Literature of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands
A four-part series which will be facilitated by Chuck Tatum at the dates and times below:
MVUU Sanctuary
January 28th, 2:30 to 3:40 PM
February 4th , 2:30 to 3:40 PM
UUCT Sanctuary:
February 25th, 3:00 to 4:10 PM
March 18th, 3:00 to 4:10 PM
Below is a brief summary of the series.
The U.S.-Mexico borderlands that extend from Chula Vista/Tijuana on the West Coast to Brownsville/Matamoros on the Gulf Coast for more than one-hundred and fifty years have been the focus of numerous Mexican American, Native American, Anglo American, and Mexican writers who have explored this geographic area’s diverse cultural, social, linguistic, demographic, and geopolitical dimensions.
Chuck Tatum, Emeritus Professor of Spanish at the University of Arizona and a long-time member of MVUU, will lead discussions on border literary production with an emphasis on contemporary writers who have grappled with pressing issues faced by U.S. and Mexican citizens who live along the 2,000 mile border. Highlighted will be the multi-faceted aspects of immigration. There will be a few short readings.
Chuck has written and lectured on borderlands literature for over forty years.
Co-sponsored by Mountain Vista Unitarian Universalist Congregation (MVUU) and the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Tucson (UUCT)
All Are Welcome