Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Cuban Heritage Collection Graduate Fellows Conference. March 20 & 21, 2014.




   #universityofmiami #CHC #cubanstudies

The Cuban Heritage Collection (CHC) at the University of Miami Libraries will host a multidisciplinary conference on March 20 and 21, 2014 to disseminate the work of past CHC Graduate Fellows and survey the current state of Cuban and Cuban American Studies.
The CHC Graduate Fellowships program launched in 2010, and since then we have awarded 43 fellowships to doctoral students from across the United States. The CHC Fellowships are meant to engage research with the resources available in the Collection and thus contribute to the larger body of scholarship in Cuban, hemispheric, and international studies.
The New Directions in Cuban Studies conference is free and open to the public.  Registration is required.
This conference is presented with the University of Miami’s Program in American Studies and the Center for Latin American Studies.
The CHC Graduate Fellowships and “New Directions in Cuban Studies” conference have been made possible with the generous support of The Goizueta Foundation, with additional funding from the Amigos of the Cuban Heritage Collection.

Conference Schedule

Thursday, March 20, 2014

6:30 p.m.
Roberto C. Goizueta Pavilion, Otto G. Richter Library

Keynote Lecture and Opening Reception
Louis A. Pérez, Jr.
J. Carlyle Sitterson Professor of History
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Friday, March 21, 2014

8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
University of Miami Student Activities Center

Conference Panels
updated February 28, 2014
8:00-8:30 a.m.                Registration and Continental breakfast
8:30-8:45 a.m.                Welcome and opening remarks
Charles Eckman, Dean, University of Miami Libraries
María R. Estorino, Chair, Cuban Heritage Collection
8:45-10:15 a.m.             Perspectives on Colonial Cuba
The Everyday Enlightenment: Slavery’s Place in the Atlantic Enlightenments of the Early United States and Colonial Cuba, 1790-1831
Eric Herschthal, Columbia University
Alexander von Humboldt y Ramón de la Sagra: viajes y saberes en la invención de Cuba en el  siglo XIX
Daylet Domínguez, University of California, Berkeley
Los Desterrados: Cuba’s 19th Century Transnationals
Raul Galván, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
Discussant: Ada Ferrer, New York University
10:15-10:30 a.m.            Break
10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m.    Recent Studies on Post-Revolutionary Cuba
“Weddings or Death”: Defining Cuban Citizenship through Marriage, 1959-1965
Rachel Hynson, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Cuban Involvement in the Guinea-Bissau Liberation Struggle and its Cultural Ramifications: the Case of Madina Boe
Marysol Quevedo, Indiana University Bloomington
The Best Go to Algeria: Algeria in the Cuban Imagination in the 1950s and 60s
Susannah Rodríguez Drissi, University of California, Los Angeles
Cuba’s Oblivion Narratives: About Some Recent Cuban Writings
Walfrido Dorta, City University of New York
Discussant: José Quiroga, Emory University
12:00-1:15 p.m.             Lunch (provided)
1:15-3:00 p.m.               Immigration and Transnationalism
Building a Present from the Past: Chinese Secret Societies in Cuba
Martin Tsang, Florida International University
The Translated Literacies and Figured Worlds of a Cuban Adolescent
Natasha Pérez, Michigan State University
“Give us liberty, or we will tear the place apart”: Resistance and Control in Immigration Detention during the Reagan Administration
Kristina Shull, University of California, Irvine
Discussant: Lisandro Pérez, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
3:00-3:15 p.m.               Break
3:15-4:45 p.m.               The Politics of Exile in Cuban Miami
“Little Refugees from International Communism”: The Cold War Politics of Childhood in Cuban Miami, 1959-1961
Anita Casavantes Bradford, University of California, Irvine
Some Other Place: Cuban Americans, Federal Policy, and the Intersections of the Local, the National, and the Transnational in Miami
Mauricio Castro, Purdue University
¿Exilio unido, jamás ha existido?: Cuban Exiles and the Search for “Total Unity”
Michael Bustamante, Yale University
Discussant: María de los Angeles Torres, University of Illinois, Chicago
4:45-5:30 p.m.               Closing remarks

Travel & Hotel Information

Please note that all conference activities will take place at the University of Miami and not at the hotel.
HOTEL
Conference participants are eligible for a discounted rate of $159/night (plus taxes) Single/Double at the Holiday Inn Coral Gables – University of Miami.  Please use this link to make your reservation at the conference rate.  The hotel has free Wi-Fi access, an outdoor pool, a fitness center, and an onsite restaurant.
Holiday Inn Coral Gables –University of Miami
1350 South Dixie Highway
Coral Gables, FL 33146
305-667-5611

GETTING AROUND
The Holiday Inn Coral Gables-University of Miami is near the Metrorail University Station and across US 1 from the University’s Coral Gables campus.


Directions & Parking

Thursday, March 20: For the keynote and opening reception at the Otto G. Richter Library, guests will be able to park for free directly behind the Library.  The Library is located at 1300 Memorial Drive, Coral Gables, FL 33146.
  • Get directions to the Otto G. Richter Library »
Friday, March 21: Visitor parking is available at the University’s Pavia Parking Garage.  A parking day pass costs $7 and can be purchased from a vending machine near the elevator.  From the Garage entrance, walk to the right towards the lake.  Crossing the bridge, enter the Whitten University Center and walk straight through to the other side of the building (you will see a patio to your left).  Upon exiting, go to the left towards the Student Activities Center.  We do not recommend parking at a meter since these are only available for up to three hours.

Conference Planning Committee

María R. Estorino Dooling
Chair, Cuban Heritage Collection
University of Miami Libraries
Jorge Duany
Director, Cuban Research Institute
Florida International University
Michelle G. Maldonado
Associate Professor of Religious Studies
University of Miami
Lillian Manzor
Associate Professor of Spanish
University of Miami
Last updated February 28, 2014