Nuestra Familia Unida: History And Genealogy - History And Genealogy - Mexico, Latin America, La Raza, Chicano, Chicana, Hisp

Informações:

Sinopse

History podcasts of Mexico, Latina, Latino, Hispanic, Chicana, Chicano, Mexicana, Mexicano, genealogy, mexico, mexican, mexicana, mexicano, mejico, mejicana, mejicano, hispano, hispanic, hispana, latino, latina, latin, america, espanol, espanola, spanish, indigenous, indian, indio, india, native, native american, chicano, chicana, mesoamerican, mesoamerica, raza, podcast, podcasting, nuestra, familia, or unida are welcome here. If it has to do with the history of America, California, Oregon, Utah, Colorado, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Florida, Argentina, Barbodos, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Central America, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Repulic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Falkland Islands, French Guiana, Guyana, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, North America, Panama, Paraguay, Patagonia, Peru, Puerto, Puerto Rico, Rico, South, South America, Spain, Suriname, Espana, Uruguay, or Venezuela the Nuestra Familia Unida podcast is in search of contributions.Contact info: NFU@JosephPuentes.com or 206-339-4134; http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.comJoin the discussion group for this project at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/podhi/ Join the Notification list for this project at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NuestraFamiliaUnida/

Episódios

  • The Maya and Climate Change

    29/01/2008 Duração: 29min

    Lecture on how the Maya could have affected their own climate.

  • Climate Change and Violence Part 2

    29/01/2008 Duração: 29min

    Climate Change and Violence? Cautionary Tales from the Pre-Columbian Andes The seminar will take place on January 25, 2008, 4 to 5 PM, in 201 Old Chem Building, West Campus, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Dr. Arkush received her PhD at UCLA in 2005. Her research centers on the interplay of warfare, political power, social identity, and ritual in the prehispanic Andes. Her doctoral research focused on the later part of the prehispanic sequence after about A.D. 1000, when many small polities throughout the Andes were apparently engaged in cycles of endemic warfare. Fieldwork on a suite of fortified hilltop sites in the northern Lake Titicaca basin in Peru investigated the regional patterns that emerged from conflictual and cooperative social relationships. This study also examined the chronology of fortification to question current interpretations of the causes of intergroup violence at the time.

  • Climate Change and Violence Part 1

    29/01/2008 Duração: 29min

    Climate Change and Violence? Cautionary Tales from the Pre-Columbian Andes The seminar will take place on January 25, 2008, 4 to 5 PM, in 201 Old Chem Building, West Campus, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Dr. Arkush received her PhD at UCLA in 2005. Her research centers on the interplay of warfare, political power, social identity, and ritual in the prehispanic Andes. Her doctoral research focused on the later part of the prehispanic sequence after about A.D. 1000, when many small polities throughout the Andes were apparently engaged in cycles of endemic warfare. Fieldwork on a suite of fortified hilltop sites in the northern Lake Titicaca basin in Peru investigated the regional patterns that emerged from conflictual and cooperative social relationships. This study also examined the chronology of fortification to question current interpretations of the causes of intergroup violence at the time.

  • An African Empire in the Americas, part 1 by J. Lorand Matory, Ph.D.; NFU@JosephPuentes.com

    01/10/2006 Duração: 31min

    J. Lorand Matory Professor of Anthropology and of African and African American Studies Harvard University Cambridge, MA Thursday, September 28, 2006 5:30 p.m. Breedlove Room, Perkins Library, Duke University Title: An African Empire in the Americas: Transnational Yoruba Religion and the Twilight of Andersonian Teleology

  • Noche de Candela, Part 3 - September 15, 2006; NFU@JosephPuentes.com

    01/10/2006 Duração: 29min

    Noche de Candela - September 15, 2006 "Noches de Candela" poetic vigils are a series of literary events aimed at invoking the Oshun-Chango spirit to produce a major "Rumba in San Juan de Ulua" fortress in Veracruz, Mexico summer 2007 where humanists are to meet to pay homage to the African ancestors through their song and witnessing. San Juan de Ulua was the door of entry for hundreds of thousands of enslaved Africans during the Spanish colonial period which lasted around three hundred years in that region of the continent now a part of Mexico. This foremost chapter of the history of the diverse African presence and permanence in Mexico has been kept silent. The souls of these ancestors are trapped in oblivion, official negation and the Eurocentric account of the facts that has dominated Mexican history. The common thread for these events will be "Marronage and Manumission in the Americas: an Alternate Vision of Planetary History."

  • Noche de Candela, Part 2 - September 15, 2006; NFU@JosephPuentes.com

    01/10/2006 Duração: 38min

    Noche de Candela - September 15, 2006 "Noches de Candela" poetic vigils are a series of literary events aimed at invoking the Oshun-Chango spirit to produce a major "Rumba in San Juan de Ulua" fortress in Veracruz, Mexico summer 2007 where humanists are to meet to pay homage to the African ancestors through their song and witnessing. San Juan de Ulua was the door of entry for hundreds of thousands of enslaved Africans during the Spanish colonial period which lasted around three hundred years in that region of the continent now a part of Mexico. This foremost chapter of the history of the diverse African presence and permanence in Mexico has been kept silent. The souls of these ancestors are trapped in oblivion, official negation and the Eurocentric account of the facts that has dominated Mexican history. The common thread for these events will be "Marronage and Manumission in the Americas: an Alternate Vision of Planetary History."

  • Noche de Candela, Part 1 - September 15, 2006; NFU@JosephPuentes.com

    01/10/2006 Duração: 31min

    Noche de Candela - September 15, 2006 "Noches de Candela" poetic vigils are a series of literary events aimed at invoking the Oshun-Chango spirit to produce a major "Rumba in San Juan de Ulua" fortress in Veracruz, Mexico summer 2007 where humanists are to meet to pay homage to the African ancestors through their song and witnessing. San Juan de Ulua was the door of entry for hundreds of thousands of enslaved Africans during the Spanish colonial period which lasted around three hundred years in that region of the continent now a part of Mexico. This foremost chapter of the history of the diverse African presence and permanence in Mexico has been kept silent. The souls of these ancestors are trapped in oblivion, official negation and the Eurocentric account of the facts that has dominated Mexican history. The common thread for these events will be "Marronage and Manumission in the Americas: an Alternate Vision of Planetary History."

  • Fabian Garcia - Pioneer Hispanic Horticulturist 1871-1948 by Dr. Paul Bosland, Ph.D.; NFU@JosephPuentes.com

    01/10/2006 Duração: 14min

    Dr. Fabian Garcia devoted his life to horticultural science. His work as a horticulturist changed the face of New Mexico agriculture, and that of a nation. Garcia was a member of New Mexico State University's first graduating class in 1894. When he became the director of New Mexico State University's Agricultural Experiment Station and Extension Service in 1913, he was the first Hispanic in the nation to lead a land-grant agricultural research station.

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