Donated Collection
Delia Negrón GarcÃa is the daughter of Delis Negrón and Adela Negrón. She was one of the plenary speakers at the dinner for the 25th Anniversary of Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage Program. During her talk she recited some poems of his father Delis Negrón. Collection: Recovery 25th Anniversary Conference Photographs Place: Houston, Texas Date: February 9-11, 2017 Subject headings: Delis Negrón, Delia Negrón, Plenary speaker Section:Donated Collection
Delia Negrón, daughter of Delis Negrón and Olivia Negrón, niece of Delis Negrón during their plenary talk at the dinner for the 25th Anniversary of Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage. Collection: Recovery 25th Anniversary Conference Photographs Place: Houston, Texas Date: February 9-11, 2017 Subject headings: Delia Negrón, Olivia Negrón, plenary speakers Section:Donated Collection
Explanation of Delis Negrón personal archive by family members Collection: Recovery 25th Anniversary Conference Photographs Place: Houston, Texas Date: February 9-11, 2017 Subject headings:Delis Negrón, personal archive, Negron's family Section:Donated Collection
Delia Negrón GarcÃa is the daughter of Delis Negrón and Adela Negrón. She was one of the plenary speakers at the dinner for the 25th Anniversary of Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage Program. During her talk she recited some poems of his father Delis Negrón. Collection: Recovery 25th Anniversary Conference Photographs Place: Houston, Texas Date: February 9-11, 2017 Subject headings: Delis Negrón, Delia Negrón, Plenary speaker Section:Donated Collection
The Delis Negrón Archive represents one of the many efforts led by Recovery to preserve and give visibility to the histories of the Latino population in the United States, a community that has been unrepresented in the social, cultural, political and historical areas of the United States.
This collection not only accesses a particular history of immigration and political involvement, but, in a broader sense, it is a step in the reconstruction of the intellectual history of Latinas and Latinos in the United States and their continuous contributions to the political, cultural, and social contingencies of the country.