7:24 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|history|Immigration|Media|travel · 3 Comments
22 Apr 2011Often when attending a performance, the role of the audience is as a passive witness. Their role is to observe and in some sense accept what is placed before them. Rarely is it a challenging space. Often there is an expectation of being catered to, of being told a story and walking away with new knowledge, but not a new experience. Scenes Unseen, an interactive, multimedia production produced by Irina Contreras and Nico Dacumos, slated to premiere at the National Queer Arts Festival on June 4, 2011 at the African American Arts & Culture Complex (in San Francisco), wants to change all that. They have created a work that touches on some of various intersections among immigration, detention, race, sexuality and gender. Irina & Nico were gracious enough to chat with me about the project, how it came to be, and why they chose to format the performance in a way that confronts not just the audience, but the performers as well.
Mala : What is Scenes Unseen about and who are the performers in this piece?
Irina : Scenes Unseen involves several narratives in which people have had to choose certain aspects of their identity such as within detention centers, immigration processing units, jails and many others over the course of history and today. In 2007, a woman named Victoria Arellano died in the San Pedro Detention Center. This incident as well as the response to the event led to the creation of Scenes Unseen. Nico’s poem, Hasta la Victoria, read in the beginning of the kickstarter video is based on for written for Victoria.
One act features Kristina Wong and Ms Barbie Q performing as themselves but looking at how they have engaged with their identities when they have entered spaces as women of color performers. Another act features choreography by Cherry Galette, texts and performance by Bamby Salcedo and Nenu that touch upon the 1931 Placita Raid in LA, the vigil for Victoria Arellano in 2007 and the physical act of crossing among other things. Byron Jose, an artist born in Guatemala, is doing a performance that looks at his own personal story while weaving what it’s like to work with people that call themselves “immigration activists”. He chose the place of the airplane since that is how so many people are deported to Guatemala in particular. Diego Gomez and Amitis Motevalli AKA the Sandninja are also performing and are a little different in that we have chosen them because they both are incredibly articulate in their ability to improv within the public that attends performance. And those are just a few of our performers!
Nico: Overall, the idea of using specific physical spaces fits into our ideas of interactive theater and finding ways to engage and challenge an audience by getting them out of their seats and having them “play” with us.
The audience will be led through many different parts of the theater, including the foyer, the parking lot, the backstage ramp and the theater proper. Part of how audience engagement has come up is in terms of thinking of what happens when we as artists try to challenge audiences or other things we see as oppressive. Oftentimes, a performance that is supposed to challenge, say, white fetishization, just results in more fetishization by white audiences.
Mala : So how do you challenge that second level of fetishization?
Irina & Nico : One possible way is to address is directly while it is happening in the performance by physically interacting with the audience.
Irina: I think its important to reflect upon it later, but also in the moment.
Nico: Another way is through structuring your performance in such a way that you are not just a brown queer performer that can be looked at and enjoyed, but a real live person that is talking to the audience and asking them to participate in the performance.
Irina: We recognize that we are only human and we will often interact in ways that fall into the ways we were socialized but we do also believe based on previous experiences working to further develop ourselves as people, performers, writer, teachers etc. that we have to challenge these norms more proactively.
Read more…
7:33 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Arts|Culture|Health|history|Justice|Los Angeles|Media|media justice · 1 Comment
19 Apr 2011
I am so excited to write about this because the Southern Cali portion of the tour includes so many people I love…yes myself included. So blessed that this will be my West Coast debut in such an amazingly well curated space.
For those that don’t know:
Makeshift Reclamation: New Feminist Art and Activism
A multimedia event showcasing how contemporary feminists are resisting and creating alternatives to not only gender-based oppression but also a collapsing economic system, climate crisis, and more. Featuring live readings, performances, and video works by artists and activists including Jessica Hoffmann, coeditor/copublisher of the independent, transnational, antiracist feminist magazine make/shift; Hilary Goldberg, whose new project, recLAmation, is a Super 8 experimental documentary/narrative film in which queer superheroes navigate a future beyond capitalism; and others.Upcoming Southern California Tour Dates 2011
Friday, 4/22, 8 p.m.: Echo Park Film Center
1200 N Alvarado St. (@ Sunset Blvd.) Los Angeles, CA
Feminist Media Night with imMEDIAte Justice
Live performances by Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio works by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR MagazineSaturday, 4/23, Time TBD: Cal State Long Beach
Chicana Feminisms Conference, USU Beach Auditorium,
1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, CA
Live performances by Irina Contreras, Fabiola Sandoval, tk karakashian tunchez, Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann; Film/Video/Audio works by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte justice, POOR MagazineMonday, 4/25, 3:15 pm, Cal State Los Angeles
U-SU Theater, Student Union, 5151 State University Drive, LA, CA
Live performances by Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, Maegan “la Mala” Ortiz, Fabiola Sandoval, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio: Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR MagazineTuesday, 4/26, 7:30 pm, UC Santa Barbara
Multicultural Center Theater, 1504 Santa Barbara, CA
Live performances by Irina Contreras, Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio: Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR Magazine
2:54 pm By BiancaLaureano · Activism|Bolivia|Environment|history|Religion · 11 Comments
12 Apr 2011There’s been a lot of buzz surrounding Bolivia’s new law that, when passed, will grant Nature all and equal rights granted to humans. This news is not new as Bolivia’s President Evo Morales, the first indeginous President of Latin America, announced December 2009 at the U.N. Climate Summit they were creating a Mother Earth Ministry. Days prior to the summit President Morales hosted the World People’s Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth in Bolivia.
