Latinos in Illinois and the USA: Music as a Cultural History
A Road Scholar Program by Catalina Maria Johnson
When
Mar 4, 2021
7:00pm–8:00pm
Where
Virtual
Cost
Free
Open to the public
Attend this Facebook Live event!
Music can be viewed and “read” as a tool that shares the cultural values, roots, and history of peoples. Over the years, numerous Latino musical genres share the concerns of Latinos throughout the years.
For example, there are songs about immigrant woes of the early 20th century to today. Recently, Latinos around the U.S. commented on the 43 student-teachers murdered in Ayotzinapa, Guerrero by creating various songs in different genres.
This program focuses on a broad overview of milestones the last 75 years of music in the Latino U.S. as a way of understanding the history, roots, and concerns of Latinos in this land, with a special emphasis on Mexican and Puerto Rican musicians in Illinois as Latino populations that have profoundly marked the state’s culture and music.
The presentation, paired with slides and musical samples, is lively and focused on participation, discussion, and exploration of complex topics through musical enjoyment!
This virtual Facebook Live event is free and open to the public. For more information, please contact Julieann T. Shourie at power2crop@gmail.com.
Learn more about Catalina Maria Johnson, Ph.D., this program, and how to book it.
Sponsor
AAUW Batavia, Geneva, St. Charles