Lecture

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Chicago Humanities Festival

The Printing Press and Latino Identity

ABOUT 

  • ABOUT Raul Coronado

    Raul Coronado's teaching and research interests are in Latina/o literary and cultural history, from the colonial period to the 1940s, with an emphasis on rethinking the literature of the Americas in a transnational, hemispheric framework. His teaching focuses on the historical specificities of the U.S.-Mexico border, while simultaneously providing new insights into the literary and cultural legacies of modernity and colonialism in the Americas. Coronado earned his Ph.D. at Stanford University in 2004.

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How can technology help create a culture? University of Chicago professor Raul Coronado is answering this question through his study of Latino identity in the United States. In May 1808 Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Spain and deposed the Spanish king. Overnight, the Hispanic world, comprising the Spanish peninsula, Spanish America, and the Philippines, was transformed forever. Hispanics turned to the rapidity and reach of the press, using it to advocate for their visions of a new modern world, to create a public sphere, and to contest racialization. Coronado draws on pertinent examples to tell a story of the historical accidents and reversals that led Spanish-Americans to imagine themselves not as sovereigns of new Hispanic nations but as members of a far-flung culture united by modern communication. In this program, Coronado will focus on the genesis of this identity—the 1850s and the rise of Spanish-language newspapers.

This program is presented in partnership with the Poetry Foundation.

Arte Y Vida Chicago is the media sponsor for this event.

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