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Boletín del Consejo Mexicano de Ciencias Sociales
martes 4 de octubre de 2022 por Ana Lara
En: 1 Avisos y Eventos Generales
21 edición de la revista digital Otros Diálogos / Y Ahora ¿qué? Lo que la pandemia nos dejó.
martes 4 de octubre de 2022 por Ana Lara
Con gusto compartimos la más reciente edición de la revista digital Otros Diálogos, cuyo número 21 se intitula Y ahora ¿qué? Lo que la pandemia nos dejó.
En esta ocasión dedicamos el dossier a la vida después de la pandemia de covid. La reflexión acerca de las lecciones aprendidas se lleva a cabo con artículos escritos desde perspectivas muy diversas: la educativa, la histórica, la económica, la social. Para entender los cambios de paradigmas, discutimos los niveles de violencia en México, el futuro del trabajo, la economía mundial, la historia de las epidemias y pandemias, la educación virtual y el rezago educativo, la importancia de la salud mental e, incluso, la manera en que afecta al panorama mundial la guerra en Ucrania. También se abordan el neoconfucianismo en China, “el tormentoso paso de colonia a república” de nuestro país, los 100 años del natalicio de Antonio Alatorre y los 125 años del poeta Carlos Pellicer.
El número incluye, entre otros, artículos de Julio Frenk y Octavio Gómez Dantés, América Molina del Villar, Arturo Herrera, Emilio Blanco, Elsa Cross, Jacobo Dayán, Martha Lilia Tenorio; reseñas de las historias mínimas de El indigenismo en América Latina de Andrés Fábregas Puig, Las izquierdas en México de Ariel Rodríguez Kuri, además del libro de poesía y traducción Primer amor. Antología poética y la obra Monólogos compartidos. Las plegarias de Francisco Torres Córdova.
No podemos dejar de mencionar que con el número 21 de Otros Diálogos la revista cumple cinco años de vida. Esperamos que este lustro represente la continuidad de este proyecto con el que El Colegio de México quiere mostrar su rostro de institución promotora de la divulgación y generadora de puentes entre la academia y el público general.
Los invitamos a consultarlo dando clic aquí o en la imagen de portada.
La revista digital Otros Diálogos, inspirada en la revista Diálogos que fundara Ramón Xirau en 1964, busca construir, desde El Colegio de México, un espacio que recupera la tradición de la institución como articuladora de conversaciones, reflexiones y debates desde las humanidades, la literatura y las ciencias sociales.
Publicación trimestral de acceso abierto.
En: 1 Avisos y Eventos Generales
Photo exhibition – two years of heat and covid in the San Joaquin Valley / David Bacon
martes 4 de octubre de 2022 por Ana Lara
In the San Joaquin Valley, the most productive agricultural area in the world, rural poverty is endemic. That poverty produced COVID infection rates far exceeding, per capita, any urban area in California. Rural communities enduring the pressure of low wages and bad housing became coronavirus hotspots.
This exhibition presents this complex reality through documentary photographs taken in the course of the pandemic and the past two years’ heat dome crises. They concentrate on the daily lives of farmworkers and their families, including Filipino immigrants and in particular indigenous Mexican migrants, who did the essential labor that ensured that food left the field to supply supermarkets and dinner tables. They also show that while COVID created enormous risks and problems, in many ways people lived in conditions that existed long before the pandemic began.
In these images, farmworkers appear masked and exhausted as they pick grapes, pluots and persimmons. The series documents the crisis in rural housing, and the efforts of local communities to build homes using self-help projects. Haunting night photographs taken in Fresno show the streets of San Joaquin Valley’s largest city empty except for people sleeping on sidewalks, or working in taco trucks into the early hours of the morning. Indigenous farmworkers labor as irrigators in 114 degree heat in the sun all day, while crews pick and toss watermelons into trucks—one of the most physically demanding jobs in agriculture. The growing number of H-2A guestworkers are shown both as they harvest cantaloupes in the harsh temperature, and the rundown motels where they’re housed.
The pandemic and the crisis of climate change threw the problems of social injustice in our society into high relief, and I tried to document this reality as I’ve seen it. In May, 2021, the California Newspaper Publishers Association gave its first place awards to this series of images taken in the San Joaquin Valley, and the Los Angeles Press Club gave it a first place in the Southern California Journalism Awards in 2022.
This exhibition consists of 67 black and white photographs and oral histories giving their context. It is a continuation of previous projects that document the lives of indigenous farmworker communities, including Living Under the Trees and In the Fields of the North.
The photographs are produced as a cooperative effort with the Binational Front of Indigenous Organizations (FIOB), the Central Valley Empowerment Alliance, California Rural Legal Assistance, the Leadership Counsel for Justice and Accountability, and the United Farm Workers. The photographs are used by partner organizations in campaigns for immigrant rights and better working and living conditions. Part of this effort includes using the exhibitions to organize dialogues within these communities about indigenous identity and culture, and ways to advocate for equality and social justice as migrant communities in the U.S., opposing an abusive and dysfunctional immigration system.
Public support is vital to creating a broad movement for immigrant rights, labor rights, cultural respect and the social justice demands of Mexican indigenous migrant farmworkers. This project is part of that effort, at the same time helping documentary photography survive as a medium for advancing social justice.
The exhibition is sponsored by the UC Merced Library, the UCM Center for Analytic Political Engagement (CAPE), and the UCM Community and Labor Center. Special thanks to KFCF 88.1 FM «Nuestro Foro», Central Valley Empowerment Alliance, Centro Binacional para el Desarollo Indigena Oaxaqueño (CBDIO), Community Alliance, Farmworker Justice, Pan Valley Institute, The Puffin Foundation, Rosa Luxemberg Stiftung, Unbound Philanthropy and the United Farm Workers.
For more information, contact rdelugan@ucmerced.edu
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Boletín del Centro de Investigaciones en Óptica, A.C. (CIO) | 03 al 09 de octubre | 2022
martes 4 de octubre de 2022 por Ana Lara
En: 1 Avisos y Eventos Generales