The Latino immigration experience is focus of scholar's March 28 lecture

Released on 03/14/2012, at 2:00 AM
Office of University Communications
University of Nebraska–Lincoln

WHEN: Wednesday, Mar. 28, 2012

WHERE: Ubuntu Room, Jackie Gaughan Multicultural Center, 15th and S Streets

Lincoln, Neb., March 14th, 2012 —
Louis Mendoza
Louis Mendoza

            An author and scholar who rode his bicycle 8,000 miles around the country to understand how Latino immigration has changed the United States will offer a free public lecture March 28 at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

            Louis Mendoza, chair of the Department of Chicano Studies and vice provost to the Office for Equity and Diversity at the University of Minnesota, will be the keynote speaker of the Institute for Ethnic Studies' Spring Celebration. His talk, "Conversations Across Our America," will be in the Jackie Gaughan Multicultural Center's Ubuntu Room beginning at 3 p.m. A question-and-answer session, book signing and reception will follow.

            The annual celebration is designed to inform the campus and local community about the discipline of ethnic studies and to celebrate ethnic diversity in the state of Nebraska.

            "Dr. Mendoza examines complex issues like immigration from different perspectives and that makes him a perfect speaker to help raise awareness about what we do," said Amelia Montes, director of the UNL Institute for Ethnic Studies. "Ethnic Studies uses an interdisciplinary research approach that analyzes how ethnic groups interact in society and combines methods from traditional disciplines like history and sociology to illuminate the complexities of race, ethnicity and power."

            During his bike ride around the country in 2007, Mendoza met with a broad range of people, including Latino immigrants who had varied experiences coming to this country. He did it, he said, to help move beyond the limited portrayal of immigration as a conflict between newcomers and citizens. His experience became the basis for two books, including his forthcoming work, "Conversations Across Our America: Talking About Immigration and the Latinoization of the United States." It's scheduled for release this summer.

            "We're proud and excited to be able to bring Dr. Mendoza to UNL, to share his research with our local community," Montes said. "This is a great opportunity to hear what a national expert has to say about a complicated and controversial issue that affects us all."

            UNL's Institute for Ethnic Studies, founded in 1972, is composed of three programs: African American and African Studies, Latino and Latin American Studies and Native American Studies. The program draws from multiple fields, including history, sociology, anthropology, English, political science, psychology and modern languages and literatures. It offers students the opportunity to explore and examine ethnically diverse populations within and outside the United States.

            For more information on the institute, visit http://ethnicstudies.unl.edu.

Writer: Jean Ortiz Jones, University Communications, (402) 472-8320

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