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Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies - SECOLAS
Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies
                            66th Annual Meeting

                             Conference Co-Sponsors:

       Center for US-Latin American Initiatives, University of Texas at Dallas
           School of Arts and Humanities, University of Texas at Dallas
Kimberly Green Latin American and Caribbean Center, Florida International University

                               Institutional Sponsors:

                      University of North Carolina at Charlotte
                                Winthrop University
                                Wingate University

                                       Host:

                            Instituto Cultural Oaxaca
                                 Oaxaca, Mexico
                               March 26-31, 2019

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Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies - SECOLAS
SECOLAS Officers:                                                 About our host:
President: Jackie Sumner, Presbyterian College
President-Elect: Reginald Bess, South Carolina State
                                                                  Since 1984, the Instituto Cultural Oaxaca (ICO)
         University
Secretary-Treasurer: Steven Hyland, Wingate University            has developed integral programs to enable
Editor, TLA: Greg Weeks, UNC Charlotte                            interested people to learn Spanish in Oaxaca in an
Co-Editors, Annals: Jürgen Buchenau, UNC Charlotte and            engaging manner and in a beautiful 19th century
         Gregory Crider, Winthrop University                      estate.

Executive Committee:
                                                                  ICO is a founding member of ASESEO, the
Immediate Past President: Jimmy Huck, Tulane University
Preceding Past President: Paul Worley, Western Carolina           Spanish Language Schools Association of
        University                                                Oaxaca, an organization dedicated to ensure
At-large 2019: Steven Taylor, Troy University                     quality and professionalism in Spanish language
At-large 2019: Edie Wolf, Tulane University                       learning and to promote Oaxaca and its culture as
At-large 2020: Monica Rankin, University of Texas, Dallas         a destination to study Spanish.
At-large 2020: Amy Borja, University of Dallas
At-large 2021: Lily Balloffet, Western Carolina University
At-large 2021: Martin Nesvig, University of Miami
Grad Student/Contingent Faculty 2020: David                       Our conference co-sponsors:
        McLaughlin, University of Cincinnati
Grad Student/Contingent Faculty 2020: Hannah Palmer,              Co-sponsorship of the conference and its
        UNC, Chapel Hill                                          activities is generously provided by the Center for
                                                                  U.S.-Latin American Initiatives (University of
Local Arrangements Committee:
                                                                  Texas at Dallas), the School of Arts and
Monica Rankin, University of Texas, Dallas
Jürgen Buchenau, UNC Charlotte                                    Humanities (University of Texas at Dallas), the
Gregory Crider, Winthrop University                               Kimberly Green Latin American and Caribbean
Steven Hyland, Wingate University                                 Center (Florida International University), and the
                                                                  Consortium of Latin American Studies Programs.
Program Chairs:
Literature and Cultural Studies
Charles St-Georges, Denison University
                                                                  About SECOLAS:
History and Social Sciences
Jimmy Huck, Tulane University                                     Established in 1953, the Southeastern Council of
                                                                  Latin American Studies (SECOLAS) is a non-
Award Committees:                                                 political and non-profit association of individuals
The Alfred B. Thomas Book Award                                   interested in Latin America. Its objectives are the
Corrie Boudreaux (2019, Chair), University Texas, El Paso
                                                                  promotion of interest in Latin America, scholarly
Steven Bunker (2020), University of Alabama
Beau Gaitors (2021), Winston Salem State University               research pertaining to Latin America in all fields,
                                                                  and the increase of friendly contacts among the
The Sturgiss Leavitt Award for Best Article                       peoples of the Americas.
Aaron Coy Moulton (2019, Chair), Stephen F. Austin State
        University
Steven Hyland (2020), Wingate University                          SECOLAS is a 501(c)3 organization.
Paul Worley (2021), Western Carolina University

The Edward H. Moseley Student Paper Award
                                                                  SECOLAS Information Table
Melissa Birkhofer (2019, Chair), Western Carolina
        University                                                Location: ICO
Joseph Lenti (2020), Eastern Washington University                Thursday, March 28, 10:00am-5:00pm
Lisa Covert Pinley (2021), College of Charleston                  Friday, March 29, 8:30am-5:30pm
                                                                  Saturday, March 30, 8:30am-5:15pm
Graduate Assistant:
                                                             !2
Leah Walton, UNC Charlotte
Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies - SECOLAS
Events

                                 Thursday, March 28 / Jueves, 28 de marzo

General Business Meeting
Location: Auditorio Chico
5:00-7:00pm

Welcome Reception
Location: ICO Courtyard
7:00-9:00pm
Co-sponsored by the Consortium of Latin American Studies Programs

                                  Friday, March 29 / Viernes, 29 de marzo

Professional Development Workshop
Location: Auditorio Chico
6:00-7:30pm

Banquet
Location: ICO Courtyard
7:30-9:30pm

Keynote Address by Mary Kay Vaughan, Professor Emerita, Department of History, University of Maryland

Mary Kay Vaughan is a historian of modern Mexico specializing in the cultural, gender, and educational history.
Her book, Cultural Politics in Revolution: Teachers, Peasants, and Schools in Mexico, 1930-1940 received the
Herbert Eugene Bolton Prize as the most outstanding book in Latin American history in 1997 and the Bryce
Wood Award of the Latin American Studies Association for best book on Latin America published in English.

Dr. Vaughan has also authored or edited such volumes as The State, Education, and Social Class in México:
1880-1928, Portrait of a Young Painter: Pepe Zúñiga and Mexico City Rebel Generation, and Sex in
Revolution: Gender, Politics, and Power in Modern Mexico. She also is former editor of the Hispanic American
Historical Review and served as president of the Conference on Latin American History. Dr. Vaughan has
received several prestigious fellowships from such organizations as the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation
and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

                                 Saturday, March 30 / Sábado, 30 de marzo

Networking Event
Location: Hotel Casa Vértiz, Reforma #404 Col. Centro
6:00pm until close

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Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies - SECOLAS
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Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies - SECOLAS
Sessions

                Thursday, March 28 / Jueves , 28 de Marzo - Session 01 - 11am-12:45pm

1. Traducción/Translation/Xho Guinin Art, Collaboration, and Dialogue in Oaxaca
Location: Salón 10

Arts, Teaching, and Cultural Negotiation: Traducción/Translation/Xho Guinin
Andrea Lepage, Washington and Lee University

Dialoging through the Arts
Marietta Bernstorff, Invited Curator, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Oaxaca

Understanding Millennium Zapotec Culture
Gil Hernandez

Cultural Aesthetics: Facts and Myths
Joe Lewis, University of California, Irvine

2. Mexican Feminisms Past and Present
Location: Salón 11

Timeless Bonds: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz and Nahui Olin
Marianna De Tollis, Florida Atlantic University

La gran ocultadora: El surrealismo en El diario de Frida Kahlo
Candy Hurtado, Florida Atlantic University

¿Quién es esta mujer? Harriet Winslow frente a si misma y su ética puritana
Maria Rotundo, Florida Atlantic University

