Miriam Jiménez Román Explained
Miriam Jiménez Román
(June 11, 1951 – August 6, 2020) was a Puerto Rican scholar, activist, and author on Afro-Latino culture, whose work is described as "without a doubt ... [making] an enormous contribution to the theoretical discussion surrounding Latinidad in the United States."[1] Her work on Afro-Latinidad was foundational to the field of cultural studies in that she developed programming, research, and spaces for the various Afro-Latino communities in the United States.Biography
Jiménez Román was born on June 11, 1951, in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. Miriam graduated from Manhattan's High School of Art and Design in 1969,[2] She was a visiting scholar in Africana Studies at New York University.[3] Along with her husband,[4] Juan Flores, she was co-editor of the Afro-Latin@ Studies Reader: History and Culture in the United States, a collection of essays, short stories, poetry, memoirs, interviews and writing on the Afro-Latino experience.[5] The work was described as "a corrective text that helps fill in crucial scholarly gaps" in a field, Afro-Latina/o studies, in which there is very little scholarship.[6] It "makes accessible ... a virtually ignored set of important contributions ... to the study of Afro-Latina/os", and, "makes a critical intervention in scholarship and public discourse about racial identities and the history and culture of U.S. Afro-Latina/o communities."[7] Jiménez Román and Flores received an American Book Award for The Afro-Latin@Reader in 2011.[8]
Her other publications included "Un hombre (negro) del pueblo: José Celso Barbosa and the Puerto Rican Race Towards Whiteness",[9] "Looking at that Middle Ground: Racial Mixing as Panacea?",[10] and "Triple-Consciousness? Approaches to Afro-Latino Culture in the United States."[11]
She was executive director of the Afrolatin@ forum from 2011 to 2020.[12] [13] She was also a member of the Black Latinas Know Collective[14] and a member of the advisory board for the Encyclopedia Africana.[15]
She was profiled on Remezcla as the first of "8 Afro Latinos Who Made Important Contributions to US History",[16] by Mitú as an "Afro-Latino Figure Who Changed The World For The Good",[17] and by Latina as one of "6 Afro-Latinas Who Are Changing the World!".[18]
Miriam Jiménez Román died of cancer at age 69 on August 6, 2020, in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico.[19]
External links
Notes and References
- News: Angola. Valerie. August 10, 2020. Remembering Miriam Jiménez Román, Pioneer Researcher of Gender & Race. Remezcla. 10 August 2020.
- Web site: Congress . The Library of . Jiménez Román, Miriam, 1951- - LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies Library of Congress, from LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies (Library of Congress) . 2023-01-19 . id.loc.gov.
- Web site: Book Launch and Celebration: Latinos in New York. August 9, 2020. Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.
- News: Juan Flores, a Scholar of Puerto Rican Culture in New York, Dies at 71. Paul . Vitello . The New York Times . 9 December 2014.
- Web site: Jiménez Román. Miriam. Flores. Juan. July 2010. The Afro-Latin@ Reader: History and Culture in the United States. August 8, 2020. Duke University Press.
- Review: The Afro-Latin@Reader: History and Culture in the United States by Miriam Jiménez Román, Juan Flores. Hurt . Erin. Pollard. Cherise A. . MELUS. 38 . 1 . 2013. 10.1093/melus/mls011 . 42001211 . 171–173. free.
- Rivera. Petra R . Triple Consciousness . Transition. 105. 2011 . 156–163. 10.2979/transition.105.156 . 10.2979/transition.105.156 .
- Web site: Press Release Aug. 9, 2011 - 2011 American Book Awards. Before Columbus Foundation. 11 August 2020.
- Jiménez Román, Miriam. "Un hombre (negro) del pueblo: José Celso Barbosa and the Puerto Rican Race Towards Whiteness." Center for Puerto Rican Studies, Volume 8, 1996.
- Jiménez Román, Miriam. "Looking at that Middle Ground: Racial Mixing as Panacea?" Wadabagei: A Journal of the Caribbean and its Diaspora 8, no. 1 (Winter, 2005): 65-79. .
- Triple-Consciousness? Approaches to Afro-Latino Culture in the United States . 10.1080/17442220903331662 . 2009 . Flores . Juan . Román . Miriam Jiménez . Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies . 4 . 3 . 319–328 . 144948747 .
- Web site: Leadership. 2020-08-09. afrolatin@forum. en.
- Web site: Jiménez Román. Miriam. Miriam Jimenez Roman Profile. August 8, 2020. Linkedin.
- Web site: Miriam Jiménez Román. 2020-08-09. BLKC. en.
- Web site: Advisory Board. 2020-08-09. Oxford African American Studies Center. en.
- Web site: 8 Afro Latinos Who Made Important Contributions to US History. . Jenay. Wright. 10 August 2020.
- Web site: Afro-Latino Figures Who Changed The World For The Good . Mitú . danielli . 12 February 2019. 10 August 2020.
- Web site: 6 Afro-Latinas Who Are Changing the World!. Latina. 2 February 2012. Damarys . Ocaña Perez. 11 August 2020.
- Web site: Miriam E. Jiménez Román (1951–2020) Perspectives on History AHA . 2023-01-19 . www.historians.org.