https://slides.com/sferna109/deck2/fullscreen
Forthcoming Project:
Documenting La Frontera through Digital Projects
2018 SSAW Triennial Conference
Sylvia Fernández
@sferna109 / safernandez4@uh.edu
Ph.D. Candidate
Hispanic Studies, University of Houston
"A border is a dividing line,
a narrow strip along a steep edge,
created by the emotional residue of an unnatural boundary.
It is in a constant state of transition."
-Gloria E. Anzaldúa
Alternative ways to work with the borderlands
dynamic, socially constructed sites of complex, and
often contradictory, cultural practices, social relationships, and ideological formations
nor a fixed identity and exceptional cultural status and development
critical (re)valuation and as a condition of creation
practices of (re) formulating, creating, shifting, crossing, transgressing, and blurring
Borderlands: Space and Place
Geo-humanities
#borderlandsDH
Borderlands Archives Cartography
Around DH in 80 Days
Torn Apart / Separados
United Fronteras
UF Projects
Currently a total of 102
The Strachwitz Frontera Collection
AMBOS Project
Ellas tienen nombre & Juaritos Literario
OBJECTIVES OF UNITED FRONTERAS
1. Carolina Alonso, Assistant Professor, Borders and Languages and Gender and Sexuality Studies, Fort Lewis College
2. Maira Álvarez, Ph.D. Candidate, Hispanic Studies, University of Houston
3. Isis Campos, Ph.D. Candidate, Hispanic Studies, University of Houston
4. Estefanía Castañeda Perez, Ph.D. Student, Ford Foundation and Natural Science Foundation Predoctoral Fellow, University of California at Los Angeles
5. Vannessa Falcón Orta, Ph.D. Candidate in Education, San Diego State University & Claremont Graduate University
6. Sylvia Fernández, Ph.D. Candidate, Hispanic Studies University of Houston
7. Alexander Gil, Digital Scholarship Coordinator for the Humanities and History Division and Affiliate Faculty for the English and Comparative Literature Department, Columbia University
8. Laura Gonzales, Assistant Professor, English Department, University of Texas at El Paso
9. Aurelio Meza, Ph.D. Candidate, Humanities, Concordia University
10. Rubria Rocha, Ph.D. Candidate, Hispanic Studies Texas A & M
11. Verónica Romero, Ph.D. Student, Hispanic Studies University of Houston
12. Daisy Vasquéz Vera, Ph.D. Student, University of California Los Angeles
13. Annette Zapata, Ph.D. Candidate, Hispanic Studies University of Houston
COLLABORATE
unitedfronteras@gmail.com
I. US-Mexico Projects with a digital component
II. Nineteenth century (1800-1899)
Includes projects from the entire states.
1) U.S. border states include California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana and Florida
2) Mexico border states include Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León and Tamaulipas.
III. Twentieth and twenty-first centuries (1900-Present)
Includes projects from the cities and counties located along the current division line from California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, Nuevo León and Tamaulipas.