Associated Products
Digital Stewardship and the Farmworker Movement: Preserving the Kouns and Clarke Archives at CSU Northridge (Public Lecture or Presentation)Title: Digital Stewardship and the Farmworker Movement: Preserving the Kouns and Clarke Archives at CSU Northridge
Abstract: As part of the Fourth Annual Jess Nieto Memorial Conference, last March 31, on César Chávez Day, Dr. José Luis Benavides, director of the Bradley Center presented the talk titled, “Digital Stewardship and the Farmworker Movement: Preserving the Kouns and Clarke Archives at CSU Northridge,” moderated by Dr. Oliver Rosales, professor of History at Bakersfield College.
Author: José Luis Benavides
Date: 03/31/2022
Location: Bakersfield College
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/SGGxt1VrmCUPrimary URL Description: the Annual Jess Nieto Memorial Conference Session 5
Digital Stewardship and the Farmworker Movement:
Preserving the Kouns and Clarke Archives at CSU Northridge
Dr. José Luis Benavides, Professor of Journalism and
Director of the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center at CSU Northridge
Moderated by Dr. Oliver Rosales, Professor of History at BC
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnPBhAB-bRKm1jN0cHdYqrASecondary URL Description: Bakersfield College Social Justice Institute YouTube Channel.
Farmworker Movement Collection (beta site) (Database/Archive/Digital Edition)Title: Farmworker Movement Collection (beta site)
Author: CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Images on the Farmworker Movement by American photographers Emmon Clarke and John Kouns. All images include bilingual metadata.
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://cdm17169.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/FMC/Primary URL Description: Images on the Farmworker Movement by American photographers Emmon Clarke and John Kouns. All images include bilingual metadata. The site to introduce this collection is still under construction, but users can browse the images we are uploading.
Secondary URL:
https://cdm17169.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/FMC/searchSecondary URL Description: Browse the images on the Farmworker Movement Collection by American photographers Emmon Clarke and John Kouns. All images include bilingual metadata.
Access Model: Open
Emmon Clarke speaks about his work (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Emmon Clarke speaks about his work
Writer: Kent Kirkton
Director: Kent Kirkton
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Photographer Emmon Clarke speaks about his work as a staff photographer for El Malcriado, the unofficial publication of the farmworkers. He talks about how he arrived in Delano in 1966 and was inspired by the struggle of farmworkers and wanted to document it.
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/9ptXTkrOfjsPrimary URL Description: Photographer Emmon Clarke speaks about his work as a staff photographer for El Malcriado, the unofficial publication of the farmworkers. He talks about how he arrived in Delano in 1966 and was inspired by the struggle of farmworkers and wanted to document it. The interview was conducted in 1995. (4:29 minutes)
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Farmworker Movement Collection. Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
John Kouns speaks about his work (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: John Kouns speaks about his work
Writer: Kent Kirkton
Director: Kent Kirkton
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Photographer John Kouns speaks about his work in this short interview. talks about photography as a "passport" to witness and capture important historical events—the Civil Rights struggle in the South and the Farmworker Movement in California. (6:19 minutes)
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/f8fWZp0S6zYPrimary URL Description: Photographer John Kouns speaks about his work in this short interview. talks about photography as a "passport" to witness and capture important historical events—the Civil Rights struggle in the South and the Farmworker Movement in California. (6:19 minutes)
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Dolores Huerta Interview, CSUN, 1995 (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Dolores Huerta Interview, CSUN, 1995
Writer: Rick Marks
Director: Kent Kirkton
Director: Rick Marks
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Journalism Professor Rick Marks interviewed Dolores Huerta in 1995 when she came to speak at CSUN, as part of the California Farm Workers Oral History Project. The project was sponsored by the CSUN Provost's Committee on Chicano/Labor History, the School of Humanities, the Urban Archives, and the Center for Photojournalism and Visual History (now the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center). Music and editing by Brandon Lien. Thumbnail photo by Emmon Clarke.
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/WZ35FJ27M-APrimary URL Description: Journalism Professor Rick Marks interviewed Dolores Huerta in 1995 when she came to speak at CSUN, as part of the California Farm Workers Oral History Project. The project was sponsored by the CSUN Provost's Committee on Chicano/Labor History, the School of Humanities, the Urban Archives, and the Center for Photojournalism and Visual History (now the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center). Music and editing by Brandon Lien. Thumbnail photo by Emmon Clarke (38:46 minutes).
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Eliseo Medina on why he joined the grape strike (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Eliseo Medina on why he joined the grape strike
Writer: José Luis Benavides
Director: Kent Kirkton
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Eliseo Medina tells the story of attending the union meeting on Sept. 16, 1965, when workers of the National Farm Worker Association decided to join the grape strike that Filipino workers started on Sept. 8. Medina, then a 19-year-old farmworker from Delano, tells about the excitement of that meeting as he listened first to Gilbert Padilla and César Chávez, and how César Chávez's speech convinced him to join the strike. (4:35 minutes)
Oral history interview conducted on May 17, 2022, by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides. Sound and video: Brandon Lien. Thumbnail photo of Eliseo Medina by Emmon Clarke.
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/DYIDi_Ot3IoPrimary URL Description: Eliseo Medina tells the story of attending the union meeting on Sept. 16, 1965, when workers of the National Farm Worker Association decided to join the grape strike that Filipino workers started on Sept. 8. Medina, then a 19-year-old farmworker from Delano, tells about the excitement of that meeting as he listened first to Gilbert Padilla and César Chávez, and how César Chávez's speech convinced him to join the strike. (4:35 minutes)
Oral history interview conducted on May 17, 2022, by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides. Sound and video: Brandon Lien. Thumbnail photo of Eliseo Medina by Emmon Clarke.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Liberated: Newsletter from the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center (Blog Post)Title: Liberated: Newsletter from the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Author: Joseph Silva
Author: Marta Valier
Author: Guillermo Márquez
Author: Keith Rice
Author: José Luis Benavides
Author: Gillian Morán-Pérez
Abstract: Liberated is a publication by the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center, CSUN. The Bradley Center has a collection of more than one million images and oral histories representing diverse communities. The archive contains one of the largest collections of African American photographers west of the Mississippi and the most extensive collection in Southern California. Our collections are housed digitally and in the University Library on the campus of California State University, Northridge. LIBERATED is one of the multiple platforms we use to disseminate our visual and aural history.
Date: 05/14/2021
Primary URL:
https://bradleycenterliberated.substack.com/Primary URL Description: The monthly newsletter, Liberated, informs friends, supporters, students, scholars, and the public in general about the activities of the Bradley Center. Also, we regularly showcase images from the photographic collections that the Center holds. We regularly include featured images and videos of the Farmworker Movement Collection, the Richard Cross Collection, and the African American Photographers' Collection, all projects supported by the National Endowment of the Humanities.
