Colonial Incarceration and its Legacies in the Southern Philippines
Schedule
Wed Oct 30 2024 at 06:15 pm to 07:45 pm
UTC-04:00Location
Casa Hispanica | New York, NY
About this Event
Mindanao, the second-largest island in the Philippines, has a long history of incarceration. The Spanish Empire built its first penal colony in San Ramón, Zamboanga in the second half of the nineteenth century. Instead of sending deportees, Spanish officials incarcerated Filipinos to “try out” (“ensayar” in the documents) new methods of colonization through agriculture and the displacement of non-normative bodies from North (Manila) to South (Zamboanga). The project looks at the racial, ethical, political, and social issues involved in the penal colonization process in the Philippines and exposes the legacies of colonial incarceration in the uses of the San Ramón Pr*son which still exists today.
About the speakers
(Yale University, Department of Spanish and Portuguese), specializes in 19th-century Iberian cultural studies, focusing on the Filipino and Catalan contexts and engaging with a acarcerality, disability, transatlantic movements, slavery networks, archives, popular music, journalist discourses, mass and working-class organizations. Her current book project is tentatively titled: The Trial Run: Gender, Disability, and Penal Colonies in the 19th-Century Philippines.
is the Academic Adviser at the JIE Scholars Program. Her work centers on confinement in all its forms, from the benevolent (hospitals, schools) to the sinister (concentration camps and prisons). She is the author and editor of multiple, award-winning books and articles on the subject, most recently Foucauld’s Node: Leros and the Grammar of Confinement. Since 2022 she has co-organized and co-directs the Leros Humanism Seminars https://leros-humanism-seminars.com/
Where is it happening?
Casa Hispanica, 612 West 116th Street, New York, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
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