Category Archives: News
Week 11: LOVED The Land of Open Graves
Dr. De Leon does a phenomenal job at outlining the path migrants cross to enter into the United States. The author nicely infuses ethnography and archaeology to depict migrants’ journey. I love how the author allows the participants to take their … Continue reading
The Land of Open Graves: Visual Storytelling
The Land of Open Graves details the violent and dangerous experiences of Mexican migrants crossing the border to the US. Although this topic has been widely studied, De Leon brings a new perspective to the narrative. He states that historically, … Continue reading
The land of open graves
Of all readings in this class, the title of this book used such vivid imagery that it struck me for seconds. Throughout the book, the author continues to rely on visual elements to communicate his raw observations by using images … Continue reading
The Land of Open Graves [Mar.27]
I think one main difference between this ethnography and other ethnographies that we’ve read is that in Jason De Leon’s research, he incorporated methods of biological anthropology. Although it is not explained in detail in Chapter 7 or the Introduction, … Continue reading
March 27: “Should I be doing this?” (pg 185)
In the Fall, Jason de Leon visited campus and gave a truly impactful talk about his work in the Sonora desert that left many of us in the audience in tears. As such, I knew what to expect when beginning … Continue reading
Week 10
Being queer and black in a society that may not accept you is very challenging and very interesting also. It was interesting to read how Dr. Maurine discusses her POV and own situations in her book. Although it was a … Continue reading
Queerness : Blackness
I absolutely love the concept of the body-land as described by the author in the fifth chapter. In other anthropology classes, I have been introduced to the concept of the body as a site for structural violence, a carrier of … Continue reading
Queer: Indigenous Erasure
Lara talks about how the experiences of being Queer are distinct across cultures, identities, ethnicities and races. When she brings up the erasure of Indigenous Queer folk (64-65) in particular, it made me think about how Indigenous Queer folk are … Continue reading
Week 10: Black Sovereignty & Queer Freedom
In Queer Freedom: Black Sovereignty, author Dr. Ana Maurine Lara provides us with a powerful ethnography that proved to be extremely thought provoking in reflecting on her fieldwork in the Dominican Republic. Here, she explains her engagement in different religious … Continue reading
Week 10, Queer freedom: Black Sovereignty
I will be perfectly honest here, this was a difficult one for me, not out of rejection, but more misunderstanding. I began by reading the 2 poems contained in the introduction, and was well ready to get into the reading. … Continue reading
Week 10: Queer Freedom: Black Sovereignty
Dr. Ana-Maurine Lara’s Queer Freedom: Black Sovereignty is a poetic ethnography of queer, Black, and Indigenous people and spiritual practices in the Dominican Republic. These entanglements offer a complex understanding of Caribbean Black, Indigenous, and queer communities. Lara argues for and uncovers … Continue reading
Week 10: Queer Freedom : Black Sovereignty
One of the aspects of this ethnography that stood out to me the most was how ofter the word “we” was used in the chapters we read this week. In the chapter about war, when Lara is discussing how she … Continue reading
Week 10 blog
Lara brings up the concept of body-land which emphasizes that bodies are built from nature and therefore are not separate from it. In an excerpt at the beginning of the chapter Cherríe Moraga describes land as “the common ground for … Continue reading
Week 10: Queer Freedom : Black Sovereignty
I found this week’s reading from Lara’s Queer Freedom : Black Sovereignty to be very thought-provoking and illuminating. One aspect of this ethnography I resonated with was the incorporation of different modes of thinking in her analysis of current oppressive … Continue reading
Queer Freedom: Black Sovereignty
I was intrigued by Lara’s inclusion of Frantz Fanon’s definition of decolonization. Fanon describes decolonization as, “quite simply, the substitution of one ‘species’ of mankind by another. The substitution is unconditional, absolute, total, and seamless” (2). It is also a … Continue reading
Week 10 Reading
While I did find this ethnography very interesting and significant, I honestly had some trouble understanding some of the concepts and specifics that Lara was talking about. However, I did really like her discussion and definition of “body-lands.” Lara states, … Continue reading