Remezcla started as a grassroots project among writers and creatives to showcase new Latin music, culture, and events outside not receiving covering in major media outlets.
Radio Ambulante is a Spanish-language podcast, distributed by NPR, that tells Latin American stories from anywhere Spanish is spoken, including the United States. Though episodes are in Spanish, they provide transcriptions into English and sometimes Portuguese on their website. In 2014, Radio Ambulante was awarded the Gabriel García Márquez Prize for Innovation in Journalism, the most prestigious journalism honor in Latin America.
Latino USA is a nationally syndicated public radio program produced by The Futuro Media Group and distributed nationwide by National Public Radio. Its focus is Latinxs and Latin American immigrants in the U.S.
Produced by Alex Gutierrez, who has worked with Black communities in Latin America for more than 12 years. Episodes advocate for access to education, health and justice for all, and occasionally include guest speakers.
Podcast & trainings by "three Black Central American macheteras about Blackness beyond borders, life, politics, love, anti-blackness among Latines, kids & more."
Features hundreds of fully searchable newspapers published in the United States by Hispanics, 1890-1980. Part of America's Historical Newspapers series. Select Hispanic American Newspapers from drop-down menu next to search box.
Coverage of the Hispanic American experience from earliest times to today. Sourced from nearly 17,500 American and global newspapers, including almost 450 Hispanic American newspapers. Provides full-text searching as well as access to content by Topic, Event, and Eras in Hispanic American History.
The Tulane subscription consists of Series 1 (1704 – 1942) and Series 3 (2010 to today).
The Historic Mexican and Mexican American Press collection documents and showcases historic Mexican and Mexican American publications published in Tucson, El Paso, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Sonora, Mexico from the mid-1800s to the 1970s.
Library of Congress digitization project including many historical newspapers published in Spanish in the continental United States as well as in Puerto Rico.
Dedicated to locating, digitizing, and facilitating the access of nineteenth and mid-twenty periodicals from the U.S.-Mexico borderlands through a digital map and other data visualization platforms.
Palante (1970 - 1976) was a bilingual newspaper published by the Young Lords Party in New York City. Palante focused on the Puerto Rican independence movement, the oppression of Puerto Ricans and other Latinos in the United States, and global struggles for liberation.
The Latino-Hispanic American Experience: Leaders, Writers, and Thinkers covers thematic content focusing on the evolution of Hispanic civil rights, religious thought, and the growing presence of women writers from the late 19th and 20th centuries. Rare and relevant books and newspapers –including rare anarchist newspapers – are presented in their original form. Extensive manuscript collections of both organizations and individuals are included for viewing.
The Latin American Library provides access to news sources in a variety of formats, ranging from rare print copies of historical newspapers (18th century-1930s), print copies of contemporary newspapers (1940s-present), current newspapers subscriptions (such as the Granma International from Havana, Cuba) and access to full-text databases. Use this guide to explore LAL holdings.
Guide to contemporary and historical news sources and databases, including a bibliography of Spanish-language press in New Orleans dating back to the 19th century.