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- Latino History - National Museum of American History
Latino history is American history Latinos trace their origins to Latin America and other Spanish colonies, both in the Caribbean and in the contemporary United States These groups include, but are not limited to, Indigenous, Mestizos, Afro-Latinos, and other mixed-race people Currently representing the largest ethnic minority in the country, Latinos have participated in the creation and
- Latinas Talk Latinas - National Museum of American History
This series introduces you to the lives of 21 Latinas, as told by educators, curators, and scientists across the Smithsonian Join them as they explore stories of women breaking barriers— in everything from music and fashion to community organizing and scientific exploration—who have shaped the United States The Latinas Talk Latinas series is accompanied by digital educational resources
- Latinas Make Breaking News in Smithsonian Spanish-Language TV . . .
“Latinas Talk Latinas,” a video series produced in collaboration with the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Latino, will feature several episodes on Latina journalists, including Jovita Idár, a journalist, teacher and civil rights leader who worked in the early 1900s, and Martha Tijerina, whose groundbreaking show, “En San
- Historia latina - National Museum of American History
Te invitamos a explorar muchas de estas complejas narrativas latinas a través de nuestras exhibiciones, colecciones, archivos, programas y blogs
- Calendar of Exhibitions and Events: March 2025
Latinas Talk Latinas | National Museum of American History “Latinas Talk Latinas,” will launch its third season March 4, introducing viewers to the lives of four Latinas as told by curators, historians and educators across the Smithsonian
- Pachucas: How Fashion Asserts Identity - National Museum of American . . .
In this story of pachucas we celebrate their role in the making of pachuco culture and for the ways in which their fashion stood in defiance of Mexican gender norms, second-class citizenship, and white middle-class ideas of American womanhood Verónica A Méndez is a curator in the Division of Military and Political History at the National Museum of American History
- ¡De última hora! | National Museum of American History
Las periodistas latinas escribieron el primer borrador de la historia para las comunidades de habla hispana en los Estados Unidos ¡De última hora! Latinas Report Breaking News es una exposición bilingüe que presenta historias de periodistas latinas para mostrar cómo la televisión en español dio voz y visibilidad a un amplio segmento del público estadounidense y cómo estas periodistas
- Taína Caragol Talks About Luisa Capetillo: Breaking the Mold
Luisa Capetillo was a feminist and a labor organizer Born and raised in Puerto Rico, Luisa Capetillo dared to dress as a man at a time when women were not wearing suits or even pants! It was her intellect that made her a fearless labor organizer
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