NECLAS 2014 PANELS SESSION ONE (9:00-10:30 a.m.) Vigencias y diversidad en el cuento latinoamericano Claudia Marcela Páez Lotero (UMass Amherst), Organizer Santiago Vidales (UMass Amherst), Chair Susana Antunes (UMass Amherst) Erotismo y fantasía en ‘La sueñera’ de Ana María Shua Odalis Patricia Hidalgo (UMass Amherst) Evolución y construcción del imaginario en los cuentos de Julio Ramón Ribeyro Claudia Marcela Páez Lotero (UMass Amherst) ¿Qué hay detrás de la felicidad?: Entre la violencia y la agresividad, la justicia y la venganza en ‘Las fotografías’ y ‘El árbol grabado’ de Silvina Ocampo Santiago Vidales (UMass Amherst) Intersecciones erráticas: interseccionalidad y performatividad en los cuentos de Anabelle Aguilar Brealey GIS and Remote Sensing for Study of Extractive Industries in Latin America Nicholas Cuba (Clark University), Organizer and Chair Juan Luis Dammert (Clark University), Commentator/Discussant Nicholas Cuba (Clark University) Overview, Potential, and Limitations of GIS and Remote Sensing Methodologies for Study of Extractive Industries Arthur Elmes (Clark University) Spectral Characterization of Licit and Illicit Mining Activity in the Madre de Dios Region of Peru Zoe Ritter (Clark University) Mapping Livelihood Vulnerability to Mineral Extraction in Madre de Dios, Peru The University and Social Change Mark Healey (University of Connecticut, Storrs), Chair David Espinosa (Rhode Island College) Winds of Change: The Church Reform Movement, the Mexican 1968 Student Movement, and the Iberoamerican University James J. Harrington (Eastern Nazarene College) Jesuit Higher Education and National Development: The Central American Case Regional Responses to International Norms Gabriela Torres (Wheaton College), Chair Ñusta Carranza Ko (Purdue University) Transitional Justice and the Internalization of International Norms in Peru Tamara Stenn (SIT Graduate Institute) Exploring the Justice of Living Well Pedro M. Cameselle (Fordham University) Conferences, Scientists, and Uruguayan Cigar Makers: Transnational Dilemmas and U.S. Cultural Diplomacy, 1929-1945 Diaspora Politics Jennifer Rudolph (Connecticut College), Chair Ginetta E.B. Candelario (Smith College) 'Voices Echoing Beyond the Seas': Dominican Feminists' Transnational Activism, 1882-1942 Charles R. Venator-Santiago (University of Connecticut) The Puerto Rican Immigrant? Rocío Sánchez-Ares (Lynch School of Education at Boston College) Performing Latina Action: Building Consciousness about Domestic Violence through Participatory Theater Musical Icons of the Americas Eric Galm (Trinity College), Chair and Discussant Rosa Carrasquillo (College of the Holy Cross) The People’s Poet: Life and Myth of Ismael Rivera, an Afro-Caribbean Icon Hermann Hudde (New England Conservatory of Music) The History of Carlos Chávez in Tanglewood in 1953 Eric Galm (Trinity College) Carmen Miranda and Donald Duck Were Iconic Good Neighbors SESSION TWO (10:45 a.m. -12:15 p.m.) Ruptures and Continuities in Space and Time: Historical Studies of Science in Latin America Rick A. López (Amherst College), Organizer and Chair Jordana Dym (Skidmore College), Commentator/Discussant Rick A. López (Amherst College) Depicting Mexican Nature: Science, Visuality, and the Natural World in the Construction of Indigeneity Heidi V. Scott (UMass Amherst) The Enlightenment Below Ground: Mapping Mining Spaces in the Late Colonial Andes John Soluri (Carnegie Mellon University) Representing Threats: Scientists, Chulengueadores, and the Politics of Conservation in Patagonia (1850-1970) Youth and Aging among Hispanics: Three Case Studies Mónika López Anuarbe (Connecticut College), Organizer and Chair Luis Gonzalez (Connecticut College), Discussant Ana Campos-Holland (Connecticut College) ’Done with This!’ Youth in Search of Adult-Free Spaces within Social Media María Amparo Cruz-Saco (Connecticut College) Benefits for Whom?: Private Pension Fund Administrators or Retired Workers. The Peruvian Case Mónika López Anuarbe (Connecticut College) Aging, Planning, and Familism among Hispanics: A Case Study in New London, Connecticut Objects in Colonial Contexts I Karen Melvin (Bates College), Organizer and Chair William B. Taylor (University of California, Berkeley) Prayers for Peasant Farmers: A Visit to the Flea Market of Puebla in 1793 Karen Melvin (Bates College) Devotional Objects and the Immoderate Alms Collector, 1778-1802 Sylvia Sellers-García (Boston College) Bodies and Water Lilies: A Criminal Case from Guatemala City in 1800 Discursive Manifestations of Genders, Genres and Sexualities in Latin American (Text)ualities I Lori Hopkins (University of New Hampshire), Organizer and Chair Lori Hopkins (University of New Hampshire) Mauricio Rosencof’s ‘Las cartas que no llegaron’: Genre Gaps, Gender Identities and Filial Desires Gina Canepa (Providence College) Agedness and Sexuality Between Individual Desire and Social Construction: The Chilean film ‘Gloria’ (2013) by Sebastián Lelio Rachel Payne (University of St. Joseph) Gender and the Contemporary Latin American Historical Novel: Narrative Strategies of Female Authors Latin American Film in the New Millennium Cynthia Stone (College of the Holy Cross), Chair and Discussant Bridget V. Franco (College of the Holy Cross) Lucía Puenzo's ‘Wakolda’: Fresh or Familiar Frontiers in Argentine Cinema? Taylor Doherty (UMass Boston) Where Did Joseph Go? The Portrayal of the Absentee Patriarch in Three Latin American Films Robert LeRoux Hernandez (College of the Holy Cross) ‘La Bestia’: Mexico's Vertical Border on Film Memory and Literature Ignacio Lopez-Vicuña (University of Vermont), Chair Jayne Reino (UMass Amherst) From the Margins of History to the Center of the Text: Rewriting the War of Canudos in Mario Vargas Llosa's ‘La guerra del fin del mundo’ Luisa-Maria Rojas-Rimachi (University of Rochester) Cartografías de la periferia o la urbe indiferenciada en la narrativa de Roberto Bolaño Elizabeth Rivero (U.S. Coast Guard Academy) Memoria y creación literaria: ‘La claraboya y los relojes’ (2001) Inequality and Rights Anthony Bebbington (Clark University), Chair Gabriela Tafoya (University of Connecticut) The Political Economy of Poverty and Inequality: The Different Effects of National and Subnational Policies Paul W. Posner (Clark University) Social Welfare, Citizenship and the New Left in Latin America Grant Burrier (Curry College) Evasion or Accommodation? The Developmental State, Civil Society, and Hydroelectric Dam Construction in Brazil Marc W. Herold (University of New Hampshire) Value Distribution in the Modern Cocaine Commodity Chain (Colombia – U.S.) SESSION THREE (2:30-4:00 p.m.) Environmental Justice in Latin America Julia A. Kushigian (Connecticut College), Organizer and Chair María Amparo Cruz-Saco (Connecticut College), Commentator/Discussant Julia A. Kushigian (Connecticut College) Environmental Justice in Latin American Literature and Film Joseph Schroeder (Connecticut College) Social Justice Issues of Lead Contamination in Peru Leo Garofalo (Connecticut College) Designing a Course on Environmental History and Social Justice in Latin America Manuel Lizarralde (Connecticut College) Amerindians, Virtual Environmental Injustice and Climate Change Objects in Colonial Contexts II Karen Melvin (Bates College), Organizer Sylvia Sellers-García (Boston College), Chair Luis Millones