
Open Borders to a Revolution
Description
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Persons
Adela Pineda Franco is an Associate Professor of Spanish American literature in Department of Romance Studies and the Latin American Studies Program at Boston University. Her research interests focus on nineteenth- and twentieth-century Spanish American literature, culture, and film and on the relationship between politics and culture. She is the author of Geopolíticas de la Cultura Finisecular en Buenos Aires, París y México: Las Revistas Literarias y el Modernismo (2006) and coeditor with Leticia Brauchli of Hacia el País del Mezcal (2002) and, with Ignacio Sánchez, of Alfonso Reyes y los Estudios Latinoamericanos (2004). She was awarded a grant by the US-Mexico Fund for Culture and the Rockefeller Foundation. She is currently at work on a book project on Mexico City, its lettered culture, film, and the Mexican Revolution.
Magdalena Mieri is currently the Director of the Program in Latino History and Culture at the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Her role is to organize and implement a variety of programs and to develop collaborations across the museum, and at the local and national levels, to tell the rich stories of Latinos. Before her position at the Museum, she was the Museum Specialist and Director of the Latino Virtual Gallery at the Smithsonian Center for Latino Initiatives. She has been with the Smithsonian Institution since 1992. Ms. Mieri has consulted with museums in Argentina, Peru, Mexico, Uruguay and Bolivia. Before joining the Smithsonian she was Assistant Curator at the Museo de Arte Hispanoamericano in Buenos Aires, Argentina. She holds a Senior Fellow position in the Department of Anthropology, at University of Maryland, College Park, and has taught graduate level courses in the Masters of Museum Education at George Washington University and in the Certificate in Museum Scholarship at the University of Maryland. Ms. Mieri has published a number of articles on museum representation and community museums, her latest published in 2010 in Narratives of Community: Museums and Ethnicity; Museums Etc. Edinburg. Ms. Mieri received her BA in Museum Studies from the Argentine Institute of Museology and her MA in Anthropological Sciences from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Section I: Traveling Borders
- Chapter One: Interview with John Womack, Jr
- Chapter Two: From Antagonism to Accord: The Controversy over the Mexican Revolution in the Political Culture of the United States
- Chapter Three: Mexico's Revolutionary Art and the United States, 1920-1940: A Friendly Invasion
- Chapter Four: Brown, Black, and Blues: Miguel Covarrubias and Carlos Chávez in the United States and Mexico (1923-1953)
- Chapter Five: Hollywood Villa and the Vicissitudes of Cross-Cultural Encounters
- Chapter Six: Fallen Utopias: The Mexican Revolution in Katherine Anne Porter's María Concepción and Flowering Judas
- Chapter Seven: Anita Brenner and the Jewish Roots of Mexico's Postrevolutionary National Identity
- Section II: Living Borders
- Chapter Eight: Mexican Americans and the Novel of the Mexican Revolution
- Chapter Nine: Charting the Legacy of the Revolution: How the Mexican Revolution Transformed El Paso's Cultural and Urban Landscape
- Chapter Ten: On the Banks of the Future: Ciudad Juárez and El Paso in the Mexican Revolution
- Chapter Eleven: Reveling in Patriotism: Celebrating America on the U.S.-Mexico Border during the Mexican Revolution
- Chapter Twelve: Pancho Villa's Head: The Mexican Revolution in the Chicano Theatrical Imagination
- Chapter Thirteen: An Open Letter from an Artist to a Mexican Crime Cartel Boss
- Afterword: Revolutionary Encounters of the Transnational Kind: Cross-Border Collaborations, Border Thinking, and the Politics of Mexican Nation-State Formation
- Contributors
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