Latin American and Latino/a Studies
This program in Latin American and Latino/a Studies (LALS) is devoted to the interdisciplinary investigation of Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino cultures, politics, and histories. Through a variety of disciplines, students will have opportunities to explore the vibrant cultural life of Latin American and Caribbean countries, as well as the experiences of the Latino communities in the United States. Course offerings will include language, literature, dance, film, music, art, and other cultural expressions as a way to familiarize the students with a world that is rich in imagination, powerful in social impact, and defiant of the stereotypes usually imposed upon it. Students will also interrogate the complex political dynamics involved in such processes as (post)colonialism, migration, revolution, social movements, citizenship, and the cultural politics of race, gender, sexuality, and class. The histories of conquest, colonialism, development, and resistance in the area also require broad inquiry into the often turbulent and violent realities of political economic forces.
As this program is concerned with a broad set of border crossings, faculty in LALS are also committed to expanding educational experiences beyond Sarah Lawrence College. Accordingly, students are encouraged to study abroad through Sarah Lawrence College programs in Cuba, Argentina, and Peru or with other programs in Latin America. Students will also have opportunities to explore the borderlands closer to Sarah Lawrence College, including Latino communities in New York City and Westchester County.
Courses in other disciplines related to Latin American and Latino/a Studies
- Based on a True Story? Latin American History Through Film
- First-Year Studies: Calles y Plaza Antigua: The Country and the City in Literature and Film
- Migration and Experience
- “New” World Literatures: Fictions of the Yard
- New World Studies: Maroons, Rebels, and Pirates of the Caribbean
- Spaces of Exclusion, Places of Belonging
- The Cuban Revolution(s) from 1898 to Today
- Warriors, Rogues, and Women in Breeches: Adventurous Lives in Early Modern Transatlantic Literature: Literature in Translation