La mujer como ícono cultural: la creación de una visión femenina en la literatura mexicana contemporánea
Nora Erro Peralta, Florida Atlantic University

Temporada de huracanes: radiografía de la sexualidad, misoginia y violencia en México
Alicia Zavala Garcia, Tarrant County College

3. Digital Tools & Latin American Studies: Promise & Peril for Research & Teaching (Roundtable)
Location: Salón 14

Monica Rankin, University of Texas at Dallas
Talía Dajes, University of Utah
Gregory Crider, Winthrop University
Steven Hyland, Wingate University
Hannah Givens, Wingate University
Anna Holmquist, Wingate University

4. Challenging Ideas of Development: Movements, Strategies, and Power in 20th- and 21st-Century Latin America
Location: Salón 15

Chair: Audrey Fals Henderson, Emory University

                                                           !5
Anti-Mexico: Development and the Transnational Politics of Revolutionary Containment in Latin America (1910-1940)
Teresa Davis, Emory University

Bolivia y México son gemelos americanos: Pan-American Development, Agrarian Reform, and Sites of Revolutionary
Power, 1930s-1940s
Audrey Fals Henderson, Emory University

¿Es posible desde el autogobierno indígena crear Nuevo modelo de desarrollo? Algunas reflexiones desde la experiencia
reciente de las comunidades purépechas de Michoacán
Orlando Aragón Andrade, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México-Morelia

“La tierra para quien la lucha”: Reconfiguraciones de las políticas sobre la tierra desde las historias transversales del
despojo y desarrollo nacional en el altiplano boliviano
Amy Kennemore, Universidad de California, San Diego

5. Linguistics and Education in Mexico and Guatemala
Location: Salón I

Phantomizing Precolumbian History in Guatemalan Education
Rubén Morales Forte, Tulane University

Centralizing efforts around indigenous language assessments in southern Mexico
Mario López-Gopar, Universidad Autónoma “Benito Juárez” de Oaxaca; Jamie L. Schissel, University of North Carolina
at Greensboro; Vilma Huerta Cordova, Universidad Autónoma “Benito Juárez” de Oaxaca; Edwin N. León Jiménez,
Universidad Autónoma “Benito Juárez” de Oaxaca

Mi Abuela Es Hermosa: The Non-Linguistic Impacts of a Primary School Nahuatl Language Revitalization Program in
Nealtican, Puebla, Mexico
Adaír C. Necalli, Duke University

Collaborative methodological approaches to develop multilingual approaches to language assessments in Oaxaca,
Mexico
Jamie L. Schissel, University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Mario López-Gopar, Universidad Autónoma “Benito
Juárez” de Oaxaca; Julio Morales, Universidad Autónoma “Benito Juárez” de Oaxaca; Edwin N. León Jiménez,
Universidad Autónoma “Benito Juárez” de Oaxaca; Vilma Huerta Cordova, Universidad Autónoma “Benito Juárez” de
Oaxaca

6. Film, Favelas, and Everyday Life in Brazil
Location: Salón II

O audiovisual na produção de pesquisa: Um estudo sobre os rituais canela ramkokamekrá no Maranhão
Amanda Silva Araujo, Universidade Federal do Maranhão

Domestic Violence of the Home, Itself: The Structural, Symbolic, and Physical Brutality of Favela Housing Removals in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Jessica Glass, Tulane University

Ressignificando o espaço-Favela: mobilidades poéticas em Becos da Memória, de Conceição Evaristo
Angela M. Rodriguez Mooney, Tulane University

On the Margins of a Periphery: Petty Tyrannies, Political Time, and the Politics of Everyday Life in Subaltern Recife,
1971-1979
Gray F. Kidd, Duke University

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7. The Global Economy and Latin America
Location: Salón III

The persistence of indigenous markets in Mexico’s “supermarket revolution”
Diana Denham, Portland State University

Defending Capitalism in Cuba’s Press (1940-1960)
Richard Denis, Florida International University

Chinese Investment in Latin America & The Brazilian Petroleum Sector
Lorenzo Hamilton, University of Florida

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO)’s Economic Program: It Is Going to be a Bumpy, Uncertain
Ride
Alejandro Vélez, Independent Scholar

                 Thursday, March 28 / Jueves , 28 de Marzo - Session 02 - 2pm-3:45pm
8. “Ser en el mundo. Ser nosotros”: Los saberes locales indígenas frente al mundo global (Panel 1)
Location: Salón 10

Chair: Paul M Worley

De los imaginarios, a la transformación de las narrativas sobre la selva colombiana
Dania Amaya Gómez, Colegio Gimnasio Moderno de Bogotá

Awas de Rosa Chávez y Camila Camerlengo: Más allá de la poesía y el performance
Rita M. Palacios, Conestoga College Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning

Pensar la poesía desde sus raíces
Martín Tonalmeyotl

“Cuéntame un tsikbal”: La potencia de las categorías epistemológicas indígenas en la crítica literaria
Paul M Worley, Western Carolina University

9. Experiential Learning & Inclusion in Latinx Studies: Challenges & Strategies (Roundtable)
Location: Salón 11

Forging Inclusive Latinx Studies Pedagogies & Practices
Lily Balloffet, University of California-Santa Cruz

Latinx Studies and the Rural Campus: Building Bridges with Indigenous Author-Artists in San Cristóbal de las Casas,
México
Melissa D. Birkhofer, Western Carolina University

Latinx Studies and Experiential Learning in Spanish Language Courses
Eileen Anderson, Duke University

10. Teaching Latin American History in the 21st Century: Pedagogical Approaches and Problems
Location: Salón 14

Esri Story Maps and Digital Assignments in Latin American Studies Courses
Alexandra Puerto, Occidental College

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Teaching Writing Intensive Courses in Latin American History
Donald Stevens, Drexel University

Teaching ‘Sex, Drugs, and Crime in Latin America’ to Majors and Non-Majors
Frances L. Ramos, University of South Florida

The Decline in History Majors: Strategies for Recruiting Students in Latin American History
Christina Bueno, Northeastern Illinois University

11. Indigenous Resources and Disruptive Strategies of Rule from the Pre-Hispanic Period to the Twentieth Century
Location: Salón 15

Chair: Tamara Spike, University of North Georgia

Forest Politics and the Mexica-Tenochca Triple Alliance
Chris Woolley, University of North Carolina at Pembroke

Stay off of my Irrigated Land! SICAE Member Land Seizures and its Impact on Mayo Ejidos, 1946-1957
James Mestaz, Claremont McKenna College

Witchcraft as an Impediment to and Strategy of Domination: Brujería in the Ecuadorian Amazon in the 20th Century
William T. Fischer, Missouri Southern State University

Discussant: Tamara Spike, University of North Georgia

12. Ideology, Collaborations, and U.S.-Latin American Relations
Location: Salón I

Chair: Jill Massino, UNC-Charlotte

Anti-Communism Groups and Discourses Under the Luis Echeverría Regime
Fernando Herrera Calderón, University of Northern Iowa

