Chicano Cultural Studies Forum

Chicano Cultural Studies Forum by Angie Chabram-Dernersesian, published by NYU Press in November 2007, is a comprehensive exploration of Chicana/o studies and cultural studies. This edition, consisting of 282 pages, presents a collection of essays from a diverse group of scholars who engage in current debates surrounding the intersections of these fields. The editor provides an overview of Chicana/o cultural criticism, facilitating a virtual roundtable discussion among notable critics, which highlights the dynamic nature of this interdisciplinary project.
Readers will find that this book addresses critical questions regarding the relationship between Chicana/o studies and cultural studies, as well as the methodologies employed within these frameworks. The discussions delve into various formations of Chicana/o cultural studies, including hemispheric, borderland, and feminist perspectives. By documenting these lively conversations, the book serves as a valuable resource for understanding the evolution of Chicana/o cultural studies and its connections to broader social movements and epistemologies in contemporary discourse.
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The Chicana/o Cultural Studies Forum brings together a diverse group of scholars whose work spans the interdisciplinary fields of Chicana/o studies and cultural studies. Editor Angie Chabram-Dernersesian provides an overview of current debates, locating Chicana/o cultural criticism at the intersections of these fields. She then acts as moderator of a virtual roundtable of critics, including Frances Aparicio, Lisa Lowe, George Lipsitz, Wahneema Lubiano, Renato Rosaldo, José David Saldívar, and Sonia Saldívar-Hull.
This highly collaborative and deeply interdisciplinary project addresses the questions: What is the relationship between Chicana/o studies and cultural studies? How do we do cultural studies from within Chicana/o cultural studies? How do Chicana/o cultural studies formations (hemispheric, borderland, and feminist) intermingle? The lively conversations documented here attest to the vitality and spirit of Chicana/o cultural studies today and track the movements between disciplines that share an interest in the study of culture, power relations, identity, and representation.
This book offers a unique resource for understanding not just the development of Chicana/o cultural studies, but how new social movements and epistemologies travel and affiliate with progressive forms of social inquiry in the global era.
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