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Rubén Martínez

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Writer and performer, author of Crossing Over: A Mexican Family on the Migrant Trail and other books. Fletcher Jones Chair in Literature & Writing at Loyola Marymount University.

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An elderly man wearing a baseball hat and a face mask and carrying a cane gets a helping hand from a health worker wearing PPE inside a medical clinic with sunlight streaming through a row of windows
Rossana Pérez, healer and activist in the Salvadoran community of Los Angeles, talks about the transgenerational trauma among L.A.-based Central Americans that the COVID-19 pandemic exposed.
A black and white photo of Latinx men and women in suits and dresses gathered around a table at a restaurant, four sitting with eight standing
Natalia Molina, historian, author and MacArthur fellow, discusses gentrification and her family’s history of nurturing community as she attempts to highlight under-documented L.A. with her book, "A Place at the Nayarit."
A colorful spray-painted mural adorns a low wall on the side of a building, depicting an Asian man with white hair, a white mustache and black glasses and the words "JUSTICE FOR VICHA" and "#STANDFORASIANS"
Manjusha Kulkarni, co-founder of Stop AAPI Hate, talks about the surge in anti-Asian harassment and violence during the pandemic and the communities that are pushing back.
Panorama of El Sereno homes
Roberto Flores, co-founder of the Eastside Café, saw a potential solution to the housing crisis in the vacant state-owned homes of El Sereno. He draws on lessons from Indigenous communities in Chiapas to organize for community control and stable, dignified housing.
Protesters overtake the 101 freeway near downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday, May 27, 2020.
In the personal essay below, Rubén Martínez, host of Excavating the Future, reflects on individual and collective experiences over the past two years since the World Health Organization declared COVID a global pandemic on March 11, 2020.
Mobile Clinic Delivers Vaccine to Central American Indigenous Residents in Los Angeles
Odilia Romero, Co-Founder and Executive Director of Comunidades Indigenas en Liderazgo (CIELO), talks about how traditions of mutual aid have helped Indigenous immigrant communities survive the pandemic.
a new development photographed next to other smaller homes in Koreatown
Erin Aubry Kaplan explains how historically Black L.A. neighborhoods are pushing back against gentrification. She envisions using the pandemic's "pause" to shape a better future.
Protesters march holding placards and a portrait of George Floyd during a demonstration against racism and police brutality, in Hollywood, California.
Black Lives Matter co-founder Melina Abdullah shares how the past can inform efforts to reshape public safety.
The border between U.S. and Mexico in Tijuana, which is on the water.
MacArthur Fellow Cristina Rivera Garza spoke to us from her home in San Diego to contemplate the U.S.-Mexico border, something first conceived in the imagination — which means that the imagination can also be erase it.
Pacific Division Officer Hoskins tries to pry open the door of a truck involved in a accident that left the driver and passenger locked in the overturned vehicle. | Joseph Rodriguez
Joseph Rodriguez’s photographs of the LAPD in 1994 is a deeply personal, political act that still resonates in today’s political climate.
Martinez del Rio performance poster at Teatro Princesa | Courtesy of Rubén Martinez
In the spirit of variedades shows of early 20th century Mexican Los Angeles, writer Rubén Martínez and an eclectic crew of all-around bohemians have conceived of an unusual history lesson-slash-variety show you won't soon forget.
Rodney King
Rodney and Mike are existential neighbors, both subjects and critics of succeeding Western regimes of boom and bust and busted heads, of magical and haunted encounters with the land.
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