Soft-Balancing the Hegemon? Latin American Regionalism in the Post-Cold War World
Peter M. Sanchez and Alex Grigorescu, Loyola University Chicago

US Cuba Relations in the Trump administration: Cuba’s Public Diplomacy vs. U.S. Lack of Diplomacy
Raúl Rodríguez Rodríguez, University of Habana

“Raise Aloft the Banners of the People Against the Onslaughts of Neo-liberalism and Neo-imperialism”: The Sandinistas
and United States, 1990-2006
Chris Jillson, Indiana University

Discussant: Jill Massino, UNC-Charlotte

13. Latin America in the Late 18th and Early 19th Centuries
Location: Salón II

Las escuelas de los pueblos de indios en la intendencia de Oaxaca, 1750-1821
Huemac Escalona Lüttig, CIESAS

This City of Thieves: Surveilling and Policing Bourbon Lima
William P. Cohoon, Texas Christian University

                                                           !8
Crossroads of Empire: Spanish Louisiana in the Caribbean Maritime Borderlands, 1763-1803
Daniel Velásquez, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

14. Problematizing Gendered Constructions in Twentieth Century Mexico
Location: Salón III

Chair: Alejandra Márquez, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Marimachos, lenchas y manfloras: cartografías de masculinidad femenina en representaciones de lesbianismo en la
literatura mexicana contemporánea
Alejandra Márquez, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

La Malinche: arquetipo femenino en tres obras de teatro
Elena Peña Argueso, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Las políticas del ser y el parecer: las otras masculinidades en Púrpura de Ana García Bergua
Jhonn Nilo Guerra Banda, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

“I didn't have time to be anyone's muse”
Lacie Rae Cunningham, Presidio of Monterey

                 Thursday, March 28 / Jueves , 28 de Marzo - Session 03 - 4pm-5:45pm
15. Cinema, Art, and Poetry in Mexico
Location: Salón 10

La resignificación de la maternidad en las películas Así es la vida (2000) y Otilia Rauda, la mujer del pueblo (2001):
Violencia contra las instituciones familiares y gubernamentales hegemónicas
Verónica Pérez-Picasso, University of Missouri, Columbia

Las que se quedan atrás: la representación de las mujeres en el cine mexicano contemporáneo de migración
Georgia Seminet, St. Edward's University

Mapping Miguel Covarrubias across Cultures and Disciplines
Nathaniel R. Racine, Universidad Popular Autónoma del Estado de Puebla

Fenomenología del espacio como herramienta editorial: análisis de la obra Azul Marino
Alejandra Hurtado Tarazona, Universidad de las Américas Puebla

16. Music, Sound, and Family
Location: Salón 11

Singing to the top of their lungs: An Exploration of Women, Music, and Santería in Contemporary Cuba
Silvia M. Roca-Martínez, The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina

Despacito: The Rise of Caribbean Trap, Hip Hop, and Reggaetón in Mainstream Music
Raciel Alonso, University of Lynchburg

The politics of música refrita: Ceci Bastida’s “non-activist” art
Lori Oxford, Western Carolina University

                                                              !9
‘Se van los moscos y vienen los organilleros’: A history of sound in Porfirian Mexico
J. Osciel Salazar, University of Arizona

The Search for a Father and the Impact of Religion in Kei Miller’s The Last Warner Woman
Eve Legast, Université de Liège (Belgium)

17. Terra da Alegria: Deconstructing Folkloric Imaginings of Salvador da Bahia, Brazil
Location: Salón 14

“A Bahia Tem Dendê”: Examining the Conceptualization and Implications of Notions of Africanity through the figure of
the Baiana
Vanessa Castañeda, Tulane University

Beyond the Travesti: Reconceptualizing Trans-Centered Research in 21st Century Brazil
Joshua Reason, University of Texas at Austin

Dimensionality of Blackness: Racialized and Gendered Performance of Capoeira in Salvador Bahia Brazil and Beyond
Azmera Hammouri-Davis, Harvard Divinity School

Candomblé Matriarchs and African Religious Heritage in Salvador, Brazil
Jamie Lee Andreson, University of Michigan

Discussant: Edith Wolfe, Tulane University

18. Digital Storytelling, Cultural Knowledge, and Tourism: Potentials for Collaboration (Roundtable)
Location: Salón 15

Logan Camporeale, Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture
Mark Tebeau, Arizona State University
Larry Cebula, Eastern Washington University

19. Gender and Identity
Location: Salón I

Divas, Régias, y Demoledorxs: Embodying gender normativity defiance in Monterrey, Nuevo León
Isabel Machado, University of Memphis

Gênero, sexualidade e diversidade sexual: Pautas necessárias à educação
Carlos Henrique Lucas Lima, Universidade Federal do Oeste da Bahia; Marcio Caetano, Universidade Federal do Rio
Grande

A Body in Flight: The Kidnapping Trial of a Trans* Man in the Brazilian Military Dictatorship
José Amador, Miami University, Ohio

Adversity, Gender Stereotyping, and Appraisals of Female Political Leadership: Evidence from Latin America
Mark Setzler, High Point University

Enriching Theorized Relationships Between Subjectivity and Urban Space with Contemporary Latin Americanist
Perspectives on Sex/Gender Systems
Angela Lieber, Florida State University

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20. Romantics, Intellectuals, and Literati
Location: Salón II

Philology at the Service of Pride: Contrasting Views of Early Transoceanic Contact
Michael T. Ward, Trinity University

Just the Three of Us: Love and Death in the Courtship Diary of Luciano J. Gallardo, Guadalajara, Mexico, 1864-1869
William E. French, University of British Colombia

¿Liberal radical o romántico? Una examinación del pensamiento político de Ignacio Ramírez
Alexis Ortiz, Brescia University

Black Mountain Poet Robert Creeley and Bobbie Louise Hawkins in Guatemala: 1959-1961
Alvis Dunn, University of North Carolina, Ashville

Border Brujos: Carlos Castaneda, Indigenismo, and New Age Anthropology
Ageeth Sluis, Butler University

21. Mexico in the Early 20th Century
Location: Salón III

Vicious Criminals and Desperate Pariahs?: Chinese Tongs in Mexico during the Early Twentieth Century
Jian Gao, University of Alabama

“Time to Call the Doctor”: Urban Renewal and Consumption in Post-War Mexico City
Ashley Whiting, University of Arkansas

Water Rights in the Postrevolutionary Mexican Supreme Court, 1918-1946
Peter L. Reich, UCLA School of Law

22. German Latin Americans in Texas
Location: Salón IV

Chair: Nils Roemer, University of Texas at Dallas

Latin American and WWII: Good Neighbors and Deportation
Clara Marsela Lopez, University of Texas at Dallas

Deported from Latin America: German Internee Newspapers in Seagoville Camp
Chrissy Stanford, University of Texas at Dallas

En la Solidaridad Continental: The OIAA’s Propaganda Campaign in Latin America
Sarah Hashmi, University of Texas at Dallas

Cartographic Propaganda: Forged and Secret Maps of World War II
Wendi Kavanaugh, University of Texas at Dallas

German Afrika Corps in Dallas: POW Interactions in a Racially Segregated Society
Emily Riso, University of Texas at Dallas

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PUBLISH YOUR PAPER!
               Publish your paper!

