During fall semester of 2010, I began taking students on five-day field trips to the Arizona–Mexico border. One part of these trips involves meeting with sound sculptor Glenn Weyant, who plays the border wall as a musical instrument. Weyant attaches contact microphones to the wall and plays it, sometimes bowing the steel structure with a cello bow, and other times playing it rhythmically with what he calls “instruments of mass percussion.
The border between the United States and Mexico is today and, since the signing of the Treaty of Gua...
The central research question underlying this project is ‘How to express in visual form, the music o...
The U.S.-Mexico borderlands have been variously described as a war zone, a land of opportunity, and ...
The following is an experiment in theory and practice, and is therefore divided into two parts. The ...
At a time of mass migration and growing xenophobia, what can we learn about the reception, incorpora...
The song, “Somos Mas Americanos” is a work of art, and every single one of its lyrics is tied to a h...
A play which illustrates Latin American immigrants' journey to cross the Arizona border is a testimo...
Scholarship on immigration detention centers as sites for musical exchange and identity formation re...
The complex relationship between people and places has increasingly become a subject of scholarly in...
In this research article, Cati V. de los Ríos examines US-Mexican transnational youths' engagement w...
The Canadian response to the political, cultural, and social crossing of American borders in Amigo's...
As part of our Migrations and Borderlands 360° course cluster, we brought the travelling photography...
Informed by experiential methodologies, this study demonstrates how those who engage in collective c...
In recent decades the volume of migration between Mexico and the United States has risen dramaticall...
This paper reviews current literature surrounding therapeutic work done with the migrant population ...
The border between the United States and Mexico is today and, since the signing of the Treaty of Gua...
The central research question underlying this project is ‘How to express in visual form, the music o...
The U.S.-Mexico borderlands have been variously described as a war zone, a land of opportunity, and ...
The following is an experiment in theory and practice, and is therefore divided into two parts. The ...
At a time of mass migration and growing xenophobia, what can we learn about the reception, incorpora...
The song, “Somos Mas Americanos” is a work of art, and every single one of its lyrics is tied to a h...
A play which illustrates Latin American immigrants' journey to cross the Arizona border is a testimo...
Scholarship on immigration detention centers as sites for musical exchange and identity formation re...
The complex relationship between people and places has increasingly become a subject of scholarly in...
In this research article, Cati V. de los Ríos examines US-Mexican transnational youths' engagement w...
The Canadian response to the political, cultural, and social crossing of American borders in Amigo's...
As part of our Migrations and Borderlands 360° course cluster, we brought the travelling photography...
Informed by experiential methodologies, this study demonstrates how those who engage in collective c...
In recent decades the volume of migration between Mexico and the United States has risen dramaticall...
This paper reviews current literature surrounding therapeutic work done with the migrant population ...
The border between the United States and Mexico is today and, since the signing of the Treaty of Gua...
The central research question underlying this project is ‘How to express in visual form, the music o...
The U.S.-Mexico borderlands have been variously described as a war zone, a land of opportunity, and ...