Dominicans In U.S. Subject of Special Issue of Journal 鈥楥amino Real鈥

First Time a Multidisciplinary Journal Devotes an Entire Issue to Dominican Studies

鈥淐amino Real,鈥 the journal of the Instituto Franklin of the University of Alcal谩, Spain, has published a special issue devoted to Dominican studies, a growing field in the United States focused on the study of people of Dominican ancestry.  This is the first time a multidisciplinary academic journal has published an entire issue devoted to the field.  Dr. Ramona Hern谩ndez, director of the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute (CUNY DSI), based at 海角社区, and Anthony Stevens-Acevedo, CUNY DSI assistant director, edited the issue.

鈥淭his monograph issue is an important recognition for the emerging field of Dominican studies and Dominicanists, as well as for the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute,鈥 said Dr. Hern谩ndez.  鈥淚t furthers CUNY DSI鈥檚 stature as the leading institution in the United States devoted to the study of people of Dominican ancestry.鈥  

The journal comes out at a time of significant demographic changes in the Dominican population in the United States.  Defined as people who trace their ancestry to the Dominican Republic, they have become one of the largest Latino immigrant groups in the country, numbering more than 1.4 million people.  Single women head more than one third of U.S. Dominican families, noted Dr. Hern谩ndez, a sociologist who focuses on labor and migration studies.

Additionally, there has been significant movement of Dominicans away from traditional Latino gateways such as New York City.  According to Dr. Hern谩ndez, 鈥淚n 1980, three out of four Dominicans living in the United States lived in New York. By the mid-2000s, that proportion had dropped to about half.鈥

These changes, combined with a growing second generation that is driving educational attainment and deepening Dominicans鈥 civic and cultural engagement, point to the community鈥檚 growing influence in the popular culture, politics, business, the arts and literature.

Dr. Hern谩ndez notes, however, that sparse attention is being paid to the study of the Dominican population in the United States.  Academic research continues to focus on the view of Dominicans as a 鈥渢ransnational鈥 migrant community, she adds.

鈥淲e want to move beyond the vast amount of literature on Dominicans as immigrants with one foot in the United States and the other in the Dominican Republic, and to offer new perspectives on the vibrant culture and society Dominicans have built in the United States.鈥

Dr. Hern谩ndez expressed hope that this special issue of 鈥淐amino Real鈥 augurs well for the future of Dominican studies.  鈥淚t is our hope that the broad range of topics and the multidisciplinary approach of the selected papers demonstrates the richness of the field and encourages new lines of inquiry,鈥 she said.  鈥淐ourses in Dominican history, culture, and society are still extremely rare in U.S. colleges and universities despite a very long history of political and cultural engagement between the United States and the Dominican Republic.鈥

Highlights of the articles that appear in the special issue:

  • Sarah Aponte provides a statistical analysis of the more than 600 doctoral dissertations published in the United States on Dominican-related topics since 1939;
  • Dr. Daisy Cocco de Filippis writes about the history of the tertulias (literary circles) of Dominican women writers in New York City;
  • Emilia Mar铆a Dur谩n Almarza provides a reading of playwright and poet Josefina B谩ez's performance text 鈥淒ominicanish;鈥
  • Ofelia Garc铆a and Lesley Bartlett write about the notions of 鈥渢rust鈥 and 鈥渃are鈥 in a Dominican-run high school for newly arrived immigrant youth in Washington Heights;
  • Sydney Hutchinson explores the musical influence of New York merengue bands on merengue t铆pico, which is the most folkloric expression of the merengue, the Dominican Republic鈥檚 national dance;
  • Juleyka Lantingua-Williams interviews Pulitzer prize-winning writer Junot D铆az;
  • Danny M茅ndez examines the racial and affective gaps in the New York memoirs of Pedro Henr铆quez Ure帽a; and,
  • Marisel Moreno writes about the Afro-Dominican identity of immigrant poets like Marianela Medrano and Sussy Santana.

The special issue is available on Instituto Franklin鈥檚 website by subscription:

About 鈥淐amino Real鈥濃
鈥淐amino Real鈥 is an official publication of the Instituto Franklin, established in 1987 as Centro de Estudios Norteamericanos, a university research institute of the University of Alcal谩, Spain.  鈥淐amino Real鈥 is a peer-reviewed and multidisciplinary publication, and is published twice a year, spring and fall.  It is divided into four sections - critical articles, interviews, reviews and creative writing - and includes articles that reflect the different sensibilities and peculiarities of the Hispanic world in the United States, including artistic, political, economic, sociological, cultural, literary and historical perspectives.

About Instituto Franklin
The Instituto Franklin is a research institute of the University of Alcal谩, Spain.  Its main mission is to serve as a cooperative and unifying communication platform between Spain and North America, with the goal of promoting mutual understanding.  The Instituto Franklin fulfills its mission by: fostering and nurturing the creation of groups of researchers in collaboration with different North American universities; offering official post-graduate training (master鈥檚 degrees and doctorates in North American Studies); disseminating the knowledge about North America through diverse publishing venues, and organizing academic meetings of national as well as international character on themes inherent to the mission of the Institute itself.鈥ㄢ

About the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute
Founded in 1992  at 海角社区, the Dominican Studies Institute of the City University of New York (CUNY DSI) is the nation鈥檚 first university-based research institute devoted to the study of people of Dominican descent in the United States and other parts of the world.  CUNY DSI鈥檚 mission is to produce and disseminate research and scholarship about Dominicans and about the Dominican Republic.  The Institute houses the Dominican Archives and the Dominican Library, the first and only institutions in the United States collecting primary and secondary source material about people of Dominican descent.   CUNY DSI is the locus for a community of scholars, including doctoral fellows, in the field of Dominican studies.  It sponsors multidisciplinary research projects and organizes lectures, conferences, and exhibitions that are open to the public.
 

CUNY DSI Contact
Altagracia Dilon茅 Levat, 347-739-7664,  alevat@ccny.cuny.edu

On the Internet:

CUNY Dominican Studies Institute

/ci/dsi/

Profile of Dr. Ramona Hern谩ndez
/ci/dsi/about/ramona-hernandez

鈥楥amino Real鈥欌


Instituto Franklin

MEDIA CONTACT

Ellis Simon
p: 212.650.6460
e: esimon@ccny.cuny.edu