THE LATIN AMERICANIST ANNALS ISSUE

Presenters at the March 2019 SECOLAS meeting in
Oaxaca, Mexico are encouraged to submit their papers for
possible publication in The Latin Americanist Annals
issue. The Annals issue is a peer-reviewed,
multidisciplinary journal published by SECOLAS, the
University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Winthrop
University, and the University of North Carolina Press.

The Latin Americanist Annals issue publishes scholarly
articles from any academic discipline that include original
research concerning Latin America. Manuscripts may be
in English, Spanish, or Portuguese, and should not exceed
25 double-spaced pages, including notes, tables, and
works cited. Authors should include a 150-200 word
abstract with their manuscripts.
                                    THE LATIN AMERICANIST: SECOLAS ANNAL
Papers are chosen for their scholarship, general interest, readability, and interdisciplinary appeal to all Latin Americanists.
A manuscript should be submitted electronically to The Latin Americanist at this location: https://
            Presenters at the March 2017 SECOLAS meeting in Chapel Hill, North
latinamericanist.submittable.com/submit.                                                                     Ca
            submit their papersInquiries
                                 for possible        publication in The Latin Americanist: SEC
                                         and correspondence should be sent to the email addresses of the Co-
            Annals Issue is a peer-reviewed,          multidisciplinary
                               Editors (below). The deadline                       journal
                                                             for submissions is June 1, 2019. published by SE
            of North Carolina at Charlotte, Winthrop University, and Wiley-Blackwell
                                 Manuscripts should be formatted in the style sheet used in the contributor’s
                                 discipline, such as University of Chicago, A Manual of Style, or the MLA Style
             TLA: The       SECOLAS   Annals Issue publishes scholarly articles from any
                                 Sheet.                                                  aca
             include original research concerning Latin America. Manuscripts may be i
             Portuguese, and should not exceed 25 double-spaced pages, including note
             cited. Authors
For further information, contact: should include a 150-200 word abstract with their manuscri

Dr. Gregory S. Crider                             Dr. Jürgen Buchenau
            Papers    are
Co-Editor, TLA Annals issue chosen for their scholarship,    general
                                                  Co-Editor, TLA         interest, readability, and in
                                                                 Annals issue
            all Latin Americanists. A manuscript
Winthrop University                                       should
                                                  The University     be submitted
                                                                 of North                electronically to
                                                                          Carolina at Charlotte
criderg@winthrop.edu                              jbuchenau@uncc.edu
            located on ScholarOne Manuscripts           at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/tl
980-297-3461                                      704-687-4635
            correspondence should be sent to the email addresses of the Editors (below
            submissions is June 1, 2017.
                                                              !12
            Manuscripts should be formatted in the style sheet used in the contributor’
            University of Chicago, A Manual of Style, or the MLA Style Sheet.
Friday, March 29 / Viernes , 29 de Marzo - Session 04 - 9am-10:45am
23. The Body in Mexican Literature
Location: Salón 10

La intensidad de los cuerpos en la narrativa de Mariana Enríquez
Rocío Gordon, Christopher Newport University

“The other of the other”: The Silenced and Disembodied Being of Janair in The Passion according to G.H.
Francisco Quinteiro Pires, New York University

Translating Crime and Crisis in Yuri Herrera’s La Transmigración de los cuerpos
Michael Mosier, Cornell College

24. Unknowing the Maya: Disruptions of Maya History and Identity
Location: Salón 11

Chair and Discussant: Sarah A. Williams

Translation in the Maya Context
Paula Karger, University of Toronto

The Voices of Yucatán’s Caste War Rebels: a Literary Perspective
Sarah West, Northeastern Illinois University

Waiting for Time: Maya Temporalities in the Epoch of Tourism
Sarah A. Williams, University of Toronto

Rugged Heroism: Martínez Huchim’s Intervention into Yucatec Maya History
Hannah Palmer, University of North Carolina

25. Rigoberto González, Papoleto Melendez, Judith Ortiz Cofer, Richard Rodriguez: The Geography of
 Transformation and Evolution
Location: Salón 14

Papoleto Meléndez o el Renacimiento Neorrican aún vive
Efraín Barradas, University of Florida

La educación de una mariposa: Richard Rodriguez y Rigoberto González
Ignacio Rodeño Iturriaga, The University of Alabama

Judith Ortiz Cofer: Living in The Cruel Country of Grief
Carmen S. Rivera, State University of New York-Fredonia

26. Creative Curricular Design and Programming: New Trends in Latin American Studies
Location: Salón 15

Chair: Liesl Picard, Florida International University

Latin American Studies & Community Resources: Reimagining Local Impact in Alignment with Strategic Program
Strengths
Valerie McGinley, Tulane University

                                                           !13
Leveraging International Linkage Partnerships and Technology to Support Innovation, Expand Meaningful International
Learning Opportunities and Democratize Teaching and Learning
Liesl Picard, Florida International University

27. Panorama glotopolítico sobre o ensino de línguas no Amazonas
Location: Salón I

Chair: Wagner Barros Teixeira, Universidade Federal do Amazonas

Panorama glotopolítico sobre o ensino de Libras no Amazonas
Fábio Tadeu Cabral Stoller, Universidade Federal do Amazonas; Joana Angélica Ferreira Monteiro Cabral Stoller,
Universidade Federal do Amazonas; Wagner Barros Teixeira, Universidade Federal do Amazonas

Ensino-aprendizagem de Língua Espanhola para surdos no Programa CEL da UFAM: análise sobre propostas, ações e
estratégias diferenciadas
Fábio Tadeu Cabral Stoller, Universidade Federal do Amazonas

Panorama glotopolítico sobre o ensino de Português na regiãode fronteira Brasil, Colômbia e Peru: realidades e dasafios
Rocilange Cabral, Universidade do Estado do Amazonas; Wagner Barros Texeira, Universidade Federal do Amazonas

Ensino de Línguas e de Literaturas na Fronteira Brasil, Colômbia e Peru: a formação do professor em perspectiva
Jorge Luís de Freitas Lima, Universidade Federal do Amazonas

Enseñanza de la Lengua Española en la ciudad de Benjamin Constant – Amazonaz: frontera Brasil-Perú
Solano da Silva Guerreiro, Universidade Federal do Amazonas

Panorama histórico glotopolítico sobre o ensino de Espanhol no Amazonas
Wagner Barros Teixeira, Universidade Federal do Amazonas

28. Rethinking Agrarian Reform in Latin America, from the Ground Up
Location: Salón II

Chair: E. Gabrielle Kuenzli, University of South Carolina

Fields of Revolution: Agrarian Reform and Peasant Politics in Bolivia
Carmen Soliz, UNC Charlotte

Labor, Sovereignty, and Revolution in Cuba’s Agrarian Reform, 1958-1970
Sara Kozameh, NYU

