Centering Resistance, Animating Movements - National Women's Studies Plenary

#NWSA2019's first plenary: Centering Resistance, Animating Movements. Join Moya Bailey, Michelle Téllez, Lateefah Simon, and Noura Erakat as they discuss the feminist, queer, trans, economic, disability and racial justice warriors who have been at the forefront of movements for social change and how feminist engagements have animated and informed movements for transformation in local and transnational spaces. Find this on the conference schedule through here: http://bit.ly/nwsaconferenceprogram

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Michelle Tellez
Their Dogs Came With Them Tucson Premiere

From the award-winning writer of Your Healing is Killing Me, blu, The Panza Monologues and Barrio Stories, Virginia Grise returns to Tucson with a new play about the destruction and displacement of a Mexican-American community, roaming dogs, quarantines, earthmovers and ancient voladores: Their Dogs Came with Them. Adapted from the novel by Helena María Viramontes, the play ascribes new meanings to gang life dramas, gender queer identities, and Chicana/o/x coming of age barrio tales. Much like the structure of a freeway, the lives of four youth intersect and intertwine, unearthing stories about the effects and aftereffects of the Vietnam War, displacement, and state violence. Tucson, where the most diverse and densely populated neighborhoods were destroyed to create the Convention Center in the late 1960s, is an ideal site for a play that asks its community to consider how decisions around city planning and urban development impact everyone. Borderlands Theater, in collaboration with a todo dar productions, is producing this site-specific performance October 18-20, directed by Kendra Ware and aptly staged underneath the I-19 freeway in South Tucson.

Dr. Michelle Téllez will be playing Tranquilina and Grandmother Zumaya, read more about creative team here.

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Michelle Tellez
Keynote for Symposium – "Mothering in the Age of Intensive Parenting" at Univ of Michigan

This transdisciplinary symposium, organized by the Center for Human Growth and Development (CHGD) and the Institute for Research on Women and Gender (IRWG), will focus on the growing tensions between mothers’ well-being and the increasing demands of child-rearing.

This event will further the scientific understanding of these tensions, recognize and explore how they appear in differential and discriminatory ways, and identify key knowledge gaps and opportunities in research that could inform practice, policy, and advocacy to promote the well-being of mothers, children and families. 

More details see here.

Michelle Tellez
Nurturing the Diverse Soul - Tucson Festival of Books

Local authors and activists Naomi Ortiz (author of Sustaining Spirit: Self-Care for Social Justice) and Michelle Téllez (co-editor of The Chicana Motherwork Anthology: Porque sin madres no hay revolución​) discuss how staying rooted in your culture helps women of color thrive and build resilience in activism, self-care and motherhood.

Moderator: Dominique Calza

Sunday, March 3 1-2pm (followed by book signing)

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Gaby Hurtado-Ramos
Faculty Lead for Vivir Mexico Study Abroad Program

This summer Dr. Téllez spent 4-weeks as faculty lead for the Vivir Mexico Study Abroad Program through the Guerrero Center, the Department of Mexican American Studies and the Global Experiential Learning Program at the University of Arizona. 

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Sophia Haro
Event Present by The Center for Critical Race Studies and Interactions Journal Includes Keynotes by Artist/Activist Edxie Betts and Michelle Téllez of The University of Arizona

InterActions, the UCLA Journal of Education and Information Studies, and the Center for Critical Race Studies will host “Visions of Justice & Liberation: How Do We Get Free Through Education and Technological Practices?” on May 18, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. at Campbell Hall, Rm. 1101. The symposium will include keynotes by Edxie Betts, a multiracial and trans artist, activist, and cultural producer, and Michelle Téllez, assistant professor of Mexican-American Studies at the University of Arizona.

Sophia Haro
Cumbia Summit of the Borderlands Panel

El Tambó Fest, Night One: First-Ever Cumbia Summit of the Borderlands kicked off on April 27, 2018 at Hotel Congress. The event was part of the annual Agave Heritage Festival which explores and celebrates the cultural, commercial, and culinary significance of agave on the border region through a festival of seminars, trade shows, and world-class culinary events. The evening began with a panel discussion of cumbia artists and was sponsored by Southwest Folklife Alliance and CALA Alliance (Celebración Artística de las Américas.) 
 
