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Tuesday, October 27, 2020

La Llorona: Myth, Memory, and Imagination

 Please note that we are letting our members be aware that other organizations are using Zoom to their members or the general public in educating Hispanic heritage, history and cultural events. This organization specializes in the borderlands of Southern Colorado. You will need to register to receive an invitation.



 

This Thursday: La Llorona

 

29 October Thursday / 6 pm
Zoom Video Conferencing / Suggested donation $5


La Llorona: Myth, Memory, and Imagination

Join us on Zoom on Thursday, October 29 at 6pm for our next Borderlands of Southern Colorado online lecture. In this talk, Dr. Fawn-Amber Montoya and Xavier Madrid will present "La Llorona: Myth, Memory, and Imagination."

Dr. Fawn-Amber Montoya is the Associate Dean of the Honors College and Professor of History at James Madison University and the former coordinator of Chicano Studies and Professor of History at CSU-Pueblo. She taught courses in race, ethnicity, and gender with a special focus on Mexican-American history. She has Consulted on the development of a number of museum exhibits for History Colorado, including Borderlands of Southern Colorado, El Movimiento in Colorado and Pueblo, and The Children of Ludlow.

Xavier Madrid was born and raised in Pueblo, Colorado. He is a first generation college graduate. During his undergraduate studies, a passion grew to study Latinx identity in the Southwest and the discipline of Sociology as a whole. He is a former curatorial intern at the National Museum of American History (Smithsonian Institution), where he worked on the ¡Pleibol! In the Barrios and the Big Leagues exhibit and book (acknowledged as a contributor).

The event is open to the public with a suggested donation of $5. Registration is required.

Please consider supporting the Borderlands Lecture Series by contributing at Colorado Gives.

This event is offered in collaboration with the Roswell Hispano Chamber of Commerce and the Roswell Public Library.

Our Online Borderlands Lecture Series is generously supported by the Sangre de Cristo National Heritage Area and Colorado State University Pueblo.