20 集

Voices and images from the archives of the CSUN Tom & Ethel Bradley Center. We have over one million images produced by photographers that document the social, cultural, and political lives of the diverse communities of Los Angeles and Southern California. The archives contain one of the largest collections of African American photographers west of the Mississippi. We also have collections on the Farm Worker Movement, Central America, Mexico, the U.S.–Mexico border, and Africa.

Emancipated Tom & Ethel Bradley Center

    • 歷史

Voices and images from the archives of the CSUN Tom & Ethel Bradley Center. We have over one million images produced by photographers that document the social, cultural, and political lives of the diverse communities of Los Angeles and Southern California. The archives contain one of the largest collections of African American photographers west of the Mississippi. We also have collections on the Farm Worker Movement, Central America, Mexico, the U.S.–Mexico border, and Africa.

    20. Youth Movements for Justice: The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Israel's Black Panthers

    20. Youth Movements for Justice: The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Israel's Black Panthers

    In this episode, we discuss two youth movements for justice and equality with María Varela and Elia Asaf-Shalev, who visited us at the Bradley Center last April. Varela, a photographer and organizer with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), shares her 1960s experiences in the American civil rights movement, highlighting the role of young people in securing voting rights through organizing and protests. Asaf-Shalev, author of the book Israel Black Panthers, explains how Moroccan Jews founded the Israeli Black Panthers in the 1970s to protest racial and ethnic inequalities in Israel. Join us to explore these stories of resistance and change.

    This episode was produced by CSUN journalism students in the Multiplatform Storytelling J325 class, with production facilitated by instructor Marta Valier.

    Script by Cindy Chavez, Chelsea Corry, Sulor Garretson, Krystal Guevara, Jay Kuklin, Brittney Ornelas, Tony Santos, and Marta Valier. Audio editing by George Camacho, Charlie Gonzalez, and Marta Valier. Special thanks to: Michael Akinfemi, Sophia Cano, Laura Gonzales, Kevin Khachatryan, Ariana Nassir, Melany Rizo, Ryan Romero, Breanna Small, Ayanna Smith, and Anthony Tedesco.

    • 37 分鐘
    19. The criminalization of journalism in El Salvador, Ángela Aurora interviews Julia Gavarrete. EPISODE IN SPANISH.

    19. The criminalization of journalism in El Salvador, Ángela Aurora interviews Julia Gavarrete. EPISODE IN SPANISH.

    In this episode, Ángela Aurora, a Salvadoran journalism professor and visiting scholar at the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center, interviews Julia Gavarrete, a Salvadoran journalist working for the digital newspaper El Faro. They discuss, in Spanish, the growing criminalization of journalism in El Salvador, the use by the administration of the current Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele of spyware to monitor journalists' phones and computers, and more broadly about the present state of emergency that, in the name of the war on gangs, has justified the repeal of basic rights. Since April the state of emergency has allowed authorities to intercept communications, suspend constitutional rights, including freedom of assembly and due process, and has granted broad powers to arrest hundreds of people without evidence. In the last eight weeks, authorities claim to have made over 31,000 arrests. Aurora and Gavarrete explain how this lack of accountability and unchecked executive power is having particularly grim consequences for those living in the most impoverished communities.

    This episode was produced by Marta Valier.

    You can take a look at the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center’s photos on El Salvador by Richard Cross here and you can watch two video clips of the Center’s oral history interview with Óscar Martínez, one of the founders of El Faro on our YouTube channel. One clip is about his experience covering politics for La Prensa Gráfica and why he abandoned the newspaper, and in the second clip, he explains how the Zetas operate in Mexico.

    • 32 分鐘
    18. Deported Veterans, a discussion on deportation of U.S. noncitizen service members and immigration law.

    18. Deported Veterans, a discussion on deportation of U.S. noncitizen service members and immigration law.

    In this episode, Marta Valier discusses deportations of immigrants from the U.S., more specifically about the deportation of veterans, with Héctor Barajas, director and founder of the Deported Veterans Support House in Tijuana, Mexico, ACLU immigration attorney Andrés Kwon, and photographer Joseph Silva, author of the photographic exhibition Deported Veterans at the Museum of Social Justice of Los Angeles, which will stay open until July 17. 

    Visit our webpage, CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center, explore our Border Studies archive, and see some of the digitized images of the Julián Cardona Collection.

    Episode hosted and produced by Marta Valier.

    • 18 分鐘
    17. Abecedario de Juárez, a conversation with Alice Leora Briggs.

    17. Abecedario de Juárez, a conversation with Alice Leora Briggs.

    In this episode we present a slightly edited version of a conversation with artist Alice Leora Briggs, as interviewed by professor José Luis Benavides and Marta Valier. In her newest book, Abecedario de Juárez: An Illustrated Lexicon, she and Mexican journalist Julián Cardona, bring to the forefront life in the Mexican border city of Juárez during the Six Years of Death, from 2006 to 2012, when Mexican President Felipe Calderón launched the so-called war on organized crime sending federal forces into the city and violence exploded. This book decodes and visually represents the new language that rose from a city at war, using Cardona's interviews, definitions, and Briggs's drawings, leaving a strong mark on a much disregarded war.

    Episode hosted and produced by Marta Valier.

    • 30 分鐘
    16. The indigenous resistance against megaprojects in the Guatemalan Ixil region, a discussion with anthropologist Giovanni Batz.

    16. The indigenous resistance against megaprojects in the Guatemalan Ixil region, a discussion with anthropologist Giovanni Batz.

    In this episode Marta Valier talks to Giovanni Batz, President’s Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Native American Studies at the University of California, Davis, about his upcoming book, titled The Fourth Invasion: Decolonizing Histories, Megaprojects and Ixil Resistance in Guatemala. He discusses the Ixil resistance, and the struggle against megaprojects in Guatemala analyzing topics like state-sponsored violence, the persecution of human rights defenders and activists, the negative impact of megaprojects on the indigenous communities, and the historical land inequality in Guatemala.

    Visit the Bradley Center. You can also browse Richard Cross's photos of the Mayan refugees in Chiapas, Mexico, 1983, escaping genocide.

    Visit the Center's digital collections and our curriculum website.

    Episode hosted and produced by Marta Valier.

    • 35 分鐘
    15. A student presenting clips from the The Black Power Archive Oral History Project.

    15. A student presenting clips from the The Black Power Archive Oral History Project.

    In this episode, Marta Valier talks to Brandon Lien, a Cal State University Northridge (CSUN) student that has been working for the last year at the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center on The Black Power Archive Oral History Project, a collection of oral histories documenting the African American experience in Los Angeles.  We wanted to hear from a student's perspective what it’s like for younger generations to work with oral histories archived at the Bradley Center. Lien, a film student in his third year at CSUN, shared with us three of his favorite audio clips he discovered working at the archive. One clip is from Kumasi, a member of the Slauson street organization The Slausons and author of the 1970 "Folsom Prison Strike and Bill of Rights Manifesto." A second clip is from an oral history with Watani Stiner, a member of the Black nationalist group US Organization. And the last clip is from Donzaleigh Abernathy, daughter of Juanita and Rev. Ralph Abernathy, leaders in the civil rights movement and close friends to Dr.Martin Luther King Jr.

    Visit the Bradley Center website.

    Also, visit our digital collections and our Black Power Oral History Project.

    Episode hosted and produced by Marta Valier.

    • 52 分鐘

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