Visions of the Borderlands: Three Women Writers Share Their Stories / Program, February 2, 2017.

“Visions of the Borderlands: Three Women Writers Share Their Stories”, featured the writers Denise Chavez, Patricia Preciado Martin, and Natalie Diaz. The program can be listened to in its entirety below.

Thursday, February 2, 2017 – 6:00pm

Click here to listen to the audio of program

Denise Chavez
Steve Hussman, Director of Special Collections introduces the program and panelists.
Patricia Preciado Martin and Natalie Diaz talking to attendees of the program.

From the UA News Service:

“Denise Chávez, Natalie Díaz and Patricia Preciado Martin are three celebrated authors whose novels, poems and oral histories provide unique perspectives and indigenous visions of the borderlands. Each of these writers will present samplings of their works that will broaden understanding of and appreciation for borderlands communities.

Natalie Diaz at the podium.
Patricia Preciado-Martin

Chávez, a native of Las Cruces, New Mexico is a novelist (“The Last of the Menu Girls,” “Loving Pedro Infante,” “The King and Queen of Comezon”), performance artist and bookseller whose award-winning works offer a portrayal of life in the U.S.-Mexico border region from a female, Mexican American perspective. Díaz, a native of Needles, California, grew up on the Fort Mohave Indian Reservation. She is a poet whose work “When My Brother Was an Aztec” has been awarded the Nimrod/Hardman Pablo Neruda Prize. Preciado Martin is a native Tucsonan, whose oral histories describe both urban and rural life in southwest Arizona as seen through the eyes of working class, Mexican American people”

Denise Chavez doing her thing.
Natalie Diaz

One thought on “Visions of the Borderlands: Three Women Writers Share Their Stories / Program, February 2, 2017.

Leave a Reply