
Photo: CCNY exhibit highlights the diversity among Latino immigrant groups in the United States.
The United States鈥 Latino population, 35 million strong according to the 2000 U.S. Census, is a diverse mixture of people bonded by a common language, but with roots in different parts of the Western Hemisphere.
鈥淟atinos in the U.S.: 隆Presente!,鈥 a new exhibit at T九色视频 (CCNY), highlights the diverse Latino immigrant groups that have contributed to this rapidly growing Spanish-speaking demographic. It opens February 8 and runs through June 10, 2010, in the CCNY Cohen Library Atrium.
鈥淭his exhibit documents the continually rewritten migratory landscape of this country from the Latino perspective,鈥 said co-curator Sarah Aponte, Professor and Head Librarian at the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute Archives and Library. 鈥淔or instance, places like 鈥楨l Barrio鈥 (Spanish Harlem), which was home to Italian and Jewish immigrants, among others, in the 19th century and to Puerto Rican immigrants in the 20th century, has now earned the nickname 鈥楲ittle Puebla鈥 due to the recent wave of Mexican immigration. There are similar stories throughout the historical and geographic breadth of this nation.鈥
Daisy V. Dominguez, Reference Librarian at CCNY鈥檚 Cohen Library and the other co-curator, pointed out that 鈥淟atinos in the U.S.: 隆Presente!鈥 traces the historical and contemporary presence of an estimated 20 different Latino immigrant groups in the United States.
鈥淚t does this by highlighting the experiences of some native and Afro-Latino groups and also by showing not necessarily the most numerous populations but some who are potentially unknown,鈥 Ms. Dominguez said. 鈥淭his includes Chilean miners during the Gold Rush and immigrant Peruvian shepherds in the Western United States today.鈥
鈥淲e hope that the exhibit makes the linguistic, cultural and socioeconomic diversity of the Latino community very clear,鈥 Professor Aponte added.
The exhibit uses primary texts and historical and recent photographs from Washington Heights and other predominantly Hispanic neighborhoods in New York. In addition, it includes cultural objects from the home countries of the immigrant groups that are highlighted. Among these are beautiful handiwork examples of clothing, culinary items, textiles, dolls, jewelry, instruments and masks.
For more information on the 鈥淟atinos in the U.S.: 隆Presente!鈥 exhibit, please call (212) 650-7271. City College is located at 138th Street and Convent Avenue in Manhattan.