Cultivating Consumption: The Urban Roots of Chile’s Agrarian Reform
Joshua Frens-String, UT-Austin

“The land is for those who work it”: The 1969 Peruvian Agrarian Reform in the Pampa de Anta
Rohan Chatterjee, University of Chicago

Discussant: E. Gabrielle Kuenzli, University of South Carolina

29. African Diasporas in Latin America
Location: Salón III

A Hidden History of Patriotism, Activism, and Identity: Afro-Peruvian Labor and Politics, 1855-1930
Dan Cozart, UNC Charlotte

                                                            !14
The Social Economy of Africans and African Descendents in Buenos Aires
Diane Ghogomu, Tulane University

A Revolucão Haitiana como momento privilegiado da construção de uma identidade (1791-1804)
Berno Logis, Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio Mesquita Filho

30. Tourism Strategies in Latin America
Location: Salón IV

The Caudillos of Development: Bankers, Bureaucrats, and the Founding of Cancún, 1967-74
Carlos R. Hernández, Yale University

Bellezas Naturales del Caribe: Beauty Pageants and the Dominican Tourism Industry, 1966-1972
Elizabeth Manley, Xavier University of Louisiana

The Paradox of Indigenous Tourism: Cross-Cultural Understanding and Self-Determination or Neocolonial
Commoditization of Culture?
Ellen Litwicki, State University of New York at Fredonia

                 Friday, March 29 / Viernes , 29 de Marzo - Session 05 - 11am-12:45pm
31. Mythology, Identity, and Mexico
Location: Salón 10

La leyenda de La llorona como medio para fortalecer la memoria, la identidad y la cultura
Herlinda Ramírez-Barradas, Purdue University Northwest

History, Identity and Marginality: Carlos Fuentes’ “Chac Mool”
Ann González, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Two Visions of Identity and Equality: Chicana/o and Mexican Student Activism, 1960s – 1970s
Nydia A. Martinez, Eastern Washington University

32. Cuban Literature
Location: Salón 11

Las ansiedades culturales en los poemas de Motivos de son, analizados desde los principios teóricos de Frantz Fanon
Michelle Camargo, University of Missouri

How to Leave Hialeah: paisajes de lo cubanoamericano
Arturo Matute Castro, Arturo Matute Castro

33. Poetry and Translation
Location: Salón 14

Política y poética de las antologías de poesía cubana traducida al inglés
Robert Lesman, Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania

“Excelentes traducciones de magníficas firmas”: Antologías mexicanas de poesía en lengua inglesa como proyectos de
poetas-traductores
Martha Celis Mendoza, El Colegio de México

                                                            !15
Tradutores do intraduzível: o texto de Clarice Lispector na Espanha
Lucilene Machado Garcia Arf, Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul

Medio Collage, Medio Montage, Medio Cine
Ronald J. Friis, Furman University

34. Urbanization and Political Change in Post-1968 Mexico
Location: Salón 15

Chair: Christina Jimenez, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs

Urban Regeneration in the Periphery: Political Culture in Tijuana, 1970-1993
Christian Rocha, University of Chicago

Displacement by Disaster: San Juanico Petroleum Fire in Mexico City, 1984
Anna R. Alexander, California State University, East Bay

Serfs in the Shanties: Acarreados and Political Co-Option in Marginal Mexico City
Joseph U. Lenti, Eastern Washington University

Discussant: Christina Jimenez, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs

35. Latin America in World History
Location: Salón I

Chair: Lily P. Balloffet, University of California Santa Cruz

Just before Discovery: notes on World Political Economy, 1470 CE
James D. Henderson, Coastal Carolina University

Latin America in the Story of World History, through the Lens of Food
Rick Warner, Wabash College

Against the Current: Steering Dutch Brazil into Portuguese Atlantic and World History
Suzanne M. Litrel, Georgia State University

Discussant: Lily P. Balloffet, University of California Santa Cruz

36. Religion in Latin America
Location: Salón II

Religion, Education, and Print: the Spatial Transitions of Practice in Late Bourbon, Mexico City
Shayna Mehas, Elon University

La Santa Misión de la Verapaz: Reimagining What it Means to be a Missionary in Contemporary Guatemala
Eric Hoenes del Pinal, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

A Guerra entre Deus e a Democracia: Uma Análise sobre a Atuação Bancada Evangélica na Câmara de Deputados de
Brasília
Kaliane Santos Oliveira, Universidade Paulista Julio Mesquita Filho

Beyond populism; an intersection between political and religious discourse anaylsis in a Latin American Context
Martin Mejia, University of Essex

                                                                !16
37. Colonial Latin America
Location: Salón III

Chair: Timothy Hawkins, Indiana State University

‘Without the Mutual Love of Bride and Groom?’ Parental Consent and the Royal Pragmatic of 1779 in Mexico City
Donald Stevens, Drexel University

Between Fort and Snoa; Dutch power and Sephardic persuasion in the Dutch West Indies
Oscar Lansen, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
To Live and Die at the King’s Court: Late-Sixteenth Century Indigenous Rulership in the Colombian Andes and Beyond
Kate Godfrey, Pennsylvania State University

New Spain’s Congregaciones Project, Indigenous Resistance, and Cultural Geography, 1590-1610
Martin Nesvig, University of Miami

38. New Directions in Medical History (Roundtable)
Location: Salón IV

Carlos S. Dimas, University of Nevada Las Vegas
Beau Gaitors, Winston-Salem State University
Rocio Gomez, University of Arkansas
Nicole Pacino, University of Alabama-Huntsville

                  Friday, March 29 / Viernes , 29 de Marzo - Session 06 - 2pm-3:45pm
39. 19th Century Ideologies of Nationhood
Location: Salón 10

Perico (1885): denuncia frente al positivismo en los márgenes del porfiriato
Alejandro Cortazar, Louisiana State University

Yucatán and the Limits of Nationalism: La hija del judío as Nineteenth-Century Border Novel
Cara A. Kinnally, Purdue University
Honoring the Present with the Past: Timeless Tributes to Benito Pablo Juárez’s (1803-1872) Legacy
Maria Zalduondo, Bluefield College

Las fronteras identitarias en la obra de José Joaquín Fernández de Lizardi
Sergio M. Martínez, Texas State University

Latinoamericanismo: modos de sobrevivencia
Byron Vélez Escallón, Univerisidade Federal de Santa Maria

40. “Ser en el mundo. Ser nosotros”: Los saberes locales indígenas frente al mundo global (Panel 2)
Location: Salón 11

Chair: Rita M. Palacios, Conestoga College

El tiempo principia en xibalbá: hacia un dialogo intercultural
Axel Montepeque, California State University-Northridge

Cuestionamientos críticos desde los saberes locales: Literaturas originarias como modelo de empoderamiento
Jorge Alberto Tapia Ortiz, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro

                                                            !17
Tzotzil Maya (Net)working: Digitally Archiving the Politics of Collaboration in Taller Leñateros’s Facebook Account
Tiffany D. Creegan Miller, Clemson University
¿Por qué traducir?
Xun Betan

