9:38 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Minnesota|Netroots Nation|VivirLatino · 6 Comments
9 Jun 2011
Thanks to some of your votes, Democracy for America, and America’s Voice, I will be in Minneapolis, Minnesota next week – from June 16th to the 19th – attending the Netroots Nation conference.
This will be my third year attending and those who have followed my participation before know that my coverage is complicated and controversial but also interesting and informative (and fun!).
I will be blogging here, tweeting on both the VivirLatino twitter and my own personal twitter account, as well as posting pictures, probably on our Facebook page. The hashtag is #NN11 and I will also be personally using #MalaDoesNN.
I haven’t had a chance to really plan my time there – I do know I will live-tweet/comment on the Taking Back Your State: Responding to Restrictive Immigration Legislation scheduled for Saturday, June 18th 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM (Minneapolis time).
While the DFA and America’s Voice Scholarship cover airfare, hotel, and registration, I am requesting support for , childcare, ground transport and food costs. So if you appreciate the work that VivirLatino does, consider making a small donation or if you are gonna be at the conference – I accept drinks and food
.
Gracias!
9:03 am By Maegan La Mala · Culture|Events|New York City · Comments Off
1 Jun 2011
Some of my favorite writers/performers are joining in this one of a kind event.
The celebrated Cuban writer and avant-garde performer Pedro González Reinoso is visiting the United States from Santa Clara, Cuba, where he performs regularly as “Roxy la Rusa,” an old Russian woman who became stranded in Cuba during the Cold War and who writes very intense, neo-baroque-style, stream-of-consciousness fragments of experimental fiction and social commentary, as exemplified in his last collection, “Vidas de Roxy,” (The Lives of Roxy) which was published in Colombia in 2009 and reprinted in 2010.
Part drag show, part comedy skit, part literary presentation, “Roxy la Rusa” is anything but forgettable and has been delighting audiences at regional colleges, Miami, Montreal and Boston, where enthusiastic crowds have awaited “her” with outrageous adoration.
Joining Roxy will be the Puerto Rican writer and performer Carlos Manuel Rivera performing as “La Tonga” and Orlando Ferrand-Rodríguez, a New York-based Cuban poet and visual artist who will be sharing memoir and poetry regarding his childhood and adolescence on the island. Cuban music will be plentiful and the Phoenix is a comfortable bar/lounge with great drink specials and prices.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Phoenix, 449 E 13th Street at Avenue A (L train, 1st Ave)
8PM – 9:30PM – 21+, FREE
8:18 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|Books|Events|New York City · Comments Off
27 May 20119:04 am By Maegan La Mala · Amherst|Books|Canada|Events|Lo Que Hay|New York City|Philly|qtpoc|Violence · Comments Off
14 May 2011
A book that should probably be used as a reference and jump off for critical conversations and growth, The Revolution Starts at Home : Confronting Intimate Violence Within Activist Communities, edited by Ching-In Chen, Jai Dulani and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha is out and on tour.
The anthology took 7 years to pull together and even 7 years ago was long overdue as there are so many struggles within so-called activist spaces about how we treat each other.
“Was/is your abusive partner a high-profile activist? Does your abusive girlfriend’s best friend staff the domestic violence hotline? Have you successfully kicked an abuser out of your group? Did your anti-police brutality group fear retaliation if you went to the cops about another organizer’s assault? Have you found solutions where accountability didn’t mean isolation for either of you? Was the ‘healing circle’ a bunch of bullshit? Is the local trans community so small that you don’t want you or your partner to lose it?
“We wanted to hear about what worked and what didn’t, what survivors and their supporters learned, what they wish folks had done, what they never want to have happen again. We wanted to hear about folks’ experiences confronting abusers, both with cops and courts and with methods outside the criminal justice system.”
— The Revolution Starts at Home collective
Long demanded and urgently needed, The Revolution Starts at Home: Confronting Intimate Violence Within Activist Communities finally breaks the dangerous silence surrounding the secret of intimate violence within social justice circles. This watershed collection of stories and strategies tackles the multiple forms of violence encountered right where we live, love, and work for social change — and delves into the nitty-gritty on how we might create safety from abuse without relying on the state. Drawing on over a decade of community accountability work, along with its many hard lessons and unanswered questions, The Revolution Starts at Home offers potentially life-saving alternatives for creating survivor safety while building a movement where no one is left behind.
For more information:
http://southendpress.org/2010/items/87941
http://revolutionathome.tumblr.com/
revathome@gmail.com
For all of you Northeast Coasters, there are opportunities to meet some of the editors, hear from the book, and engage in conversation about why this book and where from here. Mala will be at the NYC release tonight so please stay tuned to our twitter account for live-tweets (as permitted). Read more…
1:10 pm By BiancaLaureano · Allied Media Conference|Events|Media|media justice · Comments Off
12 May 2011Many VL readers know that the Allied Media Conference (AMC) is a space where Vivir Latino and it’s creators and contributors enjoy attending, presenting, building community, and reporting from. This year I’ve made it my goal to attend for the first time ever! As a result, I’m doing some virtual fundraising and asking folks to help Get Bi to the AMC!
Thus far I’ve raised enough money to pay for a plane ticket, which I purchased yesterday. Now I am fundraising to cover lodging, grub, and ground transportation. A full itemized budget is on my original call for support. Right now I need less than $200 to get the full conference funded and I know I can do it with the help of our community.