Figueroa (Colby College) The Bezoar Stone: A Natural Wonder in the New World Ken Ward (John Carter Brown Library) Anomalies and Arguments: Antonio de Figueroa's ‘Memorial de las casas reales’ and New Spain's Conflicted 1640's Antonia Carcelén-Estrada (College of the Holy Cross) Art and Revolution in Sixteenth-Century Quito Discursive Manifestations of Genders, Genres and Sexualities in Latin American (Text)ualities II Lori Hopkins (University of New Hampshire), Organizer and Chair Marco Dorfsman (University of New Hampshire) Gramática de la gesticulación: Cuerpo, boca, pie, nalga, mano o culo Ignacio López-Vicuña (University of Vermont) The Queer Latin American City: Vernacular Discourse and Urban Performance Brett Levinson (Binghamton University) AIDS and Biopolitics in the Work of Pedro Lemebel “Latin” America in the 19th Century Christina Mehrtens (UMass Dartmouth), Chair Paulo Moreira (Yale University) When One of the Americas Became Latin Luciana Brito (University of São Paulo) Mirrors of Degeneracy: American Observers of Latin American Populations in the Nineteenth Century Yesenia Barragan (Columbia University) In the Name of Liberty, Security, and Equality: The Racial and Gender Politics of the Law of the Free Womb in New Granada, 1821 Political Fragility and Stability Katrina Burgess (Tufts University), Chair Laura Blume (Boston University) and Benjamin Cole (Simmons College) Accounting for Latin American Homicide Rates in State Fragility Metrics Patricia Olney (Southern Connecticut State University) The New Mexican Nationalism: Cultural and Institutional Transformation From Zedillo to Calderón Marco Cupolo (University of Hartford) Berlusconism and Chavism: Logic and Instruments of Rises to Personal Power Provocative Fictions Pedro Lasarte (Boston University), Chair Pedro Lasarte (Boston University) Sobre la sátira colonial: la preceptiva poética y la realidad histórica Angela N. DeLutis-Eichenberger (Dickinson College) The Ambitions of the Generation of 1842 as Portrayed in ‘El mendigo’ and ‘Rosa’ by José Victorino Lastarria Andres X. Echarri Mendoza (UMass Dartmouth) La corrupción como mecanismo (des)estructurador en ‘Las batallas en el desierto’ de José Emilio Pacheco Isabel Alvarez-Borland (College of the Holy Cross) Costumbrismo e identidades rotas en la última novela de Roberto G. Fernández Mestizaje and Afro-Latin American Identities in Literature and Culture Dorothy E. Mosby (Mount Holyoke College), Organizer, Chair and Discussant Lesley Zapata (Mount Holyoke College) ‘The Black Grandma in the Closet’: La falta de representación de afrodescendientes en Latinoamérica Jessica Ramírez (Mount Holyoke College) Las peligrosas implicaciones detrás la conceptualización del mestizaje en promover una nueva casta racial entre latinos Gina Macino (Mount Holyoke College) Los cuadros de las castas: Su producción y significación desde la época colonial hasta hoy RECEPTION AND SAMBA HOUR (4:15-5:15 p.m.) Reception 4:15-5:15 Samba Hour: Toca Brasil (Play Brazil)! 4:30-5:15 Eric G. Galm (Trinity College) This workshop enables participants to explore the music and culture of Brazil through a kinesthetic process. Beginning with a brief introduction to the fundamental fabric of the rhythmic structure, followed by an introduction to some of the prominent instruments and how they engage in conversation, the group will then help to perform a samba song in Portuguese and English and learn how one song can simultaneously function in multiple contexts. Participants will engage in basic rhythmic call-and-response training, working towards establishing a collaborative samba rhythm.
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