled “El Hielo / I.C.E,” is provided courtesy of the artist, Fidencio Fifield-Perez.
  • Music by Juan Ruiz.
  • Our hosting is provided by Transistor.fm, which we really love.
  • Our podcasting app of choice is Overcast.fm, which also makes a handy app that streamlines the process of making the chapter markers in this podcast.

Imagining Latinidades has 21 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 14:28:01. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on November 23rd 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on March 20th, 2024 15:12.

Similar Podcasts

Every Podcast » Podcasts » Imagining Latinidades