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Home > CLA > Border Studies Archive > Latinas and Politics Collection > Gloria Anzaldua Testimonios

Latinas and Politics Collection

Gloria Anzaldua Testimonios

 
Video clips and interviews of women scholars reflecting on Gloria Anzaldúa's influence.
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  • Testimonios of Chantiri Duran Resendiz and Marcelle Maese-Cohen by Chantiri Duran Resendiz and Marcelle Maese-Cohen

    Testimonios of Chantiri Duran Resendiz and Marcelle Maese-Cohen

    Chantiri Duran Resendiz and Marcelle Maese-Cohen

  • Testimonio of Linda Heidenreich by Linda Heidenreich

    Testimonio of Linda Heidenreich

    Linda Heidenreich

  • Testimonio of Rita E. Urquijo-Ruiz by Rita E. Urquijo-Ruiz

    Testimonio of Rita E. Urquijo-Ruiz

    Rita E. Urquijo-Ruiz

  • Testimonios of Stalina Emmanuelle Villarreal, Suzanne Vost, Stephanie Saint Sanchez, and Helane Adams Androne by Stalina Emmanuelle Villarreal, Suzanne Vost, Stephanie Saint Sanchez, and Helane Adams Androne

    Testimonios of Stalina Emmanuelle Villarreal, Suzanne Vost, Stephanie Saint Sanchez, and Helane Adams Androne

    Stalina Emmanuelle Villarreal, Suzanne Vost, Stephanie Saint Sanchez, and Helane Adams Androne

  • Interview with Norma E. Cantu by Norma E. Cantu PhD and Mayra Zepeda

    Interview with Norma E. Cantu

    Norma E. Cantu PhD and Mayra Zepeda

    Recorded testimonial about the work of Gloria Anzaldua and how it has affected the research and life of Dr. Norma E. Cantu and her peers.

    Norma Elia Cantu is a Chicana postmodernist writer and the Murchison Professor of the Humanities at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas. She focuses on issues of borders and boundaries, whether in academic disciplines or the geopolitical borderlands of Mexico and the United States, all through a Chicana feminist theoretical lens

  • Interview with Joan Pinkvoss and Nancy R. Barcelo by Joan Pinkvoss, Nancy "Rusty" Barcelo, and Mayra Zepeda

    Interview with Joan Pinkvoss and Nancy R. Barcelo

    Joan Pinkvoss, Nancy "Rusty" Barcelo, and Mayra Zepeda

    Two-part recorded testimonial about the work of Gloria Anzaldua and how it has impacted Joan Pinkvoss and Nancy "Rusty" Barcelo.

    Joan Pinkvoss co-founded Aunt Lute Books (San Francisco, CA) in 1982, a nonprofit, multicultural press committed to publishing women writers whose voices and visions are underrepresented in mainstream presses by race, ethnicity, sexuality, socio-economic background, and or age. Aunt Lute has published such acclaimed authors as Alice Walker, Audre Lorde, and Gloria Anzaldúa.

    Nancy “Rusty” Barceló is the former president of Northern New Mexico College; she is a leading figure with the National Initiative for Women in Higher Education (NIWHE) and has chaired Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social (MALCS) as well as the Washington State Native American Advisory Board (NAAB). In 2004, Barceló was awarded the Ohtli Award, which is a special recognition presented by the Mexican government to Mexicans or Latinos whose work has benefited Mexicans living abroad.

  • Interview with Brenda M. Romero by Brenda M. Romero PhD and Mayra Zepeda

    Interview with Brenda M. Romero

    Brenda M. Romero PhD and Mayra Zepeda

    Recorded testimonial about the work of Gloria Anzaldua and how it has affected Dr. Brenda Romero's research and the lives of her peers.

    Brenda M. Romero is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of Ethnomusicology at the University of Colorado in Boulder, where she has been on the faculty since 1988, serving as Chair of Musicology from 2004-2007. She has worked extensively on the pantomimed Matachines music and dance and other New Mexican folk music genres that reflect both Spanish and Indian origins. Since 1998 she has extended her fieldwork and research on Matachines to Mexico and in January 2007 to Colombia, and has published various articles on the subject.

  • Interview with Brenda Sendejo by Brenda Sendejo PhD and Mayra Zepeda

    Interview with Brenda Sendejo

    Brenda Sendejo PhD and Mayra Zepeda

    Recorded testimonial with Dr. Brenda Sendejo about the work of Gloria Anzaldua and how it has affected the research and life of her peers.

    Brenda Sendejo is a Chicana/Tejana feminist anthropologist who researches spiritual activism and the Chicana feminist movement in Texas. She is the Director of the Latina History Project, an intergenerational oral history/digital archival project that documents Chicana/Latina feminism and activism in Texas since the 1960s.

 
 
 

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