Papers by Jennifer Harford Vargas
Latino Studies, 2020
This special issue foregrounds overlooked
instances of Colombianidades in the United States and c... more This special issue foregrounds overlooked
instances of Colombianidades in the United States and centers US Colombian community formations, transnational imaginaries, media representations, involvement
in electoral politics, and queer activism in relation to other (not “other”) Latina/o/xs.
In thinking of US Colombians alongside Latina/o/xs of multiple national, racial,
gender, sexual, and socioeconomic identities, we collectively unveil the uniquely
Colombian stories that have shaped and continue to shape Latina/o/x cultures, politics, and lives. Our goal for this introduction and for all of the articles included
herein is to contribute to an interdisciplinary archive of US Colombian scholarship,
to intentionally deploy citational politics in the service of helping scholars pursue
research on US Colombianidades, and to provide readers with a sense of the various experiences and narratives of Colombianidad.
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Papers by Jennifer Harford Vargas
instances of Colombianidades in the United States and centers US Colombian community formations, transnational imaginaries, media representations, involvement
in electoral politics, and queer activism in relation to other (not “other”) Latina/o/xs.
In thinking of US Colombians alongside Latina/o/xs of multiple national, racial,
gender, sexual, and socioeconomic identities, we collectively unveil the uniquely
Colombian stories that have shaped and continue to shape Latina/o/x cultures, politics, and lives. Our goal for this introduction and for all of the articles included
herein is to contribute to an interdisciplinary archive of US Colombian scholarship,
to intentionally deploy citational politics in the service of helping scholars pursue
research on US Colombianidades, and to provide readers with a sense of the various experiences and narratives of Colombianidad.
instances of Colombianidades in the United States and centers US Colombian community formations, transnational imaginaries, media representations, involvement
in electoral politics, and queer activism in relation to other (not “other”) Latina/o/xs.
In thinking of US Colombians alongside Latina/o/xs of multiple national, racial,
gender, sexual, and socioeconomic identities, we collectively unveil the uniquely
Colombian stories that have shaped and continue to shape Latina/o/x cultures, politics, and lives. Our goal for this introduction and for all of the articles included
herein is to contribute to an interdisciplinary archive of US Colombian scholarship,
to intentionally deploy citational politics in the service of helping scholars pursue
research on US Colombianidades, and to provide readers with a sense of the various experiences and narratives of Colombianidad.