During President Morales’ speech in 2009 he stated: “The budget for the United States is $687 billion for defense. And for climate change, to save life, to save humanity. They only put up $10 billion. This is shameful.” Yeah, I don’t even want to go back and look up the numbers for education and healthcare.
The law is said to establish 11 new laws for Nature which include:
(I know that’s not all 11, pero I’m having a hard time finding them in English or Spanish, if you know of a link with all of them please share and I’ll update the post!)
1:23 am By Fabiola · Culture|history|Los Angeles · 2 Comments
3 Apr 2011Managing Editor’s Note : The following guest post is by Fabiola Sandoval, an LA based writer, photographer and friend. I feel really blessed that she has joined us here through her words and giving us a little West Coast perspective. Please join me in welcoming her. -Mala
In Los Angeles the opening La Plaza de Cultura y Artes takes place April 16th, located in the Los Angeles Plaza Historic District, home to La Placita Olvera. A place of cultural and spiritual significance for many Mexican, Mexican – American, and Central American Angelenos among other communities, and a highly visited location for non – Angelenos, it is considered one of LA’s treasures; currently undergoing redevelopment, as in other areas of the city of Los Angeles.
From La Plaza’s website:
LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes is the nation’s premier center of Mexican American culture and arts. Providing an experience unlike any other, LA Plaza’s interactive exhibits and dynamic programs invite visitors to explore as well as contribute to the ongoing story of Mexican Americans in Los Angeles and beyond. Located near the site where Los Angeles was founded in 1781, LA Plaza’s 2.2-acre campus includes two historic and newly renovated buildings (the Vickrey-Brunswig Building and Plaza House) surrounded by 30,000 square feet of public garden.
The land and site have another story, as do most places. The angle of the location’s history includes the Gabrielino-Tongva Indian village before 1781, when the settlement that entailed the birth of Los Angeles began. During the construction of La Plaza it is believed that more than 90 human burials were discovered, resurrecting the knowledge that the area was indeed the oldest recorded cemetery in the city and highlighting the complex history of Los Angeles.
The conundrum lies in the precipitous time line of the construction of La Plaza, in its historic location, and the county of Los Angeles’ response to the Tongva community’s pleas for support in investigating and relocating the remains.
The location brings forth the complex relationship that ties Mexican, Mexican – American and Indian history in Los Angeles. There’s an opportunity, that seems currently trampled by the County Supervisor, Gloria Molina, and other invested players in the time-line of La Plaza, disrespecting a process that affirms the preservation of culture, allowing for a diverse and complex history that recognizes place, preservation of Native culture, and memorializing.
Let’s unveil complex history and celebrate rich diversity, affirming the multiple layers, struggles and beauty that entails the City of Angels.
Citing: City’s Birthplace Becomes Battleground Over LA History, 89.3 KPCC
Irina Contreras activism and info compilation from the – Gabrielino – Tongva Community press release, and other research.
8:46 am By Maegan La Mala · history|Violence · 2 Comments
17 Jan 2011On this morning, the 25th anniversary of the King Holiday, I am watching the count of how many articles mention the name of the slain civil rights leader. Dr. King is known most well for leading non-violent acts of civil disobedience and delivering rousing speeches as a path in the struggle for justice, especially, although not just for, African American communities across the United States. The Clergyman, who would have celebrated a birthday on January 15th, is held up as an example of the “right” way to do struggle and yet over the past few days, reflecting on the moment we find ourselves in and what school children and adults are taught about the Rev. King, I wonder about the appropriation of his legacy and work to fit sanitized reform agendas.
I am thinking about the horrifying shooting in Arizona and how Dr. King’s message of non-violence will me used to justify a certain level of complacency and turning a blind eye to state violence. I am thinking of days in jail and young bodies against water hoses, batons, fists, dogs and guns. All too often, when the work of Dr. King is mentioned it is in the context of non-violence and peace as if those words equaled no violence. As if the struggles before him, the struggles contemporary to him, and the struggles after him have not cost lives, blood, freedom.
Read more…
10:09 am By Maegan La Mala · Cuba|history · 4 Comments
1 Jan 2011On January 1st 1959, U.S. backed dictator of Cuba, Fulgencio Batista fled the island for the Dominican Republic following the Battle of Santa Clara. This ushered in the communist government, led by Fidel Castro, that remains in power today.
