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"Sound and Image: Marc Anthony's Salsa Romantica and Puerto Rican/Arab Solidarity," by Professor Frances R. Aparicio, Director, Latina/o Studies, Professor of Spanish & Portuguese. Northwestern University

Photo of Frances Aparicio, a light-skinned woman with long dark hair
March 3, 2015
4:30PM - 5:30PM
Multicultural Center, Alonso Family Room

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Add to Calendar 2015-03-03 16:30:00 2015-03-03 17:30:00 "Sound and Image: Marc Anthony's Salsa Romantica and Puerto Rican/Arab Solidarity," by Professor Frances R. Aparicio, Director, Latina/o Studies, Professor of Spanish & Portuguese. Northwestern University Aparicio is the author of several important and widely read critical texts in Latina/o Studies, including Listening to Salsa (1998) and has edited numerous anthologies, including Tropicalizations (1997), Musical Migrations (2003), Hibridismos culturales (2006), and The Routledge Companion to Latino/a Literature (2012). Her research interests include Latina and Latino literary and cultural studies, the cultural politics of U.S. Latina/o languages, Latina/o popular music and dance, literary and cultural translation, cultural hybridity, transnationalism, Latinidad, and new research on “intra-Latina/o” subjects.  This event is co-sponsored by the Latina/o Studies Program and the Department of Spanish.  Multicultural Center, Alonso Family Room Latinx Studies latinxstudies@osu.edu America/New_York public
Aparicio is the author of several important and widely read critical texts in Latina/o Studies, including Listening to Salsa (1998) and has edited numerous anthologies, including Tropicalizations (1997), Musical Migrations (2003), Hibridismos culturales (2006), and The Routledge Companion to Latino/a Literature (2012).
 
Her research interests include Latina and Latino literary and cultural studies, the cultural politics of U.S. Latina/o languages, Latina/o popular music and dance, literary and cultural translation, cultural hybridity, transnationalism, Latinidad, and new research on “intra-Latina/o” subjects. 
 
This event is co-sponsored by the Latina/o Studies Program and the Department of Spanish.