Monthly Archives: July 2021

From the Latino Archive to Your PC, with Dr. Nicolas Kanellos / Program, April 4, 2012

Promotional poster by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

In his ongoing efforts to bring Hispanic literature to mainstream audiences, Kanellos also initiated the Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage project, started in 1992 by Arte Público Press. This ten-year multimillion-dollar project represents the first coordinated, national attempt to recover, index and publish lost Latino writings that date from the American colonial period through 1960.

“Arte Público Press and the Legacy of Latino Publishing in the U.S.” showcases a sampling of Arte Público’s non-fiction titles, novels, children’s books, young adult titles, and publications in the areas of drama, theatre and poetry. A selection of publisher’s catalogs, book covers and photographs—all on loan from the press—complement the items from Special Collections. The exhibit also includes material preserved through the efforts of the “Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage Project” and documents Kanellos’s more than four decades of professional contributions to the field.

Dr. Nichola Kanellos speaking in Special Collections.
Professor Albrecht Classen with Dr. Kanellos at the reception.
Dr. Kanellos with an attendee after his talk.

Life, Family and the Arizona Mining Community: A Gendered Perspective with Dr. Anna O’Leary / Program, March 6, 2012

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Promotional material designed by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

Talk – ‘Life, Family and the Arizona Mining Community: A Gendered Perspective |UA News…

Dr. Anny Ochoa O’Leary, head of the UA Department of Mexican American Studies

Anna Ochoa O’Leary, a professor in the University of Arizona department of Mexican American and Raza Studies, delivers the closing lecture held in conjunction with “Company Town: Arizona’s Copper Mining Communities During 100 Years of Statehood,” an exhibition at the Science-Engineering Library. The lecture will be titled “Life, Family and the Arizona Mining Community: A Gendered Perspective.”

Professor Ochoa O’Leary lived in Clifton, Ariz. during the copper mine strike of 1983. Ochoa O’Leary was also the president of the Morenci Miners Women’s Auxiliary in Clifton from 1985 to 1986. According to Ochoa O’Leary, the strike forever changed the lives of families who experienced it, as well as the social nexus that helped define the Clifton-Morenci communities.

The great Arizona copper strike against Phelps Dodge was a three-year struggle that ended with the decertification of 13 unions in 1986. During the course of events, the women of the community stepped outside the traditional roles that for generations had centered on the procurement and distribution of material resources to families. Faced with new challenges but encouraged by politics of equality, the women of the Morenci Miners Women’s Auxiliary came to contribute to political mobilization that received local, national and international attention.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, SEE ALSO:

*March 6, 2012: Life, Family and the Arizona Mining Community | Special Collections

*Transcript of Dr. O’Leary’s lecture (from Barriozona website)

40 Years of Tucson Meet Yourself: An Evening with Jim Griffith / Program, September 12, 2013

Promotional material designed by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

“Join us for the opening lecture of Special Collections newest exhibition “40 Years of Tucson Meet Yourself” on Sept. 12 from 6 p.m.-8:30 p.m. The evening includes a discussion about the early days of Tucson Meet Yourself featuring Dr. Jim Griffith, retired UA professor, former director of the Southwest Center and founder and former director of Tucson Meet Yourself.

A panel of notable festival volunteers and friends, including Dan Madden, Loma Griffith, Debbie Friesen, Fred Klein, Richard Morales and Gary Tenen, will also share stories and reminiscences of Tucson Meet Yourself from its earliest days and how it evolved into the largest folk life festival in the Southwest.

This lecture will be at Special Collections. It is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served. For more information, contact Bob Diaz at diazj@u.library.arizona.edu.”

Listen to the program audio here:

A panel discussion with Tucson Meet Yourself volunteers, including Jim and Loma Griffith