About this Event
From early women’s fiction to contemporary music and comics, this panel explores how Boricua cultural production theorizes relation across time and territory. Presenters revisit neglected literary texts, examine global solidarities articulated in popular music, and trace graphic storytelling as diasporic worldmaking. Together, these works show how art not only reflects social conditions but actively constructs relational futures rooted in feminist, anti-colonial, and transnational struggle.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Silberman School of Social Work, 2180 3rd Ave, New York, United States
USD 0.00











