The Huntington Library, Ahmanson Room, Botanical Center View map Free Event

1151 Oxford Rd, Pasadena CA 91108

https://dornsife.usc.edu/icw/currentevents/
View map Free Event

Saturday, October 13, 2018 | 9:30am - 3:00pm

The Huntington | Ahmanson Room, Botanical Center

 

Registration $25; free for students and Huntington readers. Lunch included (please add separately during registration). https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/3596850

What do the letters of Mexican and Chinese migrants voice about their stories in California’s history of migration?  A symposium co-sponsored by the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West and The Huntington Library will explore this question by examining twentieth-century Mexican and Chinese migrant letters as sources in writing this history.  Besides this important question, the symposium also seeks to highlight, as well as to understand, historian José Orozco’s important—and poignantdeclaration that migrant letters are “the quieter affirmations of humanity, those simple exchanges …  expressions of love … scribbled in ink that fades, written on paper that yellows.”

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Schedule:


Opening Remarks (9:30am-9:45am): William F. Deverell (Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West)

Session I (9:45am-10:30am): Why this Symposium? Thoughts on collecting migrant letters.

• Li Wei Yang (Huntington Curator of Pacific Rim Collections) 

• Clay Stalls (Curator of California and Hispanic Collections)

Break (10:30am-10:45am)

Session II (10:45am-noon): Mexican Migrant Letters
Moderator: Clay Stalls
• Miroslava Chávez-García (University of California, Santa Barbara) 
• José Orozco (Whittier College)
• Romeo Guzmán (Fresno State)

Lunch (noon-1pm)

Session III (1pm-2:15pm): Chinese Migrant Letters 
Moderator: Li Wei Yang
Speakers:
• Sue Fawn Chung (University of Nevada, Las Vegas)
• Haiming Liu (Cal Poly Pomona)
• Susie Lan Cassel (California State University, San Marcos)

Break (2:15pm-2:30pm)

Wrap-Up: Comments and Observations (2:30pm-3pm): Natalia Molina (University of California, San Diego)

This program is open to all eligible individuals. USC operates all of its programs and activities consistent with the university’s Notice of Non-Discrimination. Eligibility is not determined based on race, sex, ethnicity, sexual orientation or any other prohibited factor.

 

Event Details

See Who Is Interested

0 people are interested in this event

User Activity

No recent activity