This year the whole VL family would like to be present at the AMC. If you can donate in any way please do (paypal link is below and feel free to choose the “friend/family” option where they don’t charge you a processing fee), if you would like to send a donation via snail mail please send us an email at info@vivirlationo.com, and if you cannot donate please help by spreading the word and sharing this link!
If any VL readers will be at AMC and want to get together and meet in 3D please let us know as well!
Many thanks in advance!
6:15 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|Culture|Events|Los Angeles|Poetry · Comments Off
3 May 2011Regular readers will note that posting, tweeting and Facebooking has been light to non-existent. It’s not that there hasn’t been a lot going on : more empty words from Washington on immigration while politicians and the media have seemingly discovered the “R” section of the dictionary and want us to as well when it comes to the killing of Osama Bin Laden. Revenge, Relief, Remembrance, Reaction. I was engaged in some “R” words of my own. Reading y Relaxation.
Two Saturdays ago, I had the honor of performing in an amazing collaboration put together by the author and curator of talents, Charlie Vázquez. Resurrection, a series of performance and poetry pieces took place on Easter Eve at los Kabayitos Theater inside the Clemente Soto Velez complex of the Lower East Side of NYC. I shared space with Aravind Adyanthaya, J Skye Cabrera, Lola von Miramar (Larry La Fountain-Stokes), Carlos Manuel Rivera, Vanessa Martir, Charlie Vazquez, y Steven Maldonado. There was also visual art gracias to the Organization of Puerto Rican Artists, Inc. (O.P.Art) before and after the show featuring art by Everardus Bogardus , Giovanni Caravaggio, Pepe Villegas, Rafael Rosario-Laguna,
Luis Carle, and Peter Madero III. I only saw portions of the performance but there will be a video available shortly and honestly the warmth I received from the other artists and the full house really resurrected me as an artist. So thank you to all who came to the show including our own Bianca Laureano, fellow Latina artista Alicia Anabell, City Council Woman Melissa Mark Viverito, and Puerto Rican activist Pedro Julio Serrano.
From there it was onto Los Angeles. What was originally just supposed to be a vacation and participating in May Day LA, turned into my West Coast reading debut thanks to the amazing people behind the Make/shift Reclamation Tour, Jess Hoffman and Hilary Goldberg, who just happened to be in Southern Cali at the same time I was. I read a new poem at Cal State Los Angeles and share space with Jess, Hillary, Fabiola Sandoval, tk karakashian tunchez with Film/Video/Audio by Alexis Pauline Gumbs and imMEDIAte Justice.
Read more…
4:36 pm By Maegan La Mala · CLPP · 2 Comments
11 Apr 2011This past weekend I attended and presented at the 30th Annual Civil Liberties & Public Policy program (CLPP) Conference at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. I am happy with the way Bianca held down the fort in my absence, making sure there was plenty of delicious, thought provoking content to keep this space alive.
While at CLPP, I co-presented a workshop and sat on a panel, both which were related to my work here and other places. The conference was a challenging space for me physically and emotionally, but I also learned and came away with much.
But, as often happens, this has caused me to be further behind in my work here and in other places. So accept my apologies as I regroup and set up some kick-culo posts full of information y corazon for all.
Abrazos,
Mala
9:30 am By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Events|New York City|sex|sexuality|youth · Comments Off
1 Apr 2011Miss Kings County 2011, is Carmen B. Mendoza, a Latina whose platform is de-stigmatizing getting tested for HIV. As part of her goal to begin discussions with Latinos and youth around HIV and topics of sexuality, she is coordinating a special exclusive screening of the documentary film LET’s TALK ABOUT SEX. This film is scheduled to air on TLC Saturday April 9, 2011. If you live in the NYC area you can check the film out before then.
Carmen has coordinated a panel of speakers to discuss the topics presented in the film, including director James Houston, media maker Aiesha Turman and yours truly will be on it as well! I’ve shared the stage with Carmen before and I’m super excited to have this opportunity again. She is an amazing young woman who is pushing the ideas and expectations of beauty pageants in a direction that it has never gone into before.
And before ya’ll anti-pageant folks get all up on this post, read up on what this program focuses on and remember there are many paths to doing this type of work, and this is one of them. If we are committed to reaching folks in various spaces, we have to recognize that doing that work may mean going to where they are, and we need folks doing this work everywhere, not just on the Internets!
Below is the press release for this event. RSVP at MissKingsCounty2011@gmail.com film is at 7pm at Center Stage 48 West 21st Street. Read more…
3:17 pm By Maegan La Mala · Culture|Events|GLBT|Linking Latinos|New York City · 1 Comment
21 Feb 2011HISPANIC PANIC!, New York City’s most avant-garde and experimental Latino reading series, has been featured on CUNY-TV’s Spanish-language culture show “Nueva York,” as well as in the Daily News. Shrugging off the icy world around us, six Latino/a writers and poets are set to share their stories of change and metamorphosis—sexually, artistically, and spiritually.
Readers include the NYC-area poets and writers Ema Lia, Tomas Rafael Montalvo, Consuelo Arias, Brittany Maldonado, and Miguel Angeles. Our featured guest reader will be novelist and writer Vanessa “La Loba” Martir, who is the curator of the successful La Loba reading series in Soho. Come experience the edge of the queer/Latino avant-garde for yourself!
Cheap drinks, great music, and even better people.
Organized and hosted by Charlie Vázquez
Info: http://www.firekingpress.com/
When : Wednesday, February 23 · 7:30pm - 10:30pm
Where : Nowhere 322 E 14th St (1st/2nd) – 21+ – free
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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