Julio and Fina Hernández and the founding of the NFWA (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Julio and Fina Hernández and the founding of the NFWA
Writer: José Luis Benavides
Director: Kent Kirkton
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Eliseo Medina and Kent Kirkton talked about Julio and Fina Hernández. Fina and Julio were founding members of the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) in 1962, and later co-founders of the United Farmworkers (UFW). Julio Hernández served on the executive board of the UFW. He was president of the Farm Workers Credit Union and vice-president of the UFW. Julio also was assigned to organize the grape boycott in Cleveland, Ohio, where he went with his family. (5:09)
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/dbdjgOJLT1cPrimary URL Description: Eliseo Medina and Kent Kirkton talked about Julio and Fina Hernández. Fina and Julio were founding members of the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) in 1962, and later co-founders of the United Farmworkers (UFW). Julio Hernández served on the executive board of the UFW. He was president of the Farm Workers Credit Union and vice-president of the UFW. Julio also was assigned to organize the grape boycott in Cleveland, Ohio, where he went with his family.
Oral history interview conducted on May 17, 2022, by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides
Sound and video: Brandon Lien
Thumbnail photo of Julio and his son Johnny by John Kouns. Foto of Fina Hernández by Emmon Clarke.
Additional footage of Mr. Julio Hernández is part of our archived historical videos, 1995.
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Dolores Huerta Speech at CSUN 1995 (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Dolores Huerta Speech at CSUN 1995
Writer: Kent Kirkton
Director: Kent Kirkton
Director: Jorge García
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Dolores Huerta came to speak at CSUN in 1995, as part of the California Farm Workers Oral History Project. The project was sponsored by the CSUN Provost's Committee on Chicano/Labor History, the School of Humanities, the Urban Archives, and the Center for Photojournalism and Visual History (now the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center). Music and editing by Brandon Lien. Thumbnail photo by Emmon Clarke © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center. (29:10)
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/QeXB4xFHz5UPrimary URL Description: Dolores Huerta came to speak at CSUN in 1995, as part of the California Farm Workers Oral History Project. The project was sponsored by the CSUN Provost's Committee on Chicano/Labor History, the School of Humanities, the Urban Archives, and the Center for Photojournalism and Visual History (now the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center). Music and editing by Brandon Lien. Thumbnail photo by Emmon Clarke © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center. (29:10)
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers: Photo Exhibition (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers: Photo Exhibition
Writer: José Luis Benavides
Director: José Luis Benavides
Director: Kent Kirkton
Director: Joseph Silva
Director: John Kouns
Director: Emmon Clarke
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Video with the images for the exhibition "Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers," The Soraya Art Gallery, CSUN. The photo exhibition “Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers” attempts to capture the duality of the struggle faced by farmworkers: hope for a better economic future for themselves and their families by creating a strong union, and dignity in their quest for being recognized as human beings and citizens. A union and civil rights struggle, as described by César Chávez during his speech of May 1968 in New York—only a month after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination in Memphis, where he supported sanitation workers who marched with signs that said, “I Am a Man.”
The exhibition focuses on the early years of the farmworkers’ struggle, marked by the grape strike, the boycott, the first march/pilgrimage from Delano to Sacramento, the early efforts to organize workers in Texas, and César Chávez’s fasting calling for nonviolence and sacrifice. It highlights portraits of some of the founders that came from the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA, 1962) and the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC, 1960). Both organizations merged in the fall of 1966 into the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee (UFWOC) and became the United Farm Workers of America (UFW, 1972) we all know today.
Photographer Emmon Clarke (1933) served seven months as a photographer for the union newspaper, El Malcriado, starting in October 1966. John Kouns (1929-2019) documented the Civil Rights struggle in the South and the Farmworker Movement.
Curators: Dr. Kent Kirkton and Joseph Silva. © CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center. (2:36)
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/qh6PgdxqhKMPrimary URL Description: Video with the images for the exhibition "Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers," The Soraya Art Gallery, CSUN. The photo exhibition “Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers” attempts to capture the duality of the struggle faced by farmworkers: hope for a better economic future for themselves and their families by creating a strong union, and dignity in their quest for being recognized as human beings and citizens. A union and civil rights struggle, as described by César Chávez during his speech of May 1968 in New York—only a month after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination in Memphis, where he supported sanitation workers who marched with signs that said, “I Am a Man.” (2:36)
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Luis Valdez: Teatro Campesino and Tortillería La Azteca (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Luis Valdez: Teatro Campesino and Tortillería La Azteca
Writer: Marta Valier
Director: Marta Valier
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Luis Valdez talks about Emmon Clarke's photographs at the Bradley Center showing El Teatro Campesino performers in front of Tortillería La Azteca in Delano. These photos were taken in the early fall, of 1966, after the DiGiorgio campaign in Delano, Lamont, and Borrego Springs. The performers are standing in front of Teatro Campesino's first storefront headquarters, located on the corner of Seventh and Ellington in Delano's westside. César Chávez agreed to let the performers have a separate office as they were also active in the farmworker movement. Beto Reyes, Eduardo "El Pirata" Del Rio, Roberto Román, Bob Fischer, Luis Valdez, Roy Valdez (no relation to Luis), Agustín Lira, and Felipe Cantú appeared in the photos. They were all founders of El Teatro Campesino in Delano. Daniel Valdez, brother of Luis Valdez, is not in these pictures. (3:19)
Interview by Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editing: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/Vu_dj7cWbxkPrimary URL Description: Luis Valdez talks about Emmon Clarke's photographs at the Bradley Center showing El Teatro Campesino performers in front of Tortillería La Azteca in Delano. These photos were taken in the early fall, of 1966, after the DiGiorgio campaign in Delano, Lamont, and Borrego Springs. The performers are standing in front of Teatro Campesino's first storefront headquarters, located on the corner of Seventh and Ellington in Delano's westside. César Chávez agreed to let the performers have a separate office as they were also active in the farmworker movement. Beto Reyes, Eduardo "El Pirata" Del Rio, Roberto Román, Bob Fischer, Luis Valdez, Roy Valdez (no relation to Luis), Agustín Lira, and Felipe Cantú appeared in the photos. They were all founders of El Teatro Campesino in Delano. Daniel Valdez, brother of Luis Valdez, is not in these pictures. (3:19)
Interview by Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editing: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Luis Valdez on Perelli Menudo at Berkeley (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Luis Valdez on Perelli Menudo at Berkeley
