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I am pleased to return to the work of Aaron Coy Moulton. If you missed his first post on archives in Cuba, please follow this link. If you would like to make your own contribution(s) on archival, library, or digital resources on Latin America, the Caribbean, and the US-Mexico borderlands, I’d love to hear from you. I’m looking for drafts that I can publish over the summer. Please email me at gkpierce@ship.edu or fill out this Google Form.

Aaron Coy Moulton is an Associate Professor in Latin American History at Stephen F. Austin State University. Multiple institutions have supported his

BLOG: How We Remember: An Archive of Indigenous Voices by Claire Lavarreda

Gretchen Pierce (She/her/hers) Blog Post
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Claire Lavarreda is a World History Ph.D. student at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts. Her main interests include the Indigenous Americas, Material Texts, and Public/Digital History. She has received several fellowships and awards, including the Gillis Family World History Research Award and a NULab Community Collaboration Grant. She is currently working as a Digital Integration Teaching Initiative Research Fellow, and her work with platforms like Omeka, StoryMap, WordPress, and others has informed her project “How We Remember.”

Neter@s: do you have similar digital project you

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Happy New Year, Neter@s! If you have not had a chance to read Research Corner’s annual review for 2023, please do so. As always, I’d love to hear from you if you’d like to contribute. Email Gretchen Pierce at gkpierce@ship.edu or fill out this Google Form.

Oscar J. Montero is an independent researcher, translator, and writer from Cuba, now living in New York City. Montero is professor emeritus at Lehman College and the Graduate Center, CUNY. He has been a visiting professor at Emory, SUNY Stony Brook, Princeton, and Columbia universities. He is the author of The Name Game on Cuban writer

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Gretchen Pierce is Associate Professor of Latin American History at Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania. She is the co-editor of Alcohol in Latin America: A Social and Cultural History (University of Arizona Press, 2014) with Áurea Toxqui, and has published a number of articles, book chapters, and academic blog posts on temperance, beer, and advertising in Mexico. In addition to serving as an editor on H-LatAm and founding this blog, she is currently working on a book, an article, and a chapter from an edited volume, all of which deal with alcohol in one way or another.

Year Four: H

BLOG: Keeping up a Research Agenda when Life Gets in the Way by Gretchen Pierce

Gretchen Pierce (She/her/hers) Blog Post
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Gretchen Pierce is Associate Professor of Latin American History at Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania. She is the co-editor of Alcohol in Latin America: A Social and Cultural History (University of Arizona Press, 2014) with Áurea Toxqui, and has also published (or will soon publish) two articles, three book chapters, one encyclopedia article, and thirteen academic blog posts on temperance, beer, and advertising in Mexico. In addition to serving as an editor on H-LatAm and founding this blog, she is currently working on a book manuscript tentatively titled, “Altered States: Mexico’s

BLOG: Tallersol Cultural Centre: Memories of Resistance by Richard G. Smith

Gretchen Pierce (She/her/hers) Blog Post
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H-Latamist@s: I believe the system-upgrade bugs have been worked out and we are back to a regular publication schedule. While I have many blog posts in the queue, I am always looking for more. Now that many of us are back to school, we would love to know all about your summer research! Please contact Gretchen Pierce at gkpierce@ship.edu or at this Google Form if you would like to contribute for the good of the H-Latam community.

Richard Smith originally trained as a chemist before a career in consumer product innovation took him all over the world, including three fantastic years living in

Neter@s: Research Corner has been on hiatus while H-Net underwent an update and bugs were being fixed. However, I am still learning the new system, so please bear with me as the technical team and I work through issues that may still arise (you may have noticed all of the images that were uploaded separately for this post--previously that activity would not have appeared in your feeds). While waiting, I have accumulated a huge pile of blog posts to upload. Even still, I am soliciting new posts about your summer research! Please contact Gretchen Pierce at gkpierce@ship.edu or at this Google

BLOG: The Biblioteca Nacional del Perú’s Digitized Holdings by William Cohoon

Gretchen Pierce (She/her/hers) Blog Post
 
William Cohoon teaches upper school history at Trinity Valley School in Fort Worth, Texas, and earned his Ph.D. in colonial Latin American history at Texas Christian University. Recently, Historia y Cultura published his article “Intercambios predecibles: estandarización del servicio de correo real en el Perú borbónico,” which focuses the Bourbon monarchy’s desire to create a predictable and revenue generating postal service. For this article, he completed research at the Archivo General de la Nación del Perú and relied on digitized documents from the Biblioteca Nacional del
 

Attention Latin Americanist@s! I'm looking for more guest bloggers on Research Corner. Please check out my Call for Bloggers post. If you're interested, contact me at gkpierce@ship.edu or fill out this Google Form.

Douglas McRae is an urban environmental historian, and has researched the history of water and sanitation in São Paulo, Brazil. Douglas holds a BA from Middlebury College, an MA from Georgetown University in Latin American Studies, and a PhD in History from Georgetown University. He is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New

 

Attention Latin Americanist@s! I'm looking for more guest bloggers on Research Corner. Please check out my Call for Bloggers post. If you're interested, contact me at gkpierce@ship.edu or fill out this Google Form.

Douglas McRae is an urban environmental historian, and has researched the history of water and sanitation in São Paulo, Brazil. Douglas holds a BA from Middlebury College, an MA from Georgetown University in Latin American Studies, and a PhD in History from Georgetown University. He is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New