La codificación de la cosmovisión maya: Retos y oportunidades para investigadores indígenas en el Sur Global
Please join us on April 13, 2021, from 6-8:30 pm (EST) for a symposium on La codificación de la cosmovisión maya: Retos y oportunidades para investigadores indígenas en el Sur Global [1], sponsored by the Institute for Global Humanities and Cultures [2] and Multepal Project [3] at the University of Virginia. Click here to register [4]! Click here for a sharable poster [5].
Among the many challenges facing contemporary Indigenous communities in the Global South is language endangerment. In Mexico and Central America, state persecution, economic pressure, and barriers that reflect the deep legacies of colonialism led to precipitous declines in language learning among Maya youth throughout the twentieth century. These trends are exacerbated today by migration crises and the COVID-19 pandemic. In response, Indigenous researchers have created new strategies, transnational networks, and tools to meet young learners where they are: online. With a new approach to colonial archives, K’iche’, Q’eqchi’, Tz’utujil, and Yukatek collaborators at UVA’s Multepal Project are converting ancient texts like the Popol Wuj into digital tools to promote language acquisition, literacy, and cultural empowerment among youth in Mexico, Guatemala, and the diaspora.
Presenters will speak in Spanish, with English-language slides translated by UVA students enrolled in SPAN 4040 (Translation): Alisa Negrón Damsky, Natalie Axelrod, Lauren Mason, and Sarah Alverson. Audience members are invited to participate in English, Spanish, and Mayan languages.