Writer: Marta Valier
Director: Marta Valier
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: In early 1967, El Teatro Campesino points performed at Berkely some of the early "actos," including the 1966 Perilli Minetti (Menudo) Acto. It depicts the farmworkers' struggle against one of the main Delano growers, Fred Perelli-Minetti. Photographer Emmon Clarke documented this performance and published some of these photos in El Malcriado. The involvement of the American consumer in the boycott was one of the key weapons in the farmworkers' non-violent struggle. "To many of you, these actos may seem to be satire," said Luis Valdez to the audience that night at Berkeley, "but, in the eyes of the farm workers these are the realities." (3:12)
Interview by Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editing: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/mBIpxTUM5WwPrimary URL Description: In early 1967, El Teatro Campesino points performed at Berkely some of the early "actos," including the 1966 Perilli Minetti (Menudo) Acto. It depicts the farmworkers' struggle against one of the main Delano growers, Fred Perelli-Minetti. Photographer Emmon Clarke documented this performance and published some of these photos in El Malcriado. The involvement of the American consumer in the boycott was one of the key weapons in the farmworkers' non-violent struggle. "To many of you, these actos may seem to be satire," said Luis Valdez to the audience that night at Berkeley, "but, in the eyes of the farm workers these are the realities." (3:12)
Interview by Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editing: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Luis Valdez: Performing "Papelacción" at Union Meeting (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Luis Valdez: Performing "Papelacción" at Union Meeting
Writer: Marta Valier
Director: Marta Valier
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Luis Valdez talks about an early performance of the 1965 Acto: "Papelacción" (Paperaction) during a Friday union meeting in Delano. César Chávez and Rev. Jim Drake are seated at the front enjoying the performance. Santos Díaz, a member of Teatro who didn't stay long, shares the tiny performance space with Felipe Cantú, Agustín Lira, Gilbert Rubio, and Luis Valdez. Díaz and Cantú collaborated in the creation of the song "Llegando a los Files." (3:35)
Interview: Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editor: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by John Kouns. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/jmqYmpKpftMPrimary URL Description: Luis Valdez talks about an early performance of the 1965 Acto: "Papelacción" (Paperaction) during a Friday union meeting in Delano. César Chávez and Rev. Jim Drake are seated at the front enjoying the performance. Santos Díaz, a member of Teatro who didn't stay long, shares the tiny performance space with Felipe Cantú, Agustín Lira, Gilbert Rubio, and Luis Valdez. Díaz and Cantú collaborated in the creation of the song "Llegando a los Files."
Interview: Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editor: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by John Kouns. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Luis Valdez on Performing Governor Brown (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Luis Valdez on Performing Governor Brown
Writer: Marta Valier
Director: Marta Valier
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: On the march to Sacramento, Teatro Campesino performed the Acto: Governor Brown (1966), who refused to meet the marchers in Sacramento and decided to spend the weekend instead at Frank Sinatra's home in Palm Springs. Luis Valdez tells the story of this Acto, performed here by Agustín Lira (Governor Brown), Beto Reyes (Delano Rekord), Felipe Cantú (Bank of Amerika), Errol Franklin (Zaninovich), and Luis Valdez (Di Gorgio Fruit Corp.). (4:04)
Interview: Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editing: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by John Kouns. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/Pto4hfDP45gPrimary URL Description: On the march to Sacramento, Teatro Campesino performed the Acto: Governor Brown (1966), who refused to meet the marchers in Sacramento and decided to spend the weekend instead at Frank Sinatra's home in Palm Springs. Luis Valdez tells the story of this Acto, performed here by Agustín Lira (Governor Brown), Beto Reyes (Delano Rekord), Felipe Cantú (Bank of Amerika), Errol Franklin (Zaninovich), and Luis Valdez (Di Gorgio Fruit Corp.). (4:04)
Interview: Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editing: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by John Kouns. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Luis Valdez: Las dos caras de Patroncito (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Luis Valdez: Las dos caras de Patroncito
Writer: Marta Valier
Director: Marta Valier
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: In Berkeley, Teatro Campesino performed the Acto: Las dos caras de Patroncito [The Two Sides of Little-Boss] (1965). Luis Valdez is playing the Patroncito, Roy Valdez the police officer, and Agustín Lira the farmworker and strikebreaker. The act shows a farmworker swapping roles with his employer. The boss is wearing a pig mask. He is complaining about all of the responsibilities of his wealthy life and he suggests switching places with his employee. The farmworker agrees, enjoys his new powers, and exploits his boss. When the boss wants to get back his status, the farmworker refuses. Desperate, the boss calls other farmworkers for help and ends up calling for a strike. (2:02)
Interview: Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editing: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/KokpY3sYyrsPrimary URL Description: In Berkeley, Teatro Campesino performed the Acto: Las dos caras de Patroncito [The Two Sides of Little-Boss] (1965). Luis Valdez is playing the Patroncito, Roy Valdez the police officer, and Agustín Lira the farmworker and strikebreaker. The act shows a farmworker swapping roles with his employer. The boss is wearing a pig mask. He is complaining about all of the responsibilities of his wealthy life and he suggests switching places with his employee. The farmworker agrees, enjoys his new powers, and exploits his boss. When the boss wants to get back his status, the farmworker refuses. Desperate, the boss calls other farmworkers for help and ends up calling for a strike. (2:02)
Interview: Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editing: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Luis Valdez: Doña Sotaca (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Luis Valdez: Doña Sotaca
Writer: Marta Valier
Director: Marta Valier
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Luis Valdez talks about an early performance of an unwritten Acto with Clarisse Luna performing the role of Doña Sotaca, Felipe Cantú playing her husband, Don Sotaco, Danny Valdez playing Sotaco Jr., Doug Rippey playing La Jura, Agustín Lira playing Vecino, and Luis Valdez playing UFWOC. (1:35)
Interview: Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editor: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by John Kouns. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/FhO5YZ8uQ28Primary URL Description: Luis Valdez talks about an early performance of an unwritten Acto with Clarisse Luna performing the role of Doña Sotaca, Felipe Cantú playing her husband, Don Sotaco, Danny Valdez playing Sotaco Jr., Doug Rippey playing La Jura, Agustín Lira playing Vecino, and Luis Valdez playing UFWOC. (1:35)
Interview: Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editor: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by John Kouns. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Luis Valdez talks about winter picketing (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Luis Valdez talks about winter picketing
Writer: Marta Valier
Director: Marta Valier
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Luis Valdez talks about his experience during the winter picket season with the National Farm Workers Association. Valdez talks about the conflicting demands of farmworkers, who wanted to support the strike yet they had to find ways of earning a living. (1:42)
