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A List
9/18/06
SLU PROF TO DISCUSS BOOK ON MEXICAN BALLADS
CANTON - The Friends of Owen D. Young and Launders Libraries will celebrate the
publication of Corridos in Migrant Memory, a new book by St. Lawrence University
Assistant Professor of Global Studies Martha I. Chew Sánchez, on Friday, September
29, at 4 p.m. in the Josephine Young Room of Owen D. Young Library. Chew Sánchez
will speak at the event, which is open to the public, free of charge.
The book examines the role of traditional Mexican ballads in shaping the cultural
memories and identities of transnational Mexican groups. Corridos are ballads
particular to Mexican traditions that are used to analyze or recall a particular
political, cultural or natural event important to the communities where they are
performed. As part of the cultural memory, many of the most popular corridos
express the immigrant experience: exploitation, surveillance and dehumanization
stemming from racism and classism of the host country. The corrido helps Mexican
immigrants in the United States to humanize, dignify and make sense of their
transnational experiences as racial minorities.
These narrative songs, dating from the earliest colonial times, recount the
historical circumstances surrounding a model protagonist whose history embodies
the everyday experiences and values of the community.
The book was published in May by the University of New Mexico Press, which
states, "The everyday experiences and cultural expressions of Mexican-Americans and
Mexican immigrants have not found their way into textbooks in Mexico or in the United
States. Martha Chew Sánchez's study provides a foundation upon which to build an
understanding of the corrido."
A St. Lawrence faculty member since 2002, Chew Sánchez earned her bachelor's
degree from La Escuela Nacional de Maestros in Mexico City and from the University
of Texas at El Paso. She was a visiting scholar at the International Institute for
Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Laxemburg, Austria, where she worked on her
master's thesis, on community development. She earned the Ph.D. at the University
of New Mexico, in intercultural communication, and carried out her post-doctoral
studies at UCLA in the Chicano Studies Research Center. Her areas of interest
are cultural studies; popular culture in Latin America; border studies; and
migration, transnationalism and nationalism.
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