Publication Date

1-1-2018

Document Type

Article

Organizational Units

Sturm College of Law

Keywords

LatCrit, Puerto Rico, Pitiyanqui, Dual consciousness, Jerome Culp, People of color, Black, Latina, Latino, Asian, Native, Filipino, Critical Legal Theory

Abstract

One of our longtime LatCrit leaders in progressive and emancipatory pedagogy, Roberto Corrada (Denver), reflects on LatCrit’s role in awakening and developing his interest in critical scholarship and critical, community-based, pedagogy. In doing so, he also puts on display how our programmatic work, again, twines the personal with the collective, and the human with the intellectual. He reminds us, again, that our work is rooted in difference, and in learning from it.

Rights Holder

Steven W. Bender, Francisco Valdes, Shelley Cavalieri, Jasmine B. Gonzales Rose, Dr. Sarudzayi M. Matambanadzo, Roberto L. Corrada, Jorge R. Roig, Tayyab Mahmud, Zsea Bowmani, Anthony E. Varona, Seattle Journal for Social Justice

File Format

application/pdf

Language

English (eng)

Extent

10 pgs

File Size

584 KB

Publication Statement

Copyright held by the author. User is responsible for all copyright compliance.

This article was originally published as Roberto L. Corrada, Reflections of a “Pitiyanqui”: My History with LatCrit, in What's Next: Into a Third Decade of LatCrit Theory, Community, and Praxis, 16 Seattle J. Soc. Just. 849 (2018).

Volume

16

First Page

849

Last Page

858



Share

COinS