LatinX and Iberian Crossings

Thursday, April 3, -
LatinX and Iberian Crossings is a day-long scholarly meeting featuring interlocutors across the United States and Europe who are expanding emerging fields of study: Transatlantic LatinX Studies and Global Iberian Studies. The event proposes that Iberia's legacy can be found outside Spain and Europe: in Africa, in the Americas, in the Atlantic Ocean, in Southeast Asia, in the U.S. Southwest, and more. The LatinX-Iberian connections covered in this gathering include Equatorial Guinea, the Canary Islands, the Pacific, and the African diaspora.

9-10:15 / The Art of X
Esther Gabara, Duke University
"Chicano Art at the Museo lnstituto de las Americas, Madrid, 1992"

Francisco Godoy Vega, Madrid, Spain "Panchito Pigmentocracy"

Francisco-J. Hernandez Adrian, Durham University "Teresa Correa: Canarian lndigeneity under Xpeculation"

10:30-12:15 / X Between Continents
Nicholas R. Jones, Yale University "The Esotericas of LatinX Spain"

Violeta Gil, Madrid, Spain
"Un futuro brillante, Or What They Didn't Tell Us in School"

Rebecca Ingram, University of San Diego "Latinx Foodscapes in Madrid"

Ana Ugarte, College of the Holy Cross "X Auralities, Z Dysfunctions"

Break

2-3:15 / X Genealogies
Claudia Milian, Duke University
"Greetings from Expo '92 (Or, Columbiana: The Forgotten Collection)"

Aitor Bouso Gavin, Harvard University
"Casas de lndianos: The LatinX Foundation of Galician Architecture"

Elizabeth Spragins, College of the Holy Cross
"The Truly Invented Recuperation of Islamic Xpana" 4-5:15 / The X of Iberian and ChicanX

4-5:15 / The X of Iberian and ChicanX
Maria DeGuzman, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"Rememory of the Alhambra: Spain and the Transatlantic LatinX Ecological Uncanny"

B. V. Olguin, University of California, Santa Barbara
"Recrossings, Reframings, Reimaginings: The Afterlives of 'La Malinche' and Pan-Latinx Encounters in Spanish Contact Zones-Reflections on Latinx Studies in the New Millennium"

Andres Porras Chaves, IE University
"New Inverted Conquests, Hispanidad, and LatinXness in Malinche: The Musical"

Sponsored by Program in Latino/a Studies in the Global South; Department of African & African American Studies; Department of Romance Studies; Left of Black; Office of Global Affairs; The Josiah Charles Trent Memorial Foundation Endowment Fund; Trinity College Dean of Humanities and Arts; Trinity College Dean's Office.
Sponsor

Program in Latino/a Studies in the Global South

Co-Sponsor(s)

African and African American Studies (AAAS); Franklin Humanities Institute (FHI); Romance Studies