4:25 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Dominican Republic|Immigration|Latin America|Movies|Raices|sexuality · Comments Off
26 Jul 2011This summer it’s all about saving money and supporting important films for our comunidad! I write this knowing that sometimes to support important films we may spend a little extra at film festivals, and if you live in an area where film festivals are coming (or have been) it’s def worth the energy to check out what they have to offer.
Mala and I will try to bring you some highlights of the film festivals we are going to this summer and year. In the meantime, here are a few films that have caught my attention and that I’d love to see (note that I’ve only seen some of these films and you can too, so they are not reviews), pero if any VL readers have seen any of these films I haven’t, please tell us your thoughts!
The first set of films is offered to view for free by the organization FUTURESTATES which are:
short narrative films created by established filmmakers and emerging talents transforming today’s complex social issues into visions about what life in America will be like in decades to come.
FUTURESTATES has also created a web resource for educators to use the films with grades 9-12 (but let’s be honest these are useful for any age!). The curriculums focus specifically on film and media.
The first film is one that was shared with me while I was away at a wedding. It is created, written, and directed by NYU alumna A. Sayeeda Clarke. Her film WHITE is in one word: phenomenal! It’s a short about 15 minutes long, and you may watch it online for free here. Clarke’s film takes place in the near future in NYC where the currency is skin color/melanin. She questions our ideas of identity, skin color, importance, class, natural resources, community, race, ethnicity, health, parenting, work, capitalism, global warming, and survival. The lead character is Bato, a Black Puerto Rican (yes, he’s written as that and indicates his identity in the film as such!), an activist in his community and expectant father. When the midwife working with his partner shares that she will have to give birth in a hospital setting, the couple must now find the money to pay the entrance fee to have a safe birthing outcome for their child. Bato must now find the money to do so.
The fact that there is a LatiNegro at the center of this story warms my heart. That we remain a part of the FUTURE is important for us to see and recognize. It also shares an important narrative of how white supremacy will/may continue in the future, but in new forms. This is one of those films where after seeing it I was so uncomfortable yet calm. I wanted more of the story and that alone is what makes this short film one of my favorites! Below is an interview with A. Sayeeda Clarke discussing her film:
8:50 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York City|sexuality|Women · 7 Comments
2 Jul 2011If we were to follow the logic of the NYC District Attorney’s office, if you have ever told a lie, even if it is in the face of a system set up to fail you and your family, like say the U.S. immigration system, then your accused rapist deserves to go free. This is the lesson of the recent news surrounding the rape case against former International Monetary Fund head Dominique Strauss-Kahn.
Yesterday, Strauss-Kahn was released from house arrest following an announcement by the prosecutor that called into question the “credibility” of the hotel housekeeper who has said that Strauss-Kahn sexually assaulted her in May. What has made the parties responsible for going after Strauss-Kahn throw the Guinean woman under the bus?
The immigrant mother allegedly knows people who are criminals and details regarding her application for immigration asylum are being called into question, specifically details regarding past sexual assault and genital mutilation.
The take-aways from this are pretty clear and serve as reminders to women and people of color who dare to come forward expecting the criminal justice system to protect/serve them.
1: If you are going to call anyone after you are sexually assaulted because you need support, make sure that person has never done anything remotely criminal or been accused of doing anything remotely criminal. Forget that fact that within the United States, people of color communities are policed hard and prosecuted hard over minor violations and that racial profiling means that walking down your street means handing over your papers at a moment’s notice.
2: Don’t be an immigrant, especially an immigrant woman of color. The fact that the accuser has an immigration record has served to hurt her more than help her. It has created an area of access to further violate her life. The questions that are reopened include why did she come here and does she deserve to be here. She is the one that must prove her worthiness to first even exist in the United States before it’s criminal justice system will grant her the honor of considering her valuable enough to defend.
What if she were a citizen? What if she were a White French tourist? Certainly women in general do not fare well under the current criminal justice system, but to be an immigrant woman of color – well she might as well deserved it.
