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Presented by: Rocio Carvajal Food anthropologist, culture & gastronomy educator.
Episode 85
This episode features a conversation with Dr Caroline Dodds Pennock about her latest book: On Savage Shores: How Indigenous Americans Discovered Europe combining a critical perspective that questions the historiography, narratives, and consequences of marginalizing the role of indigenous people in the colonial and post-colonial contexts, with a critical view of the complex history of Mexico's formation and the silenced voices and stories that continue to bleed through the cracks of power structures.
We talk about the challenges of writing historical narratives about indigenous travelers, the types of historical research will we be looking at in the future, and what are the obstacles that decolonial historical research has to tackle to diversify and enrich present and future scholarship.
Click HERE to see the full reading list & recommendations, many of which were mentioned during the conversation.
Contact Dr Caroline:
• Website: https://tinyurl.com/2qu8ln4q
• Twitter: https://twitter.com/carolinepennock
• Email: [email protected]
Works and projects featuring Dr Dodds:
Podcast episodes:
………………………………………………..
Twitter: twitter.com/chipotlepodcast + https://twitter.com/rocio_carvajalc
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rocio.carvajalc/
email: [email protected]
web: https://www.passthechipotle.com/
Youtube: https://tinyurl.com/y9ot9a57
Bookstand: https://payhip.com/RocioCarvajal
🎧 Check my other podcast: Hungry Books https://podfollow.com/hungry-books/view
By Rocio Carvajal4.8
2626 ratings
Presented by: Rocio Carvajal Food anthropologist, culture & gastronomy educator.
Episode 85
This episode features a conversation with Dr Caroline Dodds Pennock about her latest book: On Savage Shores: How Indigenous Americans Discovered Europe combining a critical perspective that questions the historiography, narratives, and consequences of marginalizing the role of indigenous people in the colonial and post-colonial contexts, with a critical view of the complex history of Mexico's formation and the silenced voices and stories that continue to bleed through the cracks of power structures.
We talk about the challenges of writing historical narratives about indigenous travelers, the types of historical research will we be looking at in the future, and what are the obstacles that decolonial historical research has to tackle to diversify and enrich present and future scholarship.
Click HERE to see the full reading list & recommendations, many of which were mentioned during the conversation.
Contact Dr Caroline:
• Website: https://tinyurl.com/2qu8ln4q
• Twitter: https://twitter.com/carolinepennock
• Email: [email protected]
Works and projects featuring Dr Dodds:
Podcast episodes:
………………………………………………..
Twitter: twitter.com/chipotlepodcast + https://twitter.com/rocio_carvajalc
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rocio.carvajalc/
email: [email protected]
web: https://www.passthechipotle.com/
Youtube: https://tinyurl.com/y9ot9a57
Bookstand: https://payhip.com/RocioCarvajal
🎧 Check my other podcast: Hungry Books https://podfollow.com/hungry-books/view

14,625 Listeners