Muitos e-books para sua pesquisa sobre o #Brasil. Faça uma visita virtual ao #StanfordLibraries. / Lots of ebooks from @stanfordulibraries.bsky.social for your research on #Brazil 📚https://tinyurl.com/ycybr2v9 Check it Out!
Come see what makes California special, unique, and rare (at least these days), as represented in #StanfordLibraries collections - next Tuesday, Feb. 11 in Green Library, Stanford
events.stanford.edu/event/specia...
#ChineseNewYear check out #StanfordLibraries for multilingual content on the Chinese historical presence in Cuba, Mexico, Panama & Peru tinyurl.com/4wf6a5c6. @adiazcayeros.bsky.social @spantoja.bsky.social @mollyauf.bsky.social @micuriel.bsky.social #StanfordUniversityLibraries
Need films📽️for your Latin American Studies and/or Latina/o Latinx Studies courses? Check Out the Pragda Film streaming database tinyurl.com/5n6tn6nx, all from #StanfordLibraries #StanfordUniversityLibraries @adiazcayeros.bsky.social @micuriel.bsky.social @spantoja.bsky.social @mollyauf.bsky.social
#OTD in 1605 #Cervantes published his #DonQuixote (part 1 tinyurl.com/5c77dxye). See 2 special editions from #StanfordLibraries: Quijote Mestizo (tinyurl.com/3jdd4sm5) & Japanese portfolio w/colored woodcuts (tinyurl.com/35pchudr). #DonQuijote. @adiazcayeros.bsky.social @blalbritton.bsky.social
Muitos e-books para sua pesquisa sobre o Brasil. Faça uma visita virtual ao #StanfordUniversityLibraries. / Lots of ebooks from #StanfordLibraries for your research on Brazil tinyurl.com/bdzmhkhf. Check it Out!
Just a few of the many databases tinyurl.com/ysj2myxf from #StanfordLibraries for your research on Latin America. Check it Out! #StanfordUniversityLibraries
Algunos de los ebooks Latinoamericanos que te ofrece #StanfordLibraries ... y mucho mas https://tinyurl.com/ykata5uy. / Check out some of the recently added interesting ebooks from Latin America.
Lots of film resources https://tinyurl.com/n8twej2m from #StanfordLibraries.
Bases de datos https://stanford.io/42PYtQQ que te ofrece Stanford Libraries para tus proyectos.
Farm worker from The David Bacon Photography Archive https://tinyurl.com/24xtneu5
Mira todo lo que te ofrece #StanfordLibraries: ebooks (tinyurl.com/ykata5uy); cine (tinyurl.com/n8twej2m), muchas bases de datos (stanford.io/42PYtQQ), un archivo digital de fotos (tinyurl.com/24xtneu5) ... y mucho mas. Check us Out! @adiazcayeros.bsky.social
Migrar. México, D.F.: Ediciones Tecolote, 2011. Accordion book, printed on amate paper. Text by José Manuel Mate, illustrations by Javier Martínez Pedro. Special Collections-Stanford Libraries
Rostros migrantes : colección de cien microhistorias (2019) by Derli Romero. Special Collections-Stanford Libraries. [Cardboard box, (45 x 33 x 9 cm) has title and picture of map of Central America, Mexico, the Caribbean and the southern part of the United States in black with a red arrow from Nicaragua to the northern border of Mexico. Within, 100 sheets of heavy white paper are cut into silhouettes of Central Americans who have migrated northward. On each, in black, a short story told by each person about where and why they are migrating].
Libertad (1976) By Ester Hernandez. Special Collections-Stanford Libraries.
The American Dream: Walking the Walk by Oscar Magallanes. MIGRATION NOW, 2012.
On this #InternationalMigrantsDay here are some special resources from #StanfordLibraries. Check out also over 8700 ebooks📚 on the topic tinyurl.com/yc8fun7p.
El Rayo del Sur. [Movie poster, 1943]. Rebel cleric Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon at the Battle of Cuautla w/ Virgin of Guadalupe banner as symbol of resistance. Stanford Manuscript Collection: M0945, Box 6
Soneto: “Quién sino tú, dulcísima María, libró con mano fuerte al Mexícano, del acero feroz de su paisano” [Broadside]. [México]: [s. n.], [ca. 1821]. Stanford Manuscripts Collection: MISC 1630.
Today Mexico celebrates feast of patron saint #VirginOfGuadalupe, both a religious symbol & one of resistance dating back to its fight for independence from Spain. See images from #StanfordLibraries 2010 exhibit tinyurl.com/2hd7sc25
Need some last minute articles for your research paper? Try some of these databases tinyurl.com/2p9awwd5 from #StanfordLibraries. Just remember your double authentication. 📚Check it Out!🌎
Mexican Student Posters From The Uprising 1968. New York: Studies In the Third World Inc, 1971. Rare Book Collection. F1235 .M4 1971 F. Portfolio of 15 Mexican student posters created as lithographs in 1968 by graphic artist Adolfo Mexiac in protest against political repression. Mexiac was a member of the Taller de Grafica Popular from 1950 to 1959. Originally, he made a linocut titled "Libertad de Expresion" which was mechanically reproduced as a lithograph for the 1968 Mexican students' protests, which brutally crushed by then President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. The students used social and political grievances to challenge the image projected to the world by their government through the Mexico City Olympic Games.