At a time when one of the main arguments being used by “advocates” against immigration enforcement programs like Secure Communities is the fact that it threatens the safety of immigrant women in terms of how they relate to the police aka community policing (ha) – the treatment of the accuser/survivor is an example that the entire criminal justice system places no value in the reality/lives of working, immigrant, women of color and has no respect for their sexual dignity.
What would justice look like here?
11:44 am By BiancaLaureano · Justice|Puerto Rico|sexuality|Uncategorized · Comments Off
16 May 2011I saw this posted on Facebook and wanted to share with VL readers. If you know of similar events occurring in our communities and abroad feel free to send them our way! From the Facebook page:
Tuesday May 17, 4pm-7pm
El Capitolio
Lado NorteSan Juan, Puerto RicoEl Comité contra la Homofobia y el Discrimen (CCHD) te invita a participar en la Marcha del Día Internacional contra la Homofobia y la Transfobia, que se llevará a cabo el martes 17 de mayo en el Viejo San Juan y que conmemora los 21 años de la eliminación de la homosexualidad de la lista de enfermedades de la Organización Mundial de la Salud.
La marcha iniciará en el Capitolio y culminará en la Plaza de Armas. En esta ocasión:
- denunciemos la transfobia y la homofobia en los medios de comunicación,
- exijamos verdadera separación entre Iglesia y Estado,
- denunciemos las agresiones y los asesinatos por orientación sexual y por identidad de género, y
- concienciemos sobre la violación de derechos a las personas lesbianas, gays, bisexuales, transgéneros, transexuales, intersexuales y queer (LGBTTI/Q).
Te invitan:
Amnistía Internacional (Puerto Rico)
Clínica de Asistencia Legal de la Universidad de Puerto Rico
Colectivo Queer Sin Nombre
Comité contra la Homofobia y el Discrimen
Federación Universitaria Pro Independencia
Feministas en Marcha
Fundación de Derechos Humanos
Guerrilla Sex Education
Homoerótica
Iglesia Comunitaria Metropolitana Cristo Sanador
La Acción Libertaria
Movimiento al Socialismo
Movimiento Amplio de Mujeres de Puerto Rico
Organización Socialista Internacional
Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño
Proyecto Matria
Puerto Rico Para Tod@s
Unión de Juventudes Socialistas
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…
3:50 pm By BiancaLaureano · Activism|crime|GLBT|New York City|Politics|sexuality|youth · 5 Comments
21 Oct 2010Many of our NY area readers may have already heard of the brutal and violent crimes against three gay Bronx Latino men (two who were 17 years-old) who were allegedly sodomized and tortured by several youth and adults involved with a gang. Eight men have been arraigned for gang assault, sexual abuse and unlawful imprisonment and a total of eleven men have been arrested.
In response to these acts of violence Latin@ Citywide has invited me to sit on a panel to discuss ways we can respond to such acts of violence, homophobia, and misogyny among our community. This is not the first conversation to occur in the LGBTQI community in The Bronx since these attacks, but it may be the first one to be led and centered in the Latino community.
I’ll be sharing this opportunity with Rev. Carmen Hernanded, Founder / President of NYC LGBT Chamber of Commerce who I met earlier this year at the 2010 El Diario Mujeres Destacadas Awards ceremony as we were both recipients this year. Also in attendence wtill be Andrés Duque, Blabbeando Blogger and LGBT Activist, and Ephraim Cruz, Co- Founder of Bronx for Change.
I’m happy to have been invited to speak at this space, it represents an attempt to expand this conversation in ways that are often ignored. As many VL readers know, my ideas on gang involvement and affiliation as well as sexuality education and access for youth of Color, are not very popular; and I’ll be speaking from this space. Because there is no press or elected officials allowed I will be speaking as Bianca the sexologist, professor, educator and activist.
