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Latinx Learning Community offered this fall; speaker series begins Sept. 6

With North Carolina's Latinx population rapidly growing, the university has implemented a Latinx Learning Community that was available to students this fall.

With the Latinx population in North Carolina continuing to rise, this fall Western Carolina University introduced a Latinx Learning Community.

English lecturer Melissa Birkhofer, English associate professor Paul Worley and associate professor of Spanish Lori Oxford are each teaching a course for the learning community, which they hope soon will transition into an academic minor.

鈥淲e鈥檙e excited about the Latinx Learning Community,鈥 Birkhofer said. 鈥淲e have about 18 students in the community. We鈥檙e also glad that it ties in with the 鈥楾he Book of Unknown Americans鈥 and the campus learning theme, 鈥

This fall, Birkhofer is teaching 鈥淔irst-Year Seminar: Introduction to Latinx Studies and Visual Cultures.鈥 Students are learning about Latinx communities and cultures. Discussions are centered around literature, migration, art, music and theory. The students also will research and design materials related to the trilingual photo-essay exhibit 鈥淲e Were Migrants: Chronicle of Indigenous Migrants from Chiapas, Mexico鈥 that will be on display in Gallery 130 of the Fine Art Museum from Sept. 17 through Oct. 12 for Hispanic Heritage Month.

Worley is teaching 鈥淲riting and Rhetoric Themed Course: Latinx Studies Focusing.鈥 Students are examining topics of immigration, transnationalism and belonging through a rhetorical lens. The course ties in with the Latinx Learning Community鈥檚 overall topic, 鈥淓xplorations in Latinx Cultures.鈥

In the spring, Oxford will teach 鈥淣orth American and Caribbean Literature,鈥 in which students will examine a wide range of readings from Spanish-speaking communities in North America and the Caribbean. The focus will be on works from ethnic groups that are most visible within the U.S.

Birkhofer said the Latinx Learning Community also ties in nicely with the Josefina Niggli Latinx Speakers Series, which kicks off Thursday, Sept. 6, with the screening of 鈥淒OLORES,鈥 which is presented in conjunction with Vecinos Farmworker Health Program and is a One Book and DegreePlus event. It is a documentary about Dolores Huerta, who co-founded the first farm workers union with Cesar Chavez, yet her contributions have gone largely unrecognized. The screening will be at 4 p.m. in the A.K. Hinds University Center theater.

Wednesday, Sept. 26, features the Donny Brito May poetry reading at 6 p.m. in the UC theater. Donny Brito May is an indigenous Mexican poet and winner of several Mexican national poetry awards. He currently teaches Maya language and culture at the Intercultural Maya University of Quintana Roo, Mexico.

On Thursday, Sept. 27, at 3 p.m. in the UC theater, there will be a screening of the documentary 鈥淢aya Faces in a Smoking Mirror.鈥 The screening is presented in conjunction with the 鈥淲e Were Migrants鈥 photo-essay. It is about Maya culture and community identity confronting contemporary development, exploitation and commodification.

From Oct. 15 to Nov. 2, there will be an exhibit titled 鈥淒ay of the Dead Interactive Altar鈥 displayed outside of the Intercultural Affairs office in the UC.

For more information about the Latinx Learning Community or the Josefina Niggli Latinx Speakers Series, contact Birkhofer at mdbirkhofer@wcu.edu or 828-227-3272.

 

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