"Alto A Las Deportaciones" by Mazatl. From: Migration Now. San Francisco: Mullowney Studios, 2013. Rare Book Collection. XX(9942131.1) https://justseeds.org/graphic/alto-a-las-deportaciones/, sMazatl’s piece poses an important question: If global capital has free access across borders, why can’t human beings as well? “Millions of people migrate to first world countries seeking a more stable economy after their own regions have been stripped of economic means by the so-called developed world through free-trade treaties such as NAFTA,” Mazatl said. “Immigrants are constantly targeted for violent attacks and as scapegoats for a lack of jobs and a decaying global economy, using xenophobia and racism to justify class inequities. Borders do not only affect populations of the third world, but have a negative impact on us all- plants, animals, and human beings of all ethnic background and nationalities. So end deportations now, tear down your borders.” See also https://justseeds.org/portfolio/migration-now/
Velázquez, Lorena. 43: cuarenta y tres. México: El Taller de la Lorraine, 2015. Gunst Collection. N7433.4 .V45 C83 2015. "The use of the number 43 is not restricted to the title in Ms. Velázquez’s work. Forty-three numbered copies of the book were made; the book, constructed in concertina (accordion) style, has 43 unnumbered pages; the numbers from one to 43 are printed across several pages; on one page the number 43 is produced in braille. There is little text but the book artist’s use of photographs showing demonstrations and rallies, as well as portrait photographs of the 43 missing, convey a sense of outrage and a demand for justice. The book’s pages are colored black, with most splashed or streaked with red paint, which further conveys a sense of horror and tragedy at what happened." See also artist's site https://www.lorenavelazquez.com/.../43-cuarenta-y-tres/
San Martin, Maria Veronica. In Their Memory: Human Rights Violations Chile (1973-1990). Washington, D.C, 2012. Gunst Collection N7433.4 .S266 I5 2012 F Image: https://booklyn.org/.../in-their-memory-human-rights.../ “It’s a book of resistance that carries forward the protest begun by the families of the disappeared in Chile during the military dictatorship (1973-1990). More than forty thousand political prisoners were victims of torture, execution and exile. Nameless crosses are all that they have received by way of a burial. It is to honor the missing and their families that this object-book seeks to disseminate and communicate human rights' violations in Chile. By documenting the identities of the victims, In Their Memory also invites reflection and puts forth a message of hope founded in truth. The structure, a flag book, was conceived so that the piece could be read both in a conventional and sculptural manner; it was also designed to provoke the visual impact that an issue as painful as that of the abuses committed in Chile deserves. My goal was to produce something powerful, something that could create a response commensurate with the horror of the injustices perpetrated.” Maria Veronica San Martin
Some of the rare/special items we will showcase today on #InternationalHumanRightsDay for the Human Rihgts pop-up #StanfordLibraries exhibit. Join us. 2-4pm Green Library-Hohbach Hall #123.
Este viernes lluvioso "la Green" nos recuerda que para que haya paz, tiene que haber justicia. #StanfordLibraries
Stanford's Lathrop Library, home to technical Services and the East Asian Library.
"La Green," main humanities & social sciences library, opened on July 14, 1919 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cecil_H._Green_Library.
Autumnal splendor before the storm at #StanfordLibraries. / Colorido otoña antes de la tormenta
The First Battle of Ciudad Juárez took place in April and May 1911 between federal forces loyal to President Porfirio Díaz and rebel forces of Francisco Madero, during the Mexican Revolution. Pascual Orozco and Pancho Villa commanded Madero's army.
The "Mujer Valiente" is a very rare depiction of a likely "soldadera." They're often noted as "camp followers" and they were much more than hanging out with their men. "Adelita," "Jesusita en Chihuahua," "La Rielera," were memorialized in well known "corridos" or ballads still familiar sings to this day.
Nov 20th 1910 was to be day of uprising vs the Porfirio Diaz dictatorship, not much happened until following April. See postcards stanford.io/2KBM11l from #StanfordLibraries. An image has El Paso spectators on top of railroad cars watching the battle of Juarez across the river🇲🇽 #MexicanRevolution
Si Adelita se fuera con otro. [Movie poster, 1948]. Mexican Movie Posters, ca. 1940–1969. Stanford Manuscripts Collection. M0945, Box 7
[Soldier with wooden leg, n.d.] Mexican Revolution: Photographs, ca. 1910–1920 Stanford Manuscripts Collection: MSS Photo 205
November 20 #MexicanRevolution: images from #StanfordLibraries 2010 exhibit tinyurl.com/yxrztyxm. Also tinyurl.com/j58s6m3e & tinyurl.com/4kudm9sm. For copy of award-winning catalog send note. #20DeNoviembre
#RevolucionMexicana #FranciscoMadero #PanchoVilla
#EmilianoZapata #Adelitas #Soldaderas
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