Photo by Antonia Holton-Raphael
Intervenxions is an online publication of TLP that features original writings, criticism, and interviews exploring contemporary Latinx Art, Politics, & Culture.
“Giving Form To An Asian & Latinx America” [REVIEW]
A comparative study on the common history of Latinx and Asian American diasporas as targets in the trajectory of Cold War imperialism, from 1965 to present.
“We Are Not Dreamers: Undocumented Scholars Theorize Undocumented Life in the US” [REVIEW]
A new edited volume featuring current and formerly undocumented scholars contests the popular notion of what it means to be a “DREAMer” and how this narrative and identity has, at times, done more harm than good.
Revisiting the Afro-Cuban Syncretism of “Orisha/Santos”
35 years have passed since Jorge Luis Rodriguez and Charles Abramson’s groundbreaking exploration of Afro-Cuban syncretism.
Te juro que va a caer: Patricia Herrera on Nuyorican Feminist Performance
A new work of scholarship foregrounds the experiences and contributions of women to the early Nuyorican movement.
Lessons Learned From the Los Angeles Youth Movement Against The Carceral State
“This is a movement, not a moment.” Los Angeles-based youth of color continue a legacy of challenging the carceral social order.
The Techno-Tamaladas
In the Bay area, a multifarious art project reimagines technological development through Indigenous foodways.
CHARAS and The Reimagination of Loisaida
From the 1970s onwards, community organizing, activism, and extensive arts programming, provided alternative notions of power and ownership for the Puerto Rican community and long time residents of the Lower East Side in the struggle against gentrification and displacement.
How State Violence Translates to Political Action for Immigrants in the Midwest
Informal community networks and rapid response mutual aid helped resist harrowing levels of state violence inflicted on immigrant communities.
Exhibition Reviews
Book Reviews
Politics
Arts & Community
Queer Studies
Film & TV
Afro-Latinx Studies
Alford’s clarity about the relevance of Blackness to Latinx identity serves as a balm for feeling invisible to raceless Latina authors.
The ‘NEGRITA’ doc uses the racial descriptor as an entry point to discuss the lasting effects of colonialism in Latin America, the Caribbean, and its diasporas
All Posts
Submission & Editorial Guidelines
Intervenxions is an online publication of TLP that features original writings, criticism, and interviews exploring contemporary Latinx Art, Politics, & Culture. We accept pitches on a rolling basis.
Please read our submission guidelines to learn more.
See our masthead here.