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**CANCELLED** Translating Blackness: Latinx Colonialities in Global Perspectives

17 May 2023, 5:30 pm–7:00 pm

Dr Lorgia García Peña

***We regret to inform this event has been cancelled due to reasons beyond our control. We apologise for the inconvenience this may cause.***

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Cost

Free

Organiser

UCL Institute of the Americas

In Translating Blackness Lorgia García Peña considers Black Latinidad in a global perspective in order to chart colonialism as an ongoing sociopolitical force. Drawing from archives and cultural productions from the United States, the Caribbean, and Europe, García Peña argues that Black Latinidad is a social, cultural, and political formation—rather than solely a site of identity—through which we can understand both oppression and resistance. She takes up the intellectual and political genealogy of Black Latinidad in the works of Frederick Douglass, Gregorio Luperón, and Arthur Schomburg. She also considers the lives of Black Latina women living in the diaspora, such as Black Dominicana guerrillas who migrated throughout the diaspora after the 1965 civil war and Black immigrant and second-generation women like Mercedes Frías and Milagros Guzmán organizing in Italy with other oppressed communities. In demonstrating that analyses of Black Latinidad must include Latinx people and cultures throughout the diaspora, García Peña shows how the vaivén—or, coming and going—at the heart of migrant life reveals that the nation is not a sufficient rubric from which to understand human lived experiences.

About the Speaker

Dr Lorgia García Peña

Mellon Associate Professor at Tufts University

She is co-founder of Freedom University Georgia, a school that provides college instruction to undocumented students, and co-director of Archives of Justice, a transnational digital archive project that centers the life of people who identify as Black, queer and migrant. She is the author of three books, the award-winning The Borders of Dominicanidad: Race, Nations and Archives of Contradictions (Duke, 2016); 

Translating Blackness: Latinx Colonialities in Global Perspective (Duke, 2022) and Community as Rebellion (Haymarket, 2022). Dr. García Peña is the winner of the 2022 Angela Davis Prize for Public Scholarship and has held fellowships at MIT and Johns Hopkins University. She received a PhD in American Culture from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and an M.A. in Latin American and Latino Literatures from Rutgers University. 

More about Dr Lorgia García Peña

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