Interview by Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editor: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by John Kouns. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/Z3paAbGTsIEPrimary URL Description: Luis Valdez talks about his experience during the winter picket season with the National Farm Workers Association. Valdez talks about the conflicting demands of farmworkers, who wanted to support the strike yet they had to find ways of earning a living. (1:42)
Interview by Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editor: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by John Kouns. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
César Chávez's 40th Birthday Serenade (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: César Chávez's 40th Birthday Serenade
Writer: Marta Valier
Director: Marta Valier
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: In the early morning of March 31, 1967, César Chávez's 40th birthday, a group of NFWA volunteers and organizers (which included Doug Adair, Marcia Brooks, Joe Otero, Doug Rippey, Marion Moses, Daniel Valdez, Agustín Lira, and Rodney Freeland) played a serenade outside of Chávez house in Delano. Luis Valdez talks about this day while looking at photographs by Emmon Clarke, then photo editor of El Malcriado. (1:49)
Interview by Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editor: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/xdMYomveN20Primary URL Description: In the early morning of March 31, 1967, César Chávez's 40th birthday, a group of NFWA volunteers and organizers (which included Doug Adair, Marcia Brooks, Joe Otero, Doug Rippey, Marion Moses, Daniel Valdez, Agustín Lira, and Rodney Freeland) played a serenade outside of Chávez house in Delano. Luis Valdez talks about this day while looking at photographs by Emmon Clarke, then photo editor of El Malcriado. (1:49)
Interview by Marta Valier and José Luis Benavides
Editor: Marta Valier
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Filipino American Delano Tour (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Filipino American Delano Tour
Writer: Brandon Lien
Director: Marta Valier
Director: Brandon Lien
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: Last January, Marta Valier, Brandon Lien, and José Luis Benavides went to Delano for a guided tour of Filipino American Delano. Our guides were Roger Gadiano and Alex Edillor, members of the Filipino American National Historical Society/Delano Chapter. We visited Filipino Hall, Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Abayani Village, Forty Acres, and the cemetery, Larry Itliong's resting place. (9:15)
Video producer and editor: Brandon Lien
Music courtesy of Yolanda Barrera
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/NvH3H4X1VwUPrimary URL Description: Last January, Marta Valier, Brandon Lien, and José Luis Benavides went to Delano for a guided tour of Filipino American Delano. Our guides were Roger Gadiano and Alex Edillor, members of the Filipino American National Historical Society/Delano Chapter. We visited Filipino Hall, Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Abayani Village, Forty Acres, and the cemetery, Larry Itliong's resting place. (9:15)
Video producer and editor: Brandon Lien
Music courtesy of Yolanda Barrera
Farmworker Movement Collection. Photos by Emmon Clarke. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Farmworker Oral History Dramatization Project—the process (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Farmworker Oral History Dramatization Project—the process
Writer: José Luis Benavides
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: The Bradley Center has been working with a team of talented media and performing arts students and their professors to bring the excitement of oral histories to a younger audience by dramatizing some oral history segments and using photographs from our Farmworker Movement Collection. Theatre Professor Doug Kaback directed a group of acting students and Art Professor Joe Bautista put together a talented group of film students to tape and edit the video pieces. It also helped us that the chair of the Department of Cinema, Television, and Visual Arts, Jared Rappaport, allowed us to use their TV studio to record them. We offer you here a few clips to show you how students are creating an innovative oral history dramatization project that we plan to feature on our website for the Farmworker Movement Collection. This will show you the process and not the final product. We are still working on it. (6:05)
Actors in these segments are Eileen Ávalos, Alejandra Guzmán, Ruby Hernández, and Aldeir Vázquez. Other actors: Nicolás Guerrero and Jesús Venegas Vázquez. The video team included: Joe Bernhardt, Brian Boyanov, Nathan McMackin, and Michael Prieto. Image curation by Marta Valier, editing by Josh Mortenson. Professor Doug Kaback served as a film director, and Professors Joe Bautista and Shally Juárez provided technical support. CTVA Television Studio. CSUN, 2023. © Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/hj4DqGi8Z1kPrimary URL Description: The Bradley Center has been working with a team of talented media and performing arts students and their professors to bring the excitement of oral histories to a younger audience by dramatizing some oral history segments and using photographs from our Farmworker Movement Collection. Theatre Professor Doug Kaback directed a group of acting students and Art Professor Joe Bautista put together a talented group of film students to tape and edit the video pieces. It also helped us that the chair of the Department of Cinema, Television, and Visual Arts, Jared Rappaport, allowed us to use their TV studio to record them. We offer you here a few clips to show you how students are creating an innovative oral history dramatization project that we plan to feature on our website for the Farmworker Movement Collection. This will show you the process and not the final product. We are still working on it. (6:05)
Actors in these segments are Eileen Ávalos, Alejandra Guzmán, Ruby Hernández, and Aldeir
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Luis Valdez: Aesthetics of El Teatro Campesino (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Luis Valdez: Aesthetics of El Teatro Campesino
Writer: Joe Bernhart
Director: Hunter Hawkins
Director: José Luis Benavides
Producer: Tom and Ethel Bradley Center
Abstract: On March 15, 2023, acclaimed Chicano playwright and filmmaker, Luis Valdez, discussed, with Theatre professor Jorge Huerta, Valdez’s career and his new book, Theatre of the Sphere: The Vibrant Being—an actor’s guide that fuses ancient Mayan and contemporary Western performance aesthetics within an interdisciplinary framework. Carmen Ramos Chandler served as moderator for the event. California State University, Northridge. This is an edited and closed-captioned version of the event. (1:19:07)
Film Team: Hunter Hawkins (director), Joseph Bernhardt (lead editor), Will McDonald, Andrew Suárez, Joyfiana Suryakusuma, Brandon Lien (cinematographers).
Faculty advisors: Joe Bautista, José Luis Benavides, Doug Kaback.
Tom and Ethel Bradley Center: Brandon Lien, Joseph Silva, and Marta Valier.
Sponsors: The Diversity & Equity Innovation Grant of the President’s Commission on Diversity & Inclusion; the University Student Union; Graduate Studies Distinguished Visiting Speakers Program; the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center, the Departments of Theatre, Chicana and Chicano Studies, Cinema and Television Arts, and Journalism; the University Library, the Mike Curb College of Arts, Media, and Communication, the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/c0i5ToNgETgPrimary URL Description: On March 15, 2023, acclaimed Chicano playwright and filmmaker, Luis Valdez, discussed, with Theatre professor Jorge Huerta, Valdez’s career and his new book, Theatre of the Sphere: The Vibrant Being—an actor’s guide that fuses ancient Mayan and contemporary Western performance aesthetics within an interdisciplinary framework. Carmen Ramos Chandler served as moderator for the event. California State University, Northridge. This is an edited and closed-captioned version of the event. (1:19:07)
Film Team: Hunter Hawkins (director), Joseph Bernhardt (lead editor), Will McDonald, Andrew Suárez, Joyfiana Suryakusuma, Brandon Lien (cinematographers).
