Quechua at NYU

Quechua at NYU Get involved with these impressive indigenous languages and cultures. Check out "Rimasun" Quechua podcasts at: www.clacsnyublog.com

Through a wide range of programs and events, the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS) serves as a point of connection for scholars, students and members of the public who share an interest in Quechua languages and cultures. Scholars and students from around the world meet through CLACS, furthering research and study of Quechua, while online resources expand the scope of initiati

ves, increasing access to Quechua-related materials. Native speakers from the NYC metropolitan area as well as from the Andean region of South America regularly collaborate with the NYU community to support the diffusion, exploration and celebration of these indigenous languages.

Drawing on 25 years of research, professor Odi Gonzales presents his new book Nación Anti. Ensayos de Antropología Lingü...
04/19/2023

Drawing on 25 years of research, professor Odi Gonzales presents his new book Nación Anti. Ensayos de Antropología Lingüística Andina. Lenguaje y Pensamiento Quechua. Traducción Cultural y Resistencia.

Join CLACS and Runasimi Outreach Collective for the NYC book book launch of Nación Anti on April 27 at 7:00pm. Made up of 23 essays, the book analyzes Quechua language-thought correlation. Joining the event is anthropologist Bruce Mannheim (University of Michigan), a rigorous scholar of the Andean world. The book launch also closes the first day of the CLACPI Indigenous Film Showcase.

This event will take place primarily in Spanish and is open to the public. RSVP: nacionanti.eventbrite.com.

Did you know that the "Autobiografía de Gregorio Condori y Asunta Quispe" is probably the most translated and studied Pe...
12/05/2022

Did you know that the "Autobiografía de Gregorio Condori y Asunta Quispe" is probably the most translated and studied Peruvian book in the world, and the least read in the Andean region?

This Spring 2023 course taught by Odi Gonzales will be focused on the analysis and interpretation of an oral testimony that was collected in Quechua, transcribed with the Spanish alphabet and translated into Spanish and English.

Taught in English, this course is open to all graduate students, especially students from area programs in the Inter-University Doctoral Consortium. Advanced undergraduates can apply for departmental permission to register.

Please reach out to [email protected] for more information.

12/01/2022
Next week on Monday, November 7, you're invited to a screening of the short film "Following the Thread" featuring the di...
10/31/2022

Next week on Monday, November 7, you're invited to a screening of the short film "Following the Thread" featuring the director Kathy Brew and Quechua language instructor Odi Gonzales. This event is co-sponsored by Consulado General del Perú en Nueva York.

Read more and RSVP at

Short Film Screening & Conversation

We're getting ready for the new year at CLACS at NYU. Language courses in Quechua and Haitian Creole (Kreyòl Ayisyen) ar...
06/28/2022

We're getting ready for the new year at CLACS at NYU.

Language courses in Quechua and Haitian Creole (Kreyòl Ayisyen) are open to both undergraduate and graduate students enrolled at New York University.

Questions? Connect with us at [email protected].

Afrofuturismos en el Abya Yala: Poesía, espiritualidad, música y resistenciaViernes, 29 de abril 20224-6pm PE | 5-7pm ES...
04/28/2022

Afrofuturismos en el Abya Yala: Poesía, espiritualidad, música y resistencia

Viernes, 29 de abril 2022
4-6pm PE | 5-7pm EST | 6-8pm ARG
En línea a través de Zoom

Participan:
Yanna, Artista multidisciplinaria y poeta
NaniCurvy, Afroartivista y gestora cultural
Luanda, Musique, MC, compositore y productore
Pedro Abad, Artista y elenco del Ballet Afroperuano

Organizado por:
Cinthya Vasquez, MA CLACS '22

RSVP: https://as.nyu.edu/clacs/events/spring-2022/afrofuturismos-en-el-abya-yala--poesia--espiritualidad--musica-y.html

Ecuador, Nueva York, and the Art of Karina Aguilera SkvirskyFriday, May 6 | KJCC Room 4065:00pm - 7:00pm EST The Runasim...
04/28/2022

Ecuador, Nueva York, and the Art of Karina Aguilera Skvirsky

Friday, May 6 | KJCC Room 406
5:00pm - 7:00pm EST

The Runasimi Outreach Collective from NYU are pleased to invite you to close the Spring 2022 semester with our guest artist Karina Aguilera Skvirsky who will be joining us in person to discuss her short "The Perilous Journey of Maria Rosa Palacios" & “How to build a wall and other Ruins” this event will take place at on Friday May 6th, 2022 at 5pm. For more details about how to attend in person or online please register at the link in our bio. Registration will include access to watch the films ahead of the event.

*This is a hybrid event. All are welcome to join virtually via Zoom. In-person attendance is limited to NYU students, faculty, and staff only.

RSVP: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ecuador-nueva-york-and-the-art-of-karina-aguilera-skvirsky-tickets-327412287967?aff=ebdsoporgprofile

We are sharing an invitation from Mackenzie Marcinko (PhD student, Department of Linguistics & Cognitive Science at Univ...
04/13/2022

We are sharing an invitation from Mackenzie Marcinko (PhD student, Department of Linguistics & Cognitive Science at University of Delaware) who is looking for native Peruvian Quechua speakers living in New York to complete an online survey as part of their dissertation project.

Thursday, April 7, 20226:00-8:00pm ESTWorking Group on Racisms in Comparative Perspective: "Thinking and journaling abou...
04/04/2022

Thursday, April 7, 2022
6:00-8:00pm EST
Working Group on Racisms in Comparative Perspective: "Thinking and journaling about race and identity in the U.S while being a cholo from Perú" by Marco Avilés

"Journaling about daily life after moving to the US has helped me reflect about the connections and disconnections between how we think, and talk about race and identity both in the US and in Latin America. Sharing personal memories and observations on not being white on both sides of the border, in this talk I will discuss how writing about this dual experience feeds my literary and academic work."

Marco Avilés is a Quechua-Peruvian writer and journalist. His recent work explores race and racism across the Americas. He is the author of three non-fiction books: Día de visita, a reportage about love in a women’s prison in Lima; De dónde venimos los cholos, an exploration on identity and migration in the Andes and Amazonia; and No soy tu cholo, a personal essay on being brown.

RSVP: https://as.nyu.edu/clacs/events/spring-2022/thinking-and-journaling-about-race-and-identity-in-the-us-while-.html

Address

New York, NY

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Quechua at NYU posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The University

Send a message to Quechua at NYU:

Share