Reclaiming Narratives and Methodologies for Understanding Yaqui Experiences of War, Mobility, and Deportation
Reclaiming Narratives and Methodologies for Understanding Yaqui Experiences of War, Mobility, and Deportation
Join us for Reclaiming Narratives and Methodologies for Understanding Yaqui Experiences of War, Mobility, and Deportation with Members of the Yaqui Scholar and Community Cohort including:
Marisa Duarte, Associate Professor at ASU speaking on: Challenges for teaching, learning, and writing about the US-Mexico border: Contemporary legacies of the ~1870-1930 genocide of Yaqui families during the Porfiriato
Robert Valencia, former Vice Chairman of Pascua Yaqui Tribe , speaking on: The Stolen Identity of the Hiaki.
Ventura Perez, Associate Professor at UMass speaking on: Transcending the Symbolic Borders of La Frontera: Violence and murder as National Narratives
March 26 | 7 PM | Havasupai Rooms in NAU’s University Union
Free and Open to the Public
more info:
Marisa Duarte, Associate Professor at ASU:
Challenges for teaching, learning, and writing about the US-Mexico border: Contemporary legacies of the ~1870-1930 genocide of Yaqui families during the Porfiriato.
Robert Valencia, former Vice Chairman of Pascua Yaqui Tribe
The Stolen Identity of the Hiaki.
Ventura Perez, Associate Professor at UMass
Transcending the Symbolic Borders of La Frontera: Violence and murder as National Narratives.
The Yaqui Scholar and Community Cohort
The members of this cohort represent diverse experiences of Yaqui history studies, from the practice of archaeology to history, social science, tribal nation leadership, and education. The members of this cohort have worked together on various projects that have directly shaped decision-making and understanding of history for academics in the US and Mexico, the Pascua Yaqui Tribe and the eight autonomous Yaqui pueblos in Sonora.
Let me know if this helps.
Anabel.Galindo@nau.edu