Faculty advisors: Joe Bautista, José Luis Benavides, Doug Kaback.
Tom and Ethel Bradley Center: Brandon Lien, Joseph Silva, and Marta Valier.
Sponsors: The Diversity & Equity Innovation Grant of the President’s Commission on Diversity & Inclusion; the University Student Union; Graduate Studies Distinguished Visiting Speakers Program; the Tom and
Access Model: Open
Format: Video
Format: Digital File
Format: Web
Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers (Exhibition)Title: Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers
Curator: Kent Kirkton
Curator: Joseph Silva
Abstract: The exhibition captures the duality of the struggle faced by farmworkers—hope for a better economic future for themselves and their families by creating a strong union, and dignity in their quest for being recognized as human beings and citizens. The exhibition focuses on the early years of the farmworkers’ struggle, marked by the grape strike, the boycott, the first march/pilgrimage from Delano to Sacramento, the early efforts to organize workers in Texas, and César Chávez’s fasting calling for nonviolence and sacrifice.
Year: 2022
Primary URL:
https://www.thesoraya.org/visit/artgallery/hope-and-dignity-for-farmworkers/Primary URL Description: The photo exhibition “Hope and Dignity for Farmworkers” attempts to capture the duality of the struggle faced by farmworkers: hope for a better economic future for themselves and their families by creating a strong union, and dignity in their quest for being recognized as human beings and citizens. A union and a civil rights struggle, as described by César Chávez during his speech of May 1968 in New York—only a month after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination in Memphis, where he supported sanitation workers who marched with signs that said, “I Am a Man.” The exhibition focuses on the early years of the farmworkers’ struggle, marked by the grape strike, the boycott, the first march/pilgrimage from Delano to Sacramento, the early efforts to organize workers in Texas, and César Chávez’s fasting calling for nonviolence and sacrifice. Curators: Dr. Kent Kirkton and Joseph Silva. CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center.
Luis Valdez: Aesthetics of El Teatro Campesino (Public Lecture or Presentation)Title: Luis Valdez: Aesthetics of El Teatro Campesino
Abstract: Luis Valdez, acclaimed Chicano playwright and filmmaker, discussed his career and his new book, Theatre of the Sphere: The Vibrant Being—an actor’s guide that fuses ancient Mayan and contemporary Western performance aesthetics within an interdisciplinary framework. The book is also an insight into the unique aesthetic process of Teatro Campesino—from shows staged on the backs of flatbed trucks by the participants in the Delano Grape Strike of the 1960s to international hits like the 1979 play Zoot Suit, the first Latino-authored play to appear on Broadway. The event was accompanied by a display of dozens of images by photojournalists John Kouns and Emmon Clarke, as part of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center’s Farmworker Movement Collection. 400 people attended the event.
Author: Luis Valdez
Author: Jorge Huerta
Date: 03/15/2023
Location: CSUN Campus Theatre
Primary URL:
https://library.csun.edu/events/luis-valdezPrimary URL Description: Luis Valdez, acclaimed Chicano playwright, and filmmaker, will discuss, with Theatre professor Jorge Huerta, Valdez’s career and his new book, Theatre of the Sphere: The Vibrant Being—an actor’s guide that fuses ancient Mayan and contemporary Western performance aesthetics within an interdisciplinary framework.
The book is also an insight into the unique aesthetic process of Teatro Campesino—from shows staged on the backs of flatbed trucks by the participants in the Delano Grape Strike of the 1960s to international hits like the 1979 play Zoot Suit, the first Latino-authored play to appear on Broadway. Teatro Campesino served as the catalyst for the first Chicano Theatre Festival in Fresno (1970) and as the avant-garde of a young, creative, and politically engaged Chicano theatre that bloomed in California and across the country. Valdez’s now classic films, Zoot Suit (1981) and La Bamba (1987) also helped shape the first wave of Chicanx-Latinx filmmakers that paved the way for others
Oral Histories, Photographs, and Metadata (Article)Title: Oral Histories, Photographs, and Metadata
Author: Cybele Garcia Kohel
Abstract: First-person experience of doing an internship at the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center learning about bilingual (English or Spanish) oral histories and the creation of bilingual (English and Spanish) metadata for the Farmworker Movement Collection.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/saasc_archeota/18/Primary URL Description: Archeota is a platform for SJSU iSchool students to contribute to the archival conversation. It is written BY students, FOR students. It provides substantive content on archival concerns and issues and promotes professional development in the field of archival studies. Archeota upholds the core values of the archival profession.
