Learning with Maryland’s Immigrant Communities: Digital Storytelling as Community Engagement

Authors

Keywords:

community-engaged scholarship, digital humanities, higher education, immigration studies, critical intercultural communication

Abstract

In this article, we explore digital storytelling as a community-engaged pedagogy to create students’ immigration stories in Maryland as part of the project, “Intercultural Tales: Learning with Maryland's Immigrant Communities.†Stories highlight students’ lived experiences of immigration, language, and identity. By envisioning themselves and their classmates as community members, students and their stories challenge the assumption that the university is disconnected from local communities. In turn, this process of collaborative storytelling shapes teaching and learning as student-centered practices where it is possible to learn about immigration from inside and outside the classroom.

Author Biography

Thania Muñoz D., University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Dr. Thania Muñoz D. is an Assistant Professor of Spanish, Latin American literature and Latinx studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), core faculty of the INCC MA program, Affiliate Faculty of Language, Literacy and Culture and  Gender + Women’s, + Sexuality Studies. She is also the Co-Editor in Chief of Latino Literatures – A Cultural and Literary Journal. She received her Ph.D. at the University of California, Irvine in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese in 2015. Dr. Muñoz is interested in Spanish-language literature that focus on immigration from Latin America to the United States, from the 20th Century to the present.

 

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Published

03/14/2022

Issue

Section

Research and Theory