Schedule

3 (2)All events are at Abroms-Engel Institute for the Visual Arts Lecture Hall, except those after 6:00 on Friday, which will be in the Hulsey Recital Hall. 

Schedule, 7 October:
9:00 – Set-up

9:30 – Welcome to Birmingham, Kathryn Morgan, African American Studies

9:45 – Special Presentation to UAB by the Colombian Instituto Caro y Cuervo. UAB Humanities Librarian Heather Martin

10:15 – Announcement of New Books on Afro-Latin America

 10:45-12:15 Panel 1: Palenque, Colombia Today
10:45: Graciela Maglia, Literature and Cultural Studies, Instituto Caro y Cuervo and Yves Moñino, Linguistics, LLACAN de CNRS, France.“From live speech to cultural memory: Language and oral literature of San Basilio de Palenque (Colombia).” / “De la palabra viva a la memoria cultural: Lengua y literatura oral de San Basilio de Palenque, Colombia”In Spanish.
11:05: Jaime Arocha, Anthropology, Universidad Nacional de Colombia

“Cultural Negotiation and Resistance in Afrocolombia”

11:25: Ludmila Ferrari, Romance Languages and Visual Studies, University of Michigan
“Un epígrafe cimarrón para la libertad: Monumentalización, silencio y repetición en el archivo de San Basilio de Palenque”
11:45: Open discussion
12:15 – Break
12:30 – Keynote: Víctor Simarra and Bernardino. Representatives of Palenque, Colombia.
English Interpreter: John Maddox, University of Alabama at Birmingham
“Palenque  (Colombia): Resistance and Negotiation in an Afro-Colombian community”
1:30-2:40 Public Reception for UAB community.
 2:40-3:40 Panel 2: Black Resistance in the Age of Revolutions

2:40 – Pamela Murray, History, University of Alabama at Birmingham

“Blackness and Liberalism: Afrocolombian Contributions to the Emergence of   Colombian Democracy (c. 1821-c. 1880)”

3:00 – Jane Landers, History, Vanderbilt University
“Resistance by Petition: Status Complaints by the Free Black Militia of  Cuba in the Eighteenth Century”
3:20-3:40 – Open Discussion
3:40-3:55 – Break
 3:55-4:45 Panel 3: Resistance and Negotiation through Creolization

3:55 – John Lipski, Linguistics, Pennsylvania State University

“The Congo Language of Panama: Born of Resistance, Surviving Through Activism”

4:15 – Armin Schwegler, Linguistics, University of California, Irvine
“Ritual languages in Cuba: Palo Monte and the reconstruction of its ethnolinguistic (Kongo) origins”
4:35 – Open Discussion
4:45- Coffee Break
 5:00-5:20 Panel 4: Quilombo Lessons: Afro-Brazil

5:00 Rhonda Collier, Cultural Studies, Tuskegee University
“Candomblé Feminism: Who is Chica Da Silva?”

5:20 André Bueno, Ethnomusicology, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil
“Afro-Brazilian clown traditions in three regions: 200 years breaking racist stereotypes, in a non-white majority country”
5:40-6:00 Open Discussion
 6:10-7:00 Panel 5: Quilombos Reimagined. Location: Hulsey Recital Hall

6:10 Emanuelle Oliveira-Monte, Literature, Vanderbilt University

“Quilombhoje and the Construction of Black Identity In Contemporary Afro-Brazilian Literature”

6:30 – John Maddox, Literature, University of Alabama at Birmingham

“Pedagogy of the Possessed in Nei Lopes’s novel Oiobomé

6:50 – Open Discussion

7:00-8:00 Alliance Francaise Lecture. Location: Hulsey Recital Hall.
Yves Moñino, Linguistics, LLACAN de CNRS, France.
“Colombian Maroon Resistance: San Basilio de Palenque Facing Armed Conflict in the 2000s”

Schedule, October 8:
9:00-10:15 Panel 6: Resistance and Negotiation in the Atlantic World

9:00 – Carlos Orihuela, Literature, University of Alabama at Birmingham

“El misticismo, la medicina y la erudición como formas de resistencia antiesclavista en el Perú colonial: los casos de San Martín de Porres y el Dr. José Manuel Valdés” In Spanish.

9:20 – John Moore, Literature, University of Alabama at Birmingham

“‘The Island of Santo Domingo of Perú’: Tracing the Origins of José Soller, ‘Mulatto Pilgrim’”

9:40 – Jordi Olivar, Cultural Studies, Auburn University

“On Human Trafficking and Prostitution in the Hispanic Atlantic (1877-1931)”

10:00: Open Discussion
10:15: Break
 10:30-11:45 Panel 7: Black Resistance and Negotiation Today

10:30 – Emily Sahakian, Literature, University of Georgia
“Creolization as Resistance in French Caribbean Women’s Theatre”

10:50 – Lesley Feracho, Literature, University of Georgia
“Slavery, Migration and Resistance:  Citizenship and the Nation in Contemporary Afro- Diasporic Women’s Literature”
11:10 – Dellita Martin, Literature, University of Alabama at Birmingham
“Resistance and Negotiation in Quince Duncan’s A Message from Rosa”
11:30: Open Discussion
11:45: Break
12:00 – Keynote: William Luis, Literature, Vanderbilt.
“Negotiating Resistance and Miguel Barnet’s The Autobiography of a Runaway Slave.”
1:00-2:30: Lunch at Dreamland for speakers.
2:30-5:00: Guests Visit Birmingham Civil Rights Institute.
5:00: Guests return to hotel.
3:00-5:30 – K-12 Workshop for Spanish Teachers: John Maddox, Graciela Maglia and Palenqueros