41. Comediantas, ansiosas, honradas y deshonradas: presentaciones y representaciones del yo femenino en los
 escritos de Sor Úrsula Suárez, Clorinda Matto de Turner y César Nicolás Penson
Location: Salón 14

El artificio de "santa comedianta" en la Relación Autobiográfica de Sor Úrsula Suárez
Yertty Vandermolen, Western Kentucky University

La inusual objetividad de la representación femenina en las tradiciones dominicanas de Cosas Añejas
Rita Tejada, Luther College

Tradiciones Cuzqueñas: la proyección de la escritora
Fanny Roncal Ramírez, Concordia College

42. Apropos Appropriations of the Western Tradition by Latin American Writers
Location: Salón 15

Reinaldo Arenas’s Sexual Parodies: Reviving and Annihilating the Canon
Angie Willis, Davidson College

Juan Bautista de Pomar and the Post-Conquest Re-membering of Texcoco
José Gabriel Espericueta, University of Dallas

43. Collecting Latin America: The Challenges of Expanding Acquisitions Boundaries
Location: Salón I

Documenting Extraordinary Acts of Ordinary People: A case study
Holly Ackerman, Duke University

From Abstraction to Activism: Developing Primary Source Collections Documenting an International Human Rights
Movement
Patrick A. Stawski, Duke University

Loading the Future Canon: Latin American Independent Publishing in U.S. Research Libraries
Lisa Gardinier, University of Iowa

The Challenges of Building Latin American Indigenous Languages Collections
Teresa Chapa, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

44. Actores locales y regionales y la toma de decisiones en la formación del estado poscolonial en América Latina
Location: Salón II

Chair: Silke Hensel, Universidad de Münster

Poderes centrales, resistencias locales: el proceso de formación de un cuerpo policial en territorio de la Provincia
Oriental (1826-1838)
Nicolás Duffau, FHCE/UdelaR

                                                            !18
Decisiones a nivel local. Santa Fe y Corrientes y la Asamblea Constituyente de 1824-1826
Stephan Ruderer, Universidad de Münster

Optando por América. Decidiendo por la insurgencia en 1811-21
Michael Ducey, Universidad Veracruzana

Actores regionales en la declaración del federalismo en México, 1823
Silke Hensel, Universidad de Münster

45. Language, Education, & Immigration
Location: Salón III

Examining the multi-disciplinary intersections between migration, foreign language education, and climate shock events
in Mexico
Silvia Peart, U.S. Naval Academy; Bradford Barrett, U.S. Naval Academy

Los que vinieron y se fueron: A Transnational Pursuit for Higher Education and the Impenetrable Wall of Neoliberalism
Eleanor Petrone, Western Carolina University

Multicultural Social Studies Curriculum: Incorporating Latin American Peoples into U.S. History
Chelsie Price, Eastern Washington University

Abrazando El Idioma: Developing A Community Language Program for Heritage Spanish Speakers in Florida
Anna Rodell, University of Florida

46. Political Violence, Historical Memory, and Human Rights Issues in Latin America
Location: Salón IV

Remembering the Return from Exodus: An analysis of a Salvadoran Community’s Local History Reenactment
Stephanie M. Huezo, Indiana University

The Missing Students from Ayotzinapa
Melissa Roxana Aguilar Pavon, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

The Violence in Spy Reports: Indigenismos in the Social and Political Investigations Archive in Mexico, 1960s-1970s
María L.O. Muñoz, Susquehanna University

Towards Solidarity with Workers on Wheels: Motorcycle Taxi Drivers and Human Rights
William Boose, University of Florida

                  Friday, March 29 / Viernes , 29 de Marzo - Session 07 - 4pm-5:45pm
47. Mexican-American Textualities
Location: Salón 10

Home and family in Reyna Grande’s The Distance Between Us and A Dream Called Home
María A. Beltrán-Vocal, DePaul University

Latinx Urban Landscapes as Spaces of Desire, Demolition, and Dispossession: An Analysis of Drowning Tucson by Aaron
Michael Morales
Crescencio López-González, Utah State University

                                                           !19
Singing La Bamba in the City of Angeles: The Musical Migrations and Renaissance of Son Jarocho
B. Christine Arce, University of Miami

La huelga de las uvas y el Programa Bracero en El corrido de Dante de Eduardo González Viaña
Audrey García, Kennesaw State University

El Chino Antrax, y la estética del narco-dandi en los corridos enfermos
Martin Mulligan, University of Missouri-Columbia

48. Film, Performance and Indigenous Rights
Location: Salón 11

De documental a documento, de índice a evidencia – el cine de Pamela Yates y el genocidio maya
Antonio Gómez, Tulane University

Aimé Painé y Liliana Ancalao: el imaginario cultural mapuche entre el canto y la poesía
Alicia Rolón, Gettysburg College

Death in the Andes?: The Struggle for Survival in Wiñaypacha
Andrea Meador Smith, Shenandoah University

Muxe Velas in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Performing Third-Gender Identity as Indigenous Resistance
Joshua L. Truett, Ohio State University

49. Southern Cone Literature
Location: Salón 14

La Narrativa Chilena del siglo XXI: El Individuo ante el Neoliberalismo en las Obras de Alejandro Zambra, Paulina
Flores y Álvaro Bisama
Eduardo Mora Cortés, University of North Carolina-Wilmington

POW! and POW! Again: "Chelo" Candía's Comics as Expression of Resistance
Alberto Centeno-Pulido, Western Carolina University

Body Commodification in Fruta podrida by Lina Meruane and Impuesto a la carne by Diamela Eltit
Nancy Tille-Victorica, Harriet. L. Wilkes Honors College (FAU)

50. Political Representation and Contestation in Brazil
Location: Salón 15

Afro-Brazilian Culture as a Means of Transformation: Spaces, Businesses and Political Participation in Belo Horizonte,
Brazil
Carolina Helena Timóteo de Oliveira, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Dona Ivone Lara’s Sorriso Negro: the Soundtrack of Black and Feminist Movements in the Post-Dictatorship Brazil
Mila Burns, Lehman College at the City University of New York

Brazilian Transitional Justice on the Big Screen: Cinematic Depictions of 1979's Amnesty Law and Party Reform Law
Sofia Paiva de Araujo, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Critical Social Media Literacy for Contemporary Global Politics: Reflections on Brazilian Presidential Elections
Miriam Jorge, University of Missouri-St Louis

                                                           !20
Narrativas da decolonialidade
Angela Guida, Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul

51. La modernidad digital y sus efectos político-morales, de inclusión y exclusión, en el individuo contemporáneo
 (Roundtable)
Location: Salón I

Lázaro Marcos Chávez Aceves, Universidad de Guadalajara
David Ramírez Plascencia
Israel Tonatiuh Lay Arellano
Carlos Rafael Hernández Vargas
Tania Rodríguez Salazar
Pablo Arredondo Ramiréz

