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Dive into the research topics where Rina Benmayor is active.

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Featured researches published by Rina Benmayor.


Arts and Humanities in Higher Education | 2008

Digital Storytelling as a Signature Pedagogy for the New Humanities.

Rina Benmayor

This essay argues that digital storytelling is a hybrid, multimedia narrative form that enables critical and creative theorizing. As an assets-based social pedagogy, digital storytelling constructs a safe and empowering space for cross-cultural collaboration and learning. As illustration, the essay analyzes in detail one student story, using as primary evidence the story script, visual images from the digital story, and excerpts from a recorded interview with the author. It concludes that the process of digital story making and theorizing empowers and transforms students intellectually, creatively and culturally. Thus, digital storytelling can be seen as a signature pedagogy for the new Humanities in the 21st century.


Equity & Excellence in Education | 2012

Digital Testimonio as a Signature Pedagogy for Latin@ Studies

Rina Benmayor

This article proposes the curricular integration of digital testimonio as a “signature” pedagogy in Latin@ Studies. The testimonio tradition of urgent narratives and the creative multimedia languages of digital storytelling—text, voice, image, and sound—invite historically marginalized subjects, especially younger generations, to author and inscribe their own social and cultural truths. Taking inspiration from Latina writings, undergraduate students script, record, produce, publish, and theorize their own testimonios, building new knowledge from personal and collective experience. In this process, they construct historical and theoretical understandings of identity and belonging, reproducing and reinforcing the testimonial nexus between individual and collective story. For cyberspace generations, the digital multimedia format facilitates coming to voice. The claim for “signature” pedagogy is based on my 10-year experience with the digital storytelling genre, facilitating the creation of approximately 300 digital testimonios and their accompanying reflections.


Archive | 2001

Telling to Live: Latina Feminist Testimonios

Luz del Alba Acevedo; Norma Alarcon; Celia Saldívar-Hull; Ruth Behar; Rina Benmayor


Social Justice | 2002

Narrating Cultural Citizenship: Oral Histories of First-Generation College Students of Mexican Origin

Rina Benmayor


Social Justice | 2002

Digital Technologies and Pedagogies

Tracey Weis; Rina Benmayor; Cecilia O'Leary; Bret Eynon


Archive | 1992

Responses to poverty among Puerto Rican women identity, community, and cultural citizenship

Rina Benmayor; Rosa M. Torruellas; Ana Juarbe


Oral History Review | 1988

Stories to Live By: Continuity and Change in Three Generations of Puerto Rican Women

Rina Benmayor; Ana Juarbe; Blanca Vazquez Erazo; Celia Alvarez


Oral History Review | 1988

For Every Story there is Another Story Which Stands Before it

Rina Benmayor


Oral History Review | 2010

Contested Memories of Place: Representations of Salinas' Chinatown

Rina Benmayor


Archive | 2010

Case Study: Engaging Interpretation Through Digital Technologies

Rina Benmayor

Collaboration


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Ruth Behar

University of Michigan

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Bret Eynon

City University of New York

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Cecilia O'Leary

California State University

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Licia Fiol-Matta

City University of New York

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Tracey Weis

Millersville University of Pennsylvania

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