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América First: the Americas and the New Monroe Doctrine

Day 2
Apr
10
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Humanities Quadrangle
320 York Street, New Haven CT, 06511
276

"América First" explores the varied and formative roles the Americas--from Greenland to Patagonia--played, and continue to play, in the construction of US global power, from the nineteenth century to the present. Presentations will address the dependency between political, economic, racial, gender, and ethnic formations between North and Latin America, and how they are mediated through cross-regional migration of people, ideas, commodities. Our aim, amid the rise of a hemispheric right-wing coalition and left-wing resistance, is to address the continuities and ruptures, the historical presence, of the Monroe Doctrine across continental politics.

Sponsored by the Edward J. Dorothy Clarke Kempf Memorial Fund

Friday, April 10, HQ 276

Day 2
9:00-10:15 am
Matthew Karp and Isadora Moura Mota, moderated by Gabriel Rivera Cotto
Empires of Liberty and Slavery (1820s-1890s)
10:30-11:45 am
Charisse Burden-Stelly and Christina Heatherton, moderated by Steven D. Cohen
The Rosy Dawn of the ‘American Century’ (1890s-1930s)
1:00-2:15 pm
Alexander Aviña and Javier Puente, moderated by Javier Porras Madero
The Labyrinth of the Good Neighbor Ends in the Cold War (1930s-1960s)
2:30-3:45 pm
Jorge Cuéllar, Geo Maher, and Melanie Yazzie, moderated by Jess Cruz
Lives and Afterlives of Neoliberalism (1970s-2000s)
4:15 pm
Alvita Akiboh, Anne Eller, Manu Karuka, Aziz Rana, moderated by Marcela Echeverri
Roundtable: Latin America, so far from God, so close to the United States