52. Mapping Latin America: Modernization Efforts and Cold War Ideologies in Rural and Urban Spaces
Location: Salón II

Chair: Denisa Jashari, Indiana University

Photographing Development: A Visual Analysis of Guatemala’s Model Villages, 1983-1987
Sarah Foss, Oklahoma State University

Containing Unrest, Charting a Geography of Violence: Modernization and Authoritarianism in Chile’s Late Twentieth
Century
Denisa Jashari, Indiana University

The Racialization and Violence of Sustainability: Recycling Cold War ‘Poles of Development Theory’ in Mexico
Paige Andersson, University of Michigan

Discussant: Bryan Pitts, Indiana University

53. Teachers, Learning Communities, and Innovative Pedagogies
Location: Salón III

Para la formación de formdores. Bosquejo de la historia de la formación del magisterio en Oaxaca, 1825-1937
Daniela Traffano, CIESAS Pacífico Sur

A Palavra Liberta
Suely Maria Anderle, Instituto Federal de Santa Catarina

Between Paulo and Pablo Freire: the Origins of Pedagogy of the Oppressed, its Readers, and Liberatory Education in the
Americas
Aaron Colston, Duke University

Projeto “Professora Em Minha Casa”
Maria de Fátima Destro de Arruda, Departamento de Educação Especializada, SME

54. Laws, Concessions, Commerce in Latin America
Location: Salón IV

Challenging Spanish Legal Traditions: Cuban Lawyers During the First American Intervention (1898 – 1902)
Ricardo Pelegrin Taboada, Florida International University

                                                           !21
Revoluciones, fronteras y capitalismos del Noreste: una reconceptualización del desarrollo de la industria de Monterrey,
1850-1910
Rodolfo Fernández, University of Connecticut

                Saturday, March 30 / Sábado , 29 de Marzo - Session 08 - 9am-10:45am
55. The U.S.-Mexico Border
Location: Salón 10

La frontera de la historia: Una simbología del tiempo en El ejército iluminado de David Toscana
Perla Ábrego, University of Texas of the Permian Basin

The Ecstasy of Oratory and English in a Toothless Mouth
Ty West, Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame

Literary Visions of the Caste War in Eligio Ancona’s La Mestiza (1861)
Sarah West, Northeastern Illinois University

56. Indigenous Literature
Location: Salón 11

Habla el Jaguar: entendimiento maya antiguo y contemporáneo del jaguar y del equilibrio natural
Sean Sell, University of California-Davis

Decolonizing Global Indigenous Literary Studies
Arturo Arias, University of California-Merced

El proyecto Snichimal Vayuchil
Xun Betan

57. Ni cruz ni Jesús: New Approaches to Anticlericalism and Unbelief in Mexico
Location: Salón 14

Chair: David Dalton, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Secular Redemption: Modernity and Mestizo Nationalism in the Thought of Manuel Gamio
David Dalton, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Sexualidad e irreligión en el pensamiento feminista mexicana de la Revolución
Elissa Rashkin, Universidad Veracruzana

Anticlericalism in Different Flavors: The ‘Sonoran Dynasty’ and the Church-State Conflict in Revolutionary Mexico,
1915-1934
Jürgen Buchenau, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

58. Slavery in Latin America and the Atlantic World: Imperial, Religious, and Historiographical Perspectives
Location: Salón 15

Chair: Tamara Spike, University of North Georgia

Refugees from Slavery: Maritime Marronage in Eighteenth-century Cuba
Elena Schneider, University of California, Berkeley

                                                           !22
Afro-Peruvians and the Ecclesiastical Court
Alex Wisnoski, University of North Georgia

Writing the Religious History of the Enslaved in the Atlantic World
Matt Childs, University of South Carolina

Discussant: Tamara Spike, University of North Georgia

59. Entre permanencias y transformaciones: La educación en Oaxaca del porfiriato al cardenismo
Location: Salón I

Chair: Kathleen M. McIntyre, University of Rhode Island

La formación participativa de los estudiantes del Instituto Autónomo de Ciencias y Artes del Estado de Oaxaca,
1910-1952
Alejandro Arturo Jiménez Martínez, Universidad Autónoma Benito Juárez de Oaxaca

Las nuevas formas educativas en la ciudad de Oaxaca durante el Porfiriato: La escuela graduada
Edmundo López López, Universidad La Salle Oaxaca

Los botánicos Cassiano Conzatti, Cyrus Pringle, y Lucio C. Smith en Oaxaca: Conexiones entre la educación publica, la
flora sinóptica, y la evangelización metodista en los 1890s
Kathleen M. McIntyre, University of Rhode Island

Discussant: Francisco José Ruiz Cervantes, Universidad Autónoma Benito Juárez de Oaxaca

60. Crime, Violence, & Corruption
Location: Salón II

Rumor, Spectacle, and Political Violence in Mexico’s 2018 Elections
Corrie Boudreaux, University of Texas at El Paso, and Luis Torres, Independent Scholar

The Effects of Criminal Violence on Executive Approval: Aggregate- and Individual-Level Analyses of Public Opinion in
Mexico
Luigi Antonio Mendez, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

How Crime and Violence Effects a Business in El Salvador
Andrea Calidonio, University of Florida

Corruption and the 2018 Mexican Elections
Stephen Morris, Middle Tennessee State University

Did the “Pink Tide” matter?: Governance, transparency, & effectiveness in Uruguay & beyond
Charles H. Blake, James Madison University

61. Women in Society, Politics, and History
Location: Salón III

Gendered Violence in Civilian and Military Regimes, El Salvador 1920-1960
Aldo Garcia-Guevara

Del Nacimiento: A Public Water Tank as Central to Mam Women’s Organizing in Guatemala
Lara Lookabaugh, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

                                                            !23
Women’s Agency and the Politicizing of Motherhood in the Conflict in the TIPNIS, Bolivia
Leah Walton, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Steering with both wings of politics: Feminist Organizing in Latin America
Citlaly Mora, Duke University

Far beyond colonizer’s sexual partners: indigenous women and the civilization project in the hinterland of the Captaincy
of Rio Negro (1755-1779)
Manoel Rendeiro Neto, University of California, Davis

62. Chilean Politics and Recent Political History
Location: Salón IV

Strange Bedfellows at the End of the Cold War: The Letelier Assassination, Human Rights, and State Sovereignty
Alan McPherson, Temple University

Revolutionary Space: Cordon Industrial Vicuña Mackenna and the Chilean Road to Socialism, 1972-1973
Nicholas Scott, University of Virginia

Estelas: A Performance Review in Wake of the Bachelet Phenomenon
Linda E. Moran, Freed-Hardeman University

The Politics of Childhood under Military Rule in Chile
Marian Schlotterbeck, University of California, Davis

               Saturday, March 30 / Sábado , 29 de Marzo - Session 09 - 11am-12:45pm
63. Transatlantic Dialogs Between Mexico and Europe
Location: Salón 10

Paris and Mexico City: A Dialogue of Two Capital Cities
Carole Salmon, University of Massachusetts Lowell; Angélica Lozano-Alonso, Furman University