Oral Histories, Photographs, and Metadata: An Internship at the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center By Cybele Garcia Kohel, pp. 18-19
Access Model: Open
Format: Journal
Periodical Title: Archeota
Publisher: San José State University Scholarworks
CSUN Farmworker Oral history Dramatization. Part 1: Joining the Union (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: CSUN Farmworker Oral history Dramatization. Part 1: Joining the Union
Writer: Marta Valier
Writer: Dog Kaback
Director: Doug Kaback
Producer: Joe Bautista
Producer: JOSÉ LUIS BENAVIDES
Abstract: This film series, directed by Doug Kaback, is a dramatization of selected segments of several oral histories of participants of the Farmworker Movement. It uses photographs by Emmon Clarke and John Kouns as a background to the actors's monologues, providing visual context to the stories. In Part 1, Bobby de la Cruz (Jesús Venegas Vázquez) tells how he and his mother, Jessie de la Cruz, joined the movement.; Carmen Hernández (Alejandra Guzmán) tells how all her siblings did chores to help her parents, Fina and Julio, who were active in the union; the Saludado sisters, María and Antonia, (Ruby Hernández and Eileen Ávalos) recount their experience working in the fields and why their family joined the union. Joe Serda (Aldeir Vázquez) explains how his family experience in the fields and his daughter's activism made him realize he needed to join the union.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/thtFK_Sn9d4Primary URL Description: This film series, directed by Doug Kaback, is a dramatization of selected segments of several oral histories of participants of the Farmworker Movement. It uses photographs by Emmon Clarke and John Kouns as a background to the actors's monologues, providing visual context to the stories. In Part 1, Bobby de la Cruz (Jesús Venegas Vázquez) tells how he and his mother, Jessie de la Cruz, joined the movement.; Carmen Hernández (Alejandra Guzmán) tells how all her siblings did chores to help her parents, Fina and Julio, who were active in the union; the Saludado sisters, María and Antonia, (Ruby Hernández and Eileen Ávalos) recount their experience working in the fields and why their family joined the union. Joe Serda (Aldeir Vázquez) explains how his family experience in the fields and his daughter's activism made him realize he needed to join the union.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open Access
Format: Video
CSUN Farmworker Oral History Dramatization Part 2: Becoming an Organizer (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: CSUN Farmworker Oral History Dramatization Part 2: Becoming an Organizer
Writer: Doug Kaback
Director: Doug Kaback
Producer: Joe Bautista
Producer: Jose Luis Benavides
Abstract: This film series, directed by Doug Kaback, is a dramatization of selected segments of several oral histories of participants of the Farmworker Movement. It uses photographs by Emmon Clarke and John Kouns as a background to the actors's monologues, providing visual context to the stories. In Part 2, the Saludado sisters, María and Antonia (Ruby Hernández and Eileen Ávalos), remember the beginning of the strike and how they became non-violent organizers. Joe Serda (Aldeir Vázquez) explains how he organized workers to join the union and to get information from the company. Carmen Hernández (Alejandra Guzmán) tells how her entire family managed to survive with union support and participate in the strike at the same time.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/QX-A68jx6bAPrimary URL Description: This film series, directed by Doug Kaback, is a dramatization of selected segments of several oral histories of participants of the Farmworker Movement. It uses photographs by Emmon Clarke and John Kouns as a background to the actors's monologues, providing visual context to the stories. In Part 2, the Saludado sisters, María and Antonia (Ruby Hernández and Eileen Ávalos), remember the beginning of the strike and how they became non-violent organizers. Joe Serda (Aldeir Vázquez) explains how he organized workers to join the union and to get information from the company. Carmen Hernández (Alejandra Guzmán) tells how her entire family managed to survive with union support and participate in the strike at the same time.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
CSUN Farmworker Oral History Dramatization. Part 3: The Action (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: CSUN Farmworker Oral History Dramatization. Part 3: The Action
Writer: Doug Kaback
Director: Doug Kaback
Producer: Joe Bautista
Producer: Jose Luis Benavides
Abstract: This film series, directed by Doug Kaback, is a dramatization of selected segments of several oral histories of participants of the Farmworker Movement. It uses photographs by Emmon Clarke and John Kouns as a background to the actors's monologues, providing visual context to the stories. In Part 3, Carmen Hernández (Alejandra Guzmán) tells how she abandoned school but found her path working for the union, which became a source of community strength for working families; Bobby de la Cruz (Jesús Venegas Vázquez) tells how he organized a grape boycott at the cafeteria of Fresno City College and joined his mother to picket in front of Safeway's headquarters in San Francisco; Richard Chávez (Nicolás Guerrero) explains the spiritual philosophy of his brother César so he could help bring about change and the grape boycott's 58-month journey to the signing of the contracts.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/g3pRCnaQRRkPrimary URL Description: This film series, directed by Doug Kaback, is a dramatization of selected segments of several oral histories of participants of the Farmworker Movement. It uses photographs by Emmon Clarke and John Kouns as a background to the actors's monologues, providing visual context to the stories. In Part 3, Carmen Hernández (Alejandra Guzmán) tells how she abandoned school but found her path working for the union, which became a source of community strength for working families; Bobby de la Cruz (Jesús Venegas Vázquez) tells how he organized a grape boycott at the cafeteria of Fresno City College and joined his mother to picket in front of Safeway's headquarters in San Francisco; Richard Chávez (Nicolás Guerrero) explains the spiritual philosophy of his brother César so he could help bring about change and the grape boycott's 58-month journey to the signing of the contracts.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Eliseo Medina Oral History Interview (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Eliseo Medina Oral History Interview
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: JOSÉ LUIS BENAVIDES
Director: Kent Kirkton
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Eliseo Medina tells the story of his participation in the farmworker movement as a striker, volunteer, and organizer of the National Farm Workers Association and later of the United Farm Workers. This is the first of two oral history interviews. It was conducted on May 17, 2022, by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/GiudGAE7smYPrimary URL Description: Eliseo Medina tells the story of his participation in the farmworker movement as a striker, volunteer, and organizer of the National Farm Workers Association and later of the United Farm Workers. This is the first of two oral history interviews. It was conducted on May 17, 2022, by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Eliseo Medina on Typhoid Epidemic & Slavery in Florida (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Eliseo Medina on Typhoid Epidemic & Slavery in Florida
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Kent Kirkton
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Under the headline "Slavery Ain't Dead," an April 6, 1973 story in the farmworker newspaper "El Malcriado" reported from Homestead, Florida: "With the state still
feeling the effects of the typhoid epidemic
that hit farm workers here recently, another
farm labor scandal has hit Dade County—this
time the virtual slavery of farm workers by
'crew leaders,' the Florida counterpart to
the California labor contractor." Eliseo Medina recounts these events in this clip of the oral history conducted by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/RTH0WhpwVrUPrimary URL Description: Under the headline "Slavery Ain't Dead," an April 6, 1973 story in the farmworker newspaper "El Malcriado" reported from Homestead, Florida: "With the state still
feeling the effects of the typhoid epidemic
that hit farm workers here recently, another
farm labor scandal has hit Dade County—this
time the virtual slavery of farm workers by
'crew leaders,' the Florida counterpart to
the California labor contractor." Eliseo Medina recounts these events in this clip of the oral history conducted by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Eliseo Medina on the UFW Strategies against La Migra (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Eliseo Medina on the UFW Strategies against La Migra
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Kent Kirkton
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Eliseo Medina recalls the UFW strategies against La Migra in Oxnard to prevent the growers from using the Border Patrol as an anti-union force. This is a segment of the second oral history interview conducted by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/-O-BKItNFDQPrimary URL Description: Eliseo Medina recalls the UFW strategies against La Migra in Oxnard to prevent the growers from using the Border Patrol as an anti-union force. This is a segment of the second oral history interview conducted by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Eliseo Medina on the Legacy of the Farmworker Movement (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Eliseo Medina on the Legacy of the Farmworker Movement
