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You are here: Home / THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA / THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA 9.01.23

THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA 9.01.23

September 1, 2023 by wpengine

THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA:  ON STRIKE ON LABOR DAY! DOLORES HUERTA ON SACRAMENTO MARCH, LUIS TORRES REVIEWS THE BLUE BEETLE, RICHARD VARGAS LOOKING OUT FOR GERALD LOCKLIN,  RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT ON ARTISTIC GEMS IN SAN ANTONIO AND EMMA TENAYUCA ON THE PECAN SHELLERS STRIKE.

Por Dios! Here we are and its LABOR DAY already! And it’s the summer of strikes: the Writers Guild, the Screen Actor Guild, and Unite HERE Local 11. So many peopole fighting for a decent wage and better work conditions. We thought we’d remind ourselves of strikes that have been successful. We post Dolores Huerta talking about the 1965 Farm Workers strike and the pilgrimage to Sacramento and Emma Tenayuca talking about the 1936 Pecan Sheller’s Strike.  Just to say to our colleagues who are today on the strike front lines of union activism. Sí Se Puede!

Also this week, Luis Torres returns with his Tales of Torres. He looks at the newly released blockbuster the Blue Beetle. This is heralded as the first major DC comics motion picture franchise showcasing Latino characters with a Latino lead, Xolo Maridueña. So is it worth all the hoopla in the Latino community? Check out Luis’s review and find out.

We have another visit with poet Richard Vargas as he pays homage to his late mentor, Long Beach poet Gerald Locklin. Vargas studied under Locklin and it clearly left a lifelong impression on him. Check out Richard reading his poignant and carefully crafted poem, Looking Out for Gerald Locklin.

Ricardo Romo returns with his Tejano Report. This week he looks at overlooked artistic gems in San Antonio, beginning with some of the works first purchased for the McNay Museum back in 1954. Lots of good background here on the evolution of the art scene in San Antonio. Not to be missed.

Enjoy your Labor Day week-end y no se pongan muy locos!

Tia Tenopia

Filed Under: THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA, Tia Tenopia Tagged With: This week on Latinopia, Tia Tenopia

LE PROFE QUEZADA NOS DICE 9.05.25 CURANDERISMO IN THE BARRIO

September 5, 2025 By wpengine

Curanderismo (folk healing) is an integral component of the fabric that is very much a part of the Mexican American cultural, social, and historical heritage.  My paternal grandmother, Doña Emilia, or Memia as we fondly called her was a curandera (healer).  Her older sister, Doña Ester, was a renowned curandera in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico, […]

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 8.29.25 Salomón Huerta: A Visionary Interpreter of Latino Art

August 29, 2025 By wpengine

Salomón Huerta: A Visionary Interpreter of Latino Art Ricardo Romo, Ph.D Salomón Huerta, a Los Angeles-based painter and printmaker, is known for his enigmatic portraits and compelling depictions of domestic and suburban architecture reflecting his Mexican American heritage and upbringing in Boyle Heights. Over the past quarter-century, Huerta’s works have been acquired by the Museum […]

BURUNDANGA DEL ZOCOTROCO 8.29.25 CONFESSIONS OF AN AGED ANTI-IMPERIALIST

August 29, 2025 By wpengine

José M. Umpierre Confessions of an Aged Anti-imperialist. The recent meeting between Trump and Putin in Alaska has been seen as the management of two powerful nations that flirt with the notion of empire. The term fuels a torrent of memories, it takes me back to 1976 when I defended my doctoral thesis: Imperialism and […]

BURUNDANGA BORICUA DEL ZOCOTROCO 8.29.25 CONFESIONES DE UN VIEJO ANTIIMPERIALISTA

August 29, 2025 By wpengine

Burundanga de Zocotroco José M. Umpierre Confesiones de un Viejo Antiimperialista Realengo                                        . La reunión recién celebrada entre Trump y Putin en Alaska se ha visto como la gestión de dos poderosas naciones que coquetean con la noción de imperio. El término aviva un torrente de recuerdos, me regresa al 1976 cuando defendí la tesis: […]

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