Gender and Race in B. Traven’s Aslan Norval: A German’s perspective on the U.S. and Mexico
Anabel Aliaga-Buchenau, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

The parables of Josep Renau’s La Hispanidad
Melanie Forehand, Vanderbilt University

64. “Ser en el mundo. Ser nosotros”: Los saberes locales indígenas frente al mundo global – Panel 3
Location: Salón 11

Chair: Jorge Tapia, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro

Cultura e idioma en contexto, en época global multinacional
Elizabeth C. Martinez, DePaul University

Time and World-Making in Contemporary Indigenous Literatures
Gloria E. Chacón, University of California-San Diego

Campos literarios e intelectuales en las literaturas mexicanas
Luz María Lepe Lira, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro

                                                            !24
65. Afrolatinidades
Location: Salón 14

Black Female Representation in Afro-Hispanic Literature: Searching for Origination in the Nigerian Hinterland
Uchenna Vasser, Winston-Salem State University

In the Spirit of Sankofa: Moving Forward, Looking Back in Selected Afro-Mexican Folktales
Reginald A. Bess, South Carolina State University

Identidad mediática, representación e hipertextualidad en la máscara de lucha libre mexicana
Daniel Calleros Villarreal, California State University, Fresno

66. Gender, Leadership and Activism: Gendered Networks and Resistance in the Age of Globalization
Location: Salón 15

Chair: Annabelle Conroy, University of Central Florida

Comunalidad y Resistencia de los pueblos Mixe
Edith Barrera Pineda, Universidad del Mar

Ni la tierra ni las mujeres somos territorio de conquista: Women’s Role in Preserving the Amazon
Annabelle Conroy, University of Central Florida

Gender and social vulnerability in the planned tourist center of Los Cabos
Alba E. Gámez, Manuel Angeles, and Juan Carlos Graciano, Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur

Mujeres indígenas y Educación Superior en Chile
Noemí López Santiago, Universidad del Mar; and Karin Berlien Araos, Universidad de Valparaíso

Discussant: Annabelle Conroy, University of Central Florida

67. Music, Sound, and Food in Latin America
Location: Salón I

Revolución y Evolución en las Subculturas de las Ciudad de México: The Rise of the Anarcho-Punks
Donn R. Trotter, Texas A&M University-Commerce

Music, Affect, and Hybridity in Campo de la Cruz’s Colombo-Venezuelan Population
James Everett, University of Florida

Comida, clase e identidad: Una mirada a la cocina decimonónica mexicana
Ingrid Hali Tokun Haga Alvarez, El Colegio de México

68. U.S. and Mexico: Border and Migration Histories
Location: Salón II

Strongmen in the Northern Borderlands: Reconsidering Landholding New Mexicans in the Mexican and American
Territorial Periods, 1836-65
Michael J. Alarid, University of Nevada at Las Vegas

Entre Aqui y Allá: The Paths of Migration and Emigration Control in Mexico 1920-1930
Daniel Morales, James Madison University

                                                           !25
The Last Days of the Bracero Program
Timothy Henderson, Auburn University

69. Questions of Race and Identity in Latin America
Location: Salón III

In Honor of Columbus: San Antonio, Race, and the October 1892 Quadricentenary
Chad Thomas Black, University of Tennessee – Knoxville
Race, politics, and development in conflict zones: Notes from El Chocó, Colombia
James D. Bowen, Saint Louis University; Olga Arbeláez, Saint Louis University

The “Superiority of an Inferior Race”: Racism and Labor Upheavals in Central American Banana Ports
Joseph Floyd, Georgia State University

                 Saturday, March 30 / Sábado , 29 de Marzo - Session 10 - 2pm-3:45pm
70. Transnational Latin America
Location: Salón 10

La mirada interrogante de Valeria Luiselli en Los niños perdidos: un ensayo que es crónica, testimonio, y documento
transnacional
Aurora Camacho de Schmidt, Swarthmore College

El aprendizaje, la migración, y la transnacionalidad en dos textos iniciáticos
Regina Faunes, St. Edward’s University

El oído miope /A Not So Finely Tuned Ear: a very Colombian novel in New York City
Javier Eduardo Pabón, Methodist University

Magical Realist Non-Fiction and the Meaning of Truth in the Latin American Diaspora: Reinterpretation of Tragedy
Through Magic as Means of Survival
Freddy Fuentes, Washington and Lee University

71. Cinema and Humor in South America
Location: Salón 11

A New Third Cinema: How a Subset of Contemporary Argentine Queer Film Has Incorporated Liberation Cinema’s Styles
and Tactics in Order to Function as a Cultural Agent
Dylan Wright, University of Arkansas-Little Rock

Procedimientos retóricos del cine en Cortázar, Fuentes, y García Márquez
José Sanjinés, Coastal Carolina University

El reverso de la lectura: reflexiones acerca de las textualidades del mundo moderno
Félix Ceballos

El sentido del humor como sentido común: comunicando la actualidad en un mundo de contenido
Daniel García Bullé Garza

                                                            !26
72. Aesthetics of Subversion: Representing resistance in contemporary Latin American culture
Location: Salón 14

Sampling Subversion in Chilean Hip-Hop: Víctor Jara in the Music of Subverso and Con$pirazion
Eunice Rojas, Furman University

Bodies of Resistance: Subverting the American Dream in María llena eres de gracia and Sugar
Patricia Reagan, Randolph-Macon College

Entomología Subversiva: resistencia y memoria cultural en Marabunta de Regina José Galindo
Santiago M. Quintero, Furman University

73. Re-reading Text and Image in the Americas
Location: Salón 15

Envisioning an Inca: Titu Cusi Yupanqui in Text and Images
Elizabeth Morán, Christopher Newport University

Reading Between the Lines: An Indigenous Account of Conquest on the Missing Folios of Codex Azcatitlan
Angela Herren Rajagopalan, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Rubén Darío y Nicanor Parra: La trinidad profanada en tres “Padre nuestros”
William O. Deaver, Jr., Georgia Southern University-Armstrong Campus

74. Antiquities, Monumentality, and Institutions in Mexico
Location: Salón I

Chair: Lisa Pinley Covert, College of Charleston

Theodolites and Tepalcates: Collecting the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in the Nineteenth Century
Miruna Achim, UAM-Cuajimalpa

The Tangled Journey of the Cross of Palenque
Christina Bueno, Northeastern Illinois University

Discussant: Lisa Pinley Covert, College of Charleston

75. Women and Social Movements in Mexico and California
Location: Salón II

Chair: Nichole Sanders, University of Lynchburg

Women, Sex, and Catholic Social Action in 1940s Mexico
Nichole Sanders, University of Lynchburg

PLM Women Journalists as Intimate Partners: Notes on Motherhood and Gender Ideology
Nicole M. Guidotti-Hernández, UT-Austin

Carmelite Sisters, Transnational Catholicism, and the Cristero Diaspora in California, 1927-1937
Alexandra Puerto, Occidental College

Discussant: Ivonne Wallace Fuentes, Roanoke College

                                                             !27
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