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Kent Kirkton
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Eliseo Medina talks about the complex legacy of the Farmworker Movement in this final segment of the second oral history interview conducted by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/rT3C8f853XEPrimary URL Description: Eliseo Medina talks about the complex legacy of the Farmworker Movement in this final segment of the second oral history interview conducted by Kent Kirkton and José Luis Benavides.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Yolanda Barrera on Family, Music, and the Farmworker Movement (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Yolanda Barrera on Family, Music, and the Farmworker Movement
Writer: Marta Valier
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Marta Valier
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: David Grewe
Producer: Brandon Lien
Producer: David Grewe
Abstract: Yolanda Barrera talks about the role of music in her family and the Farmworker Movement. She starts in Texas, their migration to Proterville, and the family's role in the first March to Sacramento. This oral history interview was conducted by José Luis Benavides, Marta Valier, and David Grewe.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/so5orX3HCIYPrimary URL Description: Yolanda Barrera talks about the role of music in her family and the Farmworker Movement. She starts in Texas, their migration to Proterville, and the family's role in the first March to Sacramento. This oral history interview was conducted by José Luis Benavides, Marta Valier, and David Grewe.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Yolanda Barrera on Applying to College as a Child of Farm Workers (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Yolanda Barrera on Applying to College as a Child of Farm Workers
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Marta Valier
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: David Grewe
Producer: Brandon Lien
Producer: David Grewe
Abstract: Yolanda Barrera talks about how she managed to apply for college despite having a high-school counselor who blocked her ability to apply. And the role of César Chávez in making her dream of attending college a reality. José Luis Benavides, Marta Valier, and David Grewe conducted this oral history interview.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/So9waB9MBgsPrimary URL Description: Yolanda Barrera talks about how she managed to apply for college despite having a high-school counselor who blocked her ability to apply. And the role of César Chávez in making her dream of attending college a reality. José Luis Benavides, Marta Valier, and David Grewe conducted this oral history interview.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Yolanda Barrera Remembers the Union Friday Meetings (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Yolanda Barrera Remembers the Union Friday Meetings
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Marta Valier
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: David Grewe
Producer: Brandon Lien
Producer: David Grewe
Abstract: Yolanda Barrera talks about how people from Porterville helped support the grape strike by doing fundraising bailes and traveling on Fridays to Delano to deliver the money. She also recalls how her father recruited her to speak on behalf of their group, leading to her being picked up as a Spanish-speaking interpreter. She recalls why the Friday union meetings were memorable and enjoyable for the participating families. José Luis Benavides, Marta Valier, and David Grewe conducted this oral history interview.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/dWUAwKrxZKoPrimary URL Description: Yolanda Barrera talks about how people from Porterville helped support the grape strike by doing fundraising bailes and traveling on Fridays to Delano to deliver the money. She also recalls how her father recruited her to speak on behalf of their group, leading to her being picked up as a Spanish-speaking interpreter. She recalls why the Friday union meetings were memorable and enjoyable for the participating families. José Luis Benavides, Marta Valier, and David Grewe conducted this oral history interview.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Yolanda Barrera On the Farm Workers Organizations in Porterville (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Yolanda Barrera On the Farm Workers Organizations in Porterville
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Marta Valier
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: David Grewe
Producer: Marta Valier
Producer: David Grewe
Abstract: Yolanda Barrera talks about doing farm labor picking oranges in Porterville and the role of parents and children. She also recalls when she met César Chávez for the first time, and how Jim Drake's Migrant Ministry helped her father and others to establish the Farm Worker Organization of Porterville, with her father as president of the organization. This oral history interview was conducted by José Luis Benavides, Marta Valier, and David Grewe.
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/yNKKmQooIX4Primary URL Description: Yolanda Barrera talks about doing farm labor picking oranges in Porterville and the role of parents and children. She also recalls when she met César Chávez for the first time, and how Jim Drake's Migrant Ministry helped her father and others to establish the Farm Worker Organization of Porterville, with her father as president of the organization. This oral history interview was conducted by José Luis Benavides, Marta Valier, and David Grewe.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Richard Chávez Tells Two Stories About His Brother César (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Richard Chávez Tells Two Stories About His Brother César
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Richard Chávez tells two stories about his brother, César Chávez—the design of the iconic thunderbird of the UFW flag and the creation of the Credit Union. Richard Chávez spoke at CSUN in 1995, as part of the California Farm Workers Oral History Project. The project was sponsored by the CSUN Provost's Committee on Chicano/Labor History, the School of Humanities, the Urban Archives, and the Center for Photojournalism and Visual History (now the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center).
Year: 2023
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/bcVaYNX11jgPrimary URL Description: Richard Chávez tells two stories about his brother, César Chávez—the design of the iconic thunderbird of the UFW flag and the creation of the Credit Union. Richard Chávez spoke at CSUN in 1995, as part of the California Farm Workers Oral History Project. The project was sponsored by the CSUN Provost's Committee on Chicano/Labor History, the School of Humanities, the Urban Archives, and the Center for Photojournalism and Visual History (now the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center).
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Doug Adair on the Injustices Faced by Farmworkers (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Doug Adair on the Injustices Faced by Farmworkers
Writer: Brandon Lien
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Brandon Lien
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Doug Adair talks about the injustices faced by farmworkers. Adair was interviewed at CSUN in 1995, as part of the California Farm Workers Oral History Project. The project was sponsored by the CSUN Provost's Committee on Chicano/Labor History, the School of Humanities, the Urban Archives, and the Center for Photojournalism and Visual History (now the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center).
Year: 2024
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/McrGk2VYfDgPrimary URL Description: Doug Adair talks about the injustices faced by farmworkers. Adair was interviewed at CSUN in 1995, as part of the California Farm Workers Oral History Project. The project was sponsored by the CSUN Provost's Committee on Chicano/Labor History, the School of Humanities, the Urban Archives, and the Center for Photojournalism and Visual History (now the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center).
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
El Malcriado: The Voice of the Farm Worker (Documentary Short) (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: El Malcriado: The Voice of the Farm Worker (Documentary Short)
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Writer: Brandon Lien
Director: Barndon Lien
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: A documentary about the voice of the farmworker movement, the publication El Malcriado, covering the first run from its inception in 1964 to 1967. El Malcriado played a pivotal role in distributing information about the strike, boycott, and union; its satirical cartoons and editorials also captured the cultural revolutionary inspired psyche of the movement.
Created using oral histories and photographic material from collections at the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center.
Oral histories: Doug Adair; Doug Adair, Bill Esher, and Gilbert Padilla; Helen Hernandez; Eliseo Medina; Andy Zermeño
Photographs by John Kouns and Emmon Clarke
Year: 2024
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/5OqH0IIgEY8Primary URL Description: A documentary about the voice of the farmworker movement, the publication El Malcriado, covering the first run from its inception in 1964 to 1967. El Malcriado played a pivotal role in distributing information about the strike, boycott, and union; its satirical cartoons and editorials also captured the cultural revolutionary inspired psyche of the movement.