While we can and should debate and question the Cuban revolution, as we should all revolutions, including the ones we actively participate in,
a quote from Grace Lee Boggs, from a conversation at the U.S. Social Forum last year, that I recently read is echoing within as I think about the Cuban revolution, U.S. interventions in Latin America, and the idea of democracy. Boggs was talking specifically about Chinese democracy but it’s applicable here as well.
“What is important is not our critique if the Chinese vertical democracy, but the understanding that democracy is now a concept in contention and that we are all participants in creating what we think should be the democracy of the future”
Image Via / Wikipedia
Grace Lee Boggs Quote Via / A Conversation Grace Lee Boggs, Immanuel Wallerstein, U.S. Social Forum 2010
10:48 am By Maegan La Mala · Chile|history|Politics · 1 Comment
22 Nov 2010Documents recently declassified and released to the Museum of Memory and Human Rights in Chile’s capital, Santiago, confirm that the U.S., specifically then Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, were behind the 1973 coup that violently overthrew the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende and threw Chile into 17 years of dictatorship marked by summary disappearances and deaths.
Peter Kornbluh, director of the Chile Documentation Project of the National Archive, from George Washington University said:
These documents should contribute to advance justice and dignity in Chile. Obviously these documents have a special value in terms of official investigations into open cases. Now there is a base of information that could help those who seek more details.
Translated from : La Prensa Latina
9:14 am By Maegan La Mala · history|Poetry · 7 Comments
11 Oct 2010Today is not a celebration, except of our survival, our resistance. It is not a day to claim national pride on the corpses of others. It is not a day off, it is a day on. A day on which to learn & teach. It is day to connect with your ancestors and pass that knowledge onto your children, because so many years later, we are still here, fighting.
Columbus Day Observed
Copyright 2006, Maegan la Mamita Mala OrtizI wanted to sleep in today,
Warm beneath my sheets,
Warm inside my house,
Leaving the early crisp October chill just beyond my comprehension,
Behind barred and shaded windows
That keep me and the public shielded from reality
But the sound of US sponsored bullets
Ricocheting off of innocent Iraqi skin
Shook me from my sleep and pulled me out of bed
A screaming reminder me that no matter what the calendar says
It’s still the same colonization invasion game going down
On this so called U S of A holiday.
I wanted to mourn today
Stay home and dress in black for the Palestinians and Lebanese killed by Israeli soldiers today.
I wanted to light candles for Afghanistan
Burn incense for the first nations
And cry my eyes out for Filiberto y Puerto Rico.
The 500 plus years old wounds bleed fresh
Spilling raped, mixed blood.
And I wanted to fast today
Deny my body the comfort
Of first world fast food disposable genitically modified drugs
But my children,
Born and yet to be born
Demanded to be fed
Demanded answers for their homework from the halls of miseducation.
Because she has off today
to celebrate her so called discovery
And I am left nervous
Wondering if when I remind her of the truth
She’ll agree that we were better left uncivilized.
I wanted to celebrate today,
By torching court houses and tearing down prison walls,
bombing national monuments
And taking back every last thing that has been stolen from me and those before me
From us.
I wanted to scream at the top of my lungs a huge
“FUCK YOU y VETE PA’L CARAJO”
to the spirit of Columbus marching down Fifth Avenue
and the Italianos using genocide as costume for their pride
But I was too busy struggling to survive today.
I was too busy working today.
I was too busy counting change to get onto the under constant terror alert subway today,
With its cops with machine guns standing in front of NYPD recruitment ads
the ones with the White cop hugging a Latina viejita?
I had to get to my job
as a 12 dollar an hour corporate whore for hire
Watching billions of bloody dollars
Being robbed from the third world and the third world within.
Finally when the day comes to a close
And I return
Defeated by another day
I can drown my sorrows in the made for t.v. scripted news
Falling asleep to the drone of lies we’ve gotten too used to.
In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue
And got lost
But not lost enough.
8:05 am By Maegan La Mala · Guatemala|Health|history · Comments Off
6 Oct 2010
Latina Americans being used as medical guinea pigs for U.S. medical advancement isn’t the stuff of nightmares or science fiction. Look up for example how the birth control pill that many women claim as part of their liberation came to be.
Last week, the U.S. apologized for knowingly, purposely, and without consent infecting anywhere between 700 to over 1,00 Guatemalan prisoners of the CIA, mental patients, soldiers, sex workers and children in the 1940′s with sexually transmitted illnesses like syphilis and gonorrhea in order to test the effectiveness of antibiotics The experiments came to light five years ago, stumbled upon by a professor researching the Tuskegee syphilis study, where African -Americans were withheld treatment so that scientists could observe the progression of the illness, but were only just made public.
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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