Event Date
🌟 Presented by Inclusive Excellence (Advancing Mentoring and the Professoriate initiative)
The Office of Advancing Mentoring and the Professoriate presents
President's Postdoctoral Fellowship Program Seminar Series featuring
Bernard Gordillo Brockmann
Visiting Scholar, University of California, Riverside
The Mission Soundscape: Church Bells, Spanish Colonization, and California Indians, 1769–Present
This talk explores a longue durée history of sound and the Spanish Franciscan missions in California. From 1769 to 1846, the cast suspended metal bell, or church bell, served as a crucial tool of the California mission system. Adapted from the Western European tradition, church bells with “sound and voice” defined the mission soundscape—shaping time, space, and discipline—in which California Indian peoples negotiated colonization. Much later, the mission bell came to represent “fantasy heritage” aesthetics of belonging for many Californians. Yet, more recently, California Indian truth-telling has sought to reckon with its legacies. For centuries, sound marked the power relations between Indigenous communities and newcomers in the Americas. Without the church bell, European colonization and its afterlives would have scarcely been possible.
About
Bernard Gordillo Brockmann, a native of Nicaragua, is a Visiting Scholar at the University of California, Riverside. He is a historian of the Americas, with an emphasis on culture, colonialism, and power. His current book project, Canto de Marte: Music, Culture, and US Intervention in Nicaragua, 1909–1933, is a history of Nicaragua that examines the cultural impact of early twentieth-century US political paternalism, fiscal and financial protectionism, and military occupation. The monograph is under contract with Oxford University Press. In development, his second monograph will be a history of sound and colonization in California. His research interests include sound and expressive culture in the Americas; US intervention in Latin America; the Cold War in Central America; and Spanish and Mexican California. More broadly, he is also interested in the history of Latin America and the United States as a mutually constitutive relationship. He serves as Central America area editor for the Oxford University Press Grove Dictionary of Latin American and Iberian Music. He has forthcoming journal articles in Ethnohistory and the Pacific Historical Review, as well as chapters in edited volumes with the University of California Press and Cambridge University Press. He holds a Ph.D. in Music (Musicology) from the University of California, Riverside. He recently completed a two-year appointment as a Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Scholar in the Department of History at the University of California, Los Angeles. He previously served as a Postdoctoral Associate and Lecturer at Yale University.
Check out the other series seminars:
KATHERINE ARIAS GARCĂŤA
Sloan Postdoctoral Fellow and former Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California, Irvine, School of Education
"Transforming Higher Education - Centering Cultural Assets of Latinx Premed Students"
January 20 • 12:00pm • Student Community Center, Room D
STEPHANIE KEENEY PARKS
Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of African American Studies, Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies, University of California, Los Angeles
Beyond the Clinic, Beyond the Classroom: Black Families Rewriting Possibility in Autism Care
January 28 • 12:00pm • King Hall, Room 1001
STEPHANIE SANDOVAL-PISTORIUS
Postdoctoral Scholar, Starr Lab, University of California, San Francisco
From Mutation to Modulation: Deep Brain Stimulation and Multiscale Dysfunction in Monogenic Parkinson’s Disease
February 18 • 12:00pm • 300 Aggie Square, Room 2220
MARIA JOSE ECHEVERRIA LANDETA
Assistant Professor, Civil Engineering, California State University, Sacramento
February 25 • 12:00pm • Student Community Center, Room D
More information soon.
DIEGO ELLIS SOTO
Postdoctoral Scholar, Environmental Science, Policy & Management, UC Berkeley
March 11 • 12:00pm • Student Community Center, Room D
More information soon.
DEBORAH SOUTHERN
Postdoctoral Scholar, School of Education and Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles
April 29 • 12:00pm • Student Community Center, Room D
More information soon.