Created using oral histories and photographic material from collections at the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center.
Oral histories: Doug Adair; Doug Adair, Bill Esher, and Gilbert Padilla; Helen Hernandez; Eliseo Medina; Andy Zermeño
Photographs by John Kouns and Emmon Clarke
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Carmen Ramos Chandler's Family History of Activism (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Carmen Ramos Chandler's Family History of Activism
Writer: Brandon Lien
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Marta Valier
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Carmen Ramos Chandler tells the story of her family activism in this segment of her oral history. Her mother, Irene Ramos, and her father, Bill Chandler, joined the farmworker union as organizers. Marta Valier, José Luis Benavides, and Brandon Lien conducted this oral history interview.
Year: 2024
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/iVx6_nfTE54Primary URL Description: Carmen Ramos Chandler tells the story of her family activism in this segment of her oral history. Her mother, Irene Ramos, and her father, Bill Chandler, joined the farmworker union as organizers. Marta Valier, José Luis Benavides, and Brandon Lien conducted this oral history interview.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Carmen Ramos Chandler On Her Family Organizing in Chicago (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: Carmen Ramos Chandler On Her Family Organizing in Chicago
Writer: Brandon Lien
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Director: Marta Valier
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Carmen Ramos Chandler talks about her family moving to Chicago to help organize the grape boycott and about her memories as a child of two organizers. Marta Valier, José Luis Benavides, and Brandon Lien conducted this oral history interview.
Year: 2024
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/iMJBT3Moof4Primary URL Description: Carmen Ramos Chandler talks about her family moving to Chicago to help organize the grape boycott and about her memories as a child of two organizers. Marta Valier, José Luis Benavides, and Brandon Lien conducted this oral history interview.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: open access
Format: Video
John Kouns Talks About His Photographs (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: John Kouns Talks About His Photographs
Writer: Jose Luis Benavides
Writer: Brandon Lien
Director: Brandon Lien
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: Photographer John Kouns talks about his photographs of the Farmworker Movement as part of the oral history interview with James B. Moore in 2005. The video uses, besides Kouns's photographs and Moore's recording, a video about Kouns's exhibition at the Focus Gallery in San Francisco on Union Street in 1985.
Year: 2024
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/C_XQzFpdJisPrimary URL Description: Photographer John Kouns talks about his photographs of the Farmworker Movement as part of the oral history interview with James B. Moore in 2005. The video uses, besides Kouns's photographs and Moore's recording, a video about Kouns's exhibition at the Focus Gallery in San Francisco on Union Street in 1985.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
LeRoy Chatfield on the NFWA Strike Fund 1966 (Film/TV/Video Broadcast or Recording)Title: LeRoy Chatfield on the NFWA Strike Fund 1966
Writer: LeRoy Chatfield
Director: Brandon Lien
Director: Jose Luis Benavides
Producer: Brandon Lien
Abstract: LeRoy Chatfield's voice, synthesized with AI with permission, reads his Sidebar #9 "The NFWA Strike Fund—1966." The sidebar describes how after successful fundraisers in Los Angeles, Chatfield helped develop the Co-Op movement to provide services for the farmworkers and their families. Besides John Kouns's and Emmon Clarke's photographs, this video uses additional photographs courtesy of Chatfield's archive at CSUN.
Year: 2024
Primary URL:
https://youtu.be/m21ivz0I2NQPrimary URL Description: LeRoy Chatfield's voice, synthesized with AI with permission, reads his Sidebar #9 "The NFWA Strike Fund—1966." The sidebar describes how after successful fundraisers in Los Angeles, Chatfield helped develop the Co-Op movement to provide services for the farmworkers and their families. Besides John Kouns's and Emmon Clarke's photographs, this video uses additional photographs courtesy of Chatfield's archive at CSUN.
Secondary URL:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK5L1RQvapAWcpl2FR3OucDVjahg-wVApSecondary URL Description: Photographs, interviews, and oral histories on the Farmworker Movement as part of CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center's Farmworker Movement Collection, with support by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access Model: Open access
Format: Video
Farmworker Movement (Web Resource)Title: Farmworker Movement
Author: Nicole Shibata
Author: Jose Luis Benavides
Author: Marta Valier
Author: Brandon Lien
Author: Shally Juarez
Author: Angel Goku Segovia Rinos
Author: Summayah Waseem
Author: Gerard Gandionco
Author: Megan Ngo
Author: Steve Kutay
Abstract: The website features the visual history of the farmworker movement as captured by photographers Emmon Clarke and John Kouns. Thanks to a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, we digitized and created metadata for thousands of photographs by Clarke and Kouns that form the Farmworker Movement Collection at the University Library’s digital collections. The site includes short biographical sketches of the people who participated in the movement and additional resources, like oral histories, videos, and a timeline, to learn more about the people and the events that shaped the history of La Causa.
Year: 2024
Primary URL:
https://farmworkermovement-csun.orgPrimary URL Description: The website features the visual history of the farmworker movement as captured by photographers Emmon Clarke and John Kouns. Thanks to a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, we digitized and created metadata for thousands of photographs by Clarke and Kouns that form the Farmworker Movement Collection at the University Library’s digital collections. The site includes short biographical sketches of the people who participated in the movement and additional resources, like oral histories, videos, and a timeline, to learn more about the people and the events that shaped the history of La Causa.
Secondary URL:
https://www.csun.edu/bradley-centerSecondary URL Description: Main site CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center.
Hope and Dignity: DIY exhibition (Exhibition)Title: Hope and Dignity: DIY exhibition
Curator: Kent Kirkton
Curator: Jose Luis Benavides
Curator: Marta Valier
Curator: Brandon Lien
Curator: Joseph Silva
Abstract: The bilingual Do-It-Yourself (DIY) exhibition is designed to allow—in the spirit of the Farmworker Movement—schools, unions, and other community and non-profit organizations to print and mount their exhibition on the Farmworker Movement with images and QR codes to access our digital collection and other digital resources and learn more about this important social and labor movement. (Spanish exhibition panels are also available.)
Year: 2024
Primary URL:
https://farmworkermovement-csun.org/diy-exhibition/Primary URL Description: The bilingual Do-It-Yourself (DIY) exhibition is designed to allow—in the spirit of the Farmworker Movement—schools, unions, and other community and non-profit organizations to print and mount their exhibition on the Farmworker Movement with images and QR codes to access our digital collection and other digital resources and learn more about this important social and labor movement. (Spanish exhibition panels are also available.)
Secondary URL:
https://www.csun.edu/bradley-centerSecondary URL Description: Main site CSUN Tom and Ethel Bradley Center