Photo by Antonia Holton-Raphael
Intervenxions is an online publication of TLP that features original writings, criticism, and interviews exploring contemporary Latinx Art, Politics, & Culture.
“I’m A Mother, and I’m a Mother”: A Eulogy for Evelina, The Hell Lady of the Bronx
Commemorating the centennial of beloved Puerto Rican activist, organizer, and educator, Dr. Evelina López Antonetty.
“We Were There”: The Community Fires Back in La Manplesa: An Uprising Remembered (REVIEW)
A new, first-of-its-kind documentary chronicles the history of the 1991 uprising by the largely Salvadoran community in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood of Washington D.C.
Plantains, Garlic, Oil, and Sugar: The Sacred Family Dinner
On the history and significance of Chinese-Puerto Rican cuisine in Puerto Rico.
Plátano, ajo, aceite y azúcar: la cena familiar sagrada
Sobre la historia y la importancia de la comida china en Puerto Rico.
Animating Memory: Affective Touch & Corporeality in the Work of Camilo Godoy and Carlos Martiel
Together, the work of artists Camilo Godoy and Carlos Martiel capture the immediacy of generating and reanimating collective memory.
Making Mexican Chicago: Development, Displacement & the Mexicanization of the Urban Landscape
In his new book, Mike Amezcua offers readers a powerful account of the radical transformation of Chicago’s urban landscape during the second half of the 20th century.
Making Mexican Chicago: Desarrollo, desplazamiento y mexicanización del paisaje urbano
En su libro, Mike Amezcua nos ofrece un tour de force de la transformación radical del paisaje urbano de la ciudad de Chicago en la segunda mitad del siglo XX.
Exhibition Reviews
Book Reviews
Politics
Arts & Community
Queer Studies
Film & TV
Afro-Latinx Studies
All Posts
Submission & Editorial Guidelines
Intervenxions is an online publication of TLP that features original writings, criticism, and interviews exploring contemporary Latinx Art, Politics, & Culture. We accept pitches on a rolling basis.
Please read our submission guidelines to learn more.
Click here for the La Treintena open call for poetry books.
See our masthead here.