Founder and Artistic Director of El Tambo Logan Phillips introduced the moderator and the speakers. El Tambo began in 2013 and bills itself as Tucson’s legendary dance party without borders. El Tambo loosely translates as “the Drum” and celebrates the cultural remixing that has always taken place here in the borderlands.
 
University of Arizona Assistant Professor of Mexican American Studies Michelle Téllez moderated this panel of four cumbia musicians from four of the bands who performed at El Tambó Fest, Night One: First-Ever Cumbia Summit of the Borderlands. Gabriel Sullivan from Chicha Dust, Adrian Rodriguez from La Diabla, Cody Lopez from Tohono O’odham cumbia band Native Creed, and Kiko Rodriguez from El Paso’s Frontera Bugalú.

To listen to the panel: Part 1 and Part 2 (in 30 minute segments)
Recorded by KXCI Music Director Duncan Hudson. 
Edited and produced by Amanda Shauger.

Click here to watch video about the Cumbia Summit by Arizona Public Media.
Producer/Editor: Andrew Brown
Videographer: Nate Huffman, Mitch Riley

Sophia Haro
Seminario Niñez Migrante

Dr. Michelle Téllez participated in a symposium at the Colegio de Sonora in Hermosillo, México on New Directions in Migration Research after the election of Trump. Visit here to see the livestream of the panel.

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Sophia Haro
First Annual Conference on Gender Based Violence

Plenary Panel: Institutional Responses to Gender-Based Violence
Location: Student Union, Sonora Room
​This discussion will consider how various institutions—including law enforcement,
government, military, and educational institutions—respond to systemic gender-violence, including
sexual assault against migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, the phenomenon of missing and
murdered Indigenous women, campus sexual assault, and sexual harassment and assault amongst Veterans and members of the military.

​with Kiera Ladner, Michelle Téllez, Richard Nichollis, Susan Montgomery

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Sophia Haro
In Transit/En Tránsito: Arts, Migration, Resistance Symposium

In Transit/En tránsito: Arts, Migration, Resistance is an art exhibition accompanied by related events that collectively explore artistic practice, resistance, and social transformation in relation to transnational migration and human rights politics. Anchored in the Sonoran Desert borderlands and drawing on practices from different regions of the US, Mexico, and Central America, In Transit/En tránsito will bring together artists, activists, and academics for a series of cross-disciplinary conversations and collaborations.

Organized by Drs. Kaitlin M. Murphy and Anita Huizar-Hernández, Department of Spanish and Portuguese.

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Sophia Haro
33rd Graduation Convocation

Dr. Téllez reads the names of graduates at the Adalberto and Ana Guerrero Student Center's 33rd Graduation Convocation held at Centennial Hall at the University of Arizona.

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Sophia Haro
Q&A with Noam Chomsky

February 23, 2017

POL 150C2: What Is Politics?

Q&A session with Professor Noam Chomsky on the topic of "Resistance and Social Movements"

University of Arizona, Tucson.

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Gaby Hurtado-Ramos
Hands On Humanity Camp: Liberating Action

One of Arizona Humanities many goals as a community partner, is to provide the youth of Arizona opportunities to hear other voices in the community along with helping them to discover and grow theirs.  Our Liberating Action Hands-on-Humanities camp is seeking to introduce youth in Southern Arizona to voices in communities throughout the nation. These community activists will work alongside the participants to examine what communities are struggling with and how to become engaged and take action to break free from the cycles that have often plagued our communities alike. 

Sophia Haro
Now Speaker Delves into Violence Against Women

Dr. Michelle Tellez from Northern Arizona University is the guest speaker for the monthly meeting. Tellez will discuss her perspective on the recent waves of international violence toward women and the issues of violence along our borders here at home....

Sophia Haro
Black Life Matters Conference

Scholars, writers, artists, activists, policymakers, and community members will come together in Tucson, Arizona, in January 2015 to discuss WHY Black life matters and WHAT can be done about sustained racialized state violence. The conference will include lectures, hands-on working sessions, arts and performances, and social justice actions, as well as significant time for conversation

Sophia Haro