This event is open to the public and I do hope that if you are in NYC and are able to attend that you please do so. I’d love to meet some of our readers in 3-D and have this conversation and action plan moved in a way that is productive and inclusive! If you are interested in attending please RSVP via email by October 22, 2010 to: jcartagena@CSSNY.ORG
The original email invitation is below with full details. Read more…
6:23 am By Maegan La Mala · Media|sexuality|Women · 2 Comments
15 Sep 2010Ok we get it U.S. media. The only way you would believe that Ines Sainz was subjected to sexual harassment is if she looked like Betty la Fea before her “transformation” of course.
For those that don’t know what I’m referring to, Ines Sainz, a sports reporter for Mexican TV Azteca was at a NY Jets practice, and later in the locker room, specifically to conduct an interview with quarterback Mark Sanchez. It was during that practice that Sainz alleges that footballs were thrown her way to bring players to where she stood and it was in that locker room that she says she was catcalled.
And then the firestorm began. And no the firestorm wasn’t about the harassment. Save that for a sports reporter who doesn’t have a Latino surname. The firestorm was about what Sainz was wearing and how her “booty” and how her daring to work with that body was to blame. It especially helps that Sainz has that accent because women with accents and certain body types and Spanish surnames especially have it coming.
Here are just a few headlines I saw found while Googling :
Did Ines Sainz’s Tight Pants Invite Harassment From the Jets Players?
Andrea Peyser: It’s Ines Sainz’s Fault She Was ‘Sexually Harassed’ by Jets Players
The Jets, Ines Sainz and sharing blame
Education for everyone involved could be the best way to address this controversy
And then there are the tv interviews…
Read more…
12:35 pm By BiancaLaureano · Education|Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice|sex|sexuality · 6 Comments
11 Aug 2010For the Latina Week Of Action For Reproductive Justice I decided to talk a little bit more about condoms and condom usage and my relationship/experience with condoms. It’s not often that we even see condoms used in the media especially media focusing on us as Latin@s, Caribeñ@s and people of Color. Although some of us think condoms are all around us, accessible, and an important part of decreasing the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases (STIs) including HIV, the reality is there’s limited dialogue and even less proper use of them that centers our community.
To contextualize this piece a bit more: while growing up I listened to a lot of Hip-Hop music and still do. I can vividly recall listening to Snoop Dogg on Dr. Dre’s song “ Nuthin But A ‘G’ Thang” where Snoop said
And before me dig out a bitch* I have ta’ find a contraceptive
You never know she could be earnin’ her man
and learnin’ her man – and at the same time burnin’ her man
Now you know I ain’t with that shit, Lieutenant
Ain’t no pussy good enough to get burnt while I’m up in it
6:59 am By Maegan La Mala · children|Family|GLBT|Health|Immigration|Justice|Latin America|Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice|sex|sexuality|Women · 3 Comments
9 Aug 2010
We are proud and honored to participate in the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health‘s first annual Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice. Everyday this week, we will feature a post relating to Latinas and reproductive justice and invite you to discuss with us and with each other what reproductive justice looks like for nuestra comunidad.
All of our posts and the posts of others will be linked to the Latina Institute’s blog, Nuestra Vida, Nuestra Voice> (Our Life, Our Voice). We invite our readers to visit that site as well to further the conversation.
9:28 am By BiancaLaureano · Media|media justice|sexuality|Women|youth · 3 Comments
24 Jun 2010I’ve decided that this summer I will take time out to interview media makers over at my Media Justice column. The site focuses on youth and often we don’t always embrace the media they create and find it valuable and worthy. Last week Vivir Latino was invited to attend the Human Rights Watch Film Festival’s youth track: Youth Producing Change. One of the films featured was by a young media maker named Espie Hernandez.
Espie’s film is about her experiences being a 15 year-old out Latina lesbian and planning her Quinceañera. Her short film MARIPOSA is below. I’m planning to use her film in my human sexuality class I’m teaching this summer and am very excited to hear what others think of her film (it was the only film that discussed aspects of sexuality and sexual orientation).
Espie’s interview was done on video and I’ve transcribed the interview as well. You may read and hear the interview at my Media Justice column.
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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