Yarimar Bonilla

She also released a series of articles between 2010 and 2015 focused on the political situation and sovereignty struggles in the French Caribbean island of Guadalupe.

1 (January - June 2012), 81-98 (2012) “Le syndicalisme comme marronage: epistemologies du travail et de l’histoire en Guadeloupe” Mobilisations sociales aux Antilles, pg 77-94 (2013) “Burning Questions: The Life and Work of Michel-Rolph Trouillot, 1949-2012” Nacla[5] (2013) “History Unchained (Reflections on ‘Lincoln’ and ‘Django Unchained’)” JSTOR  65.88.88.231[6] (2013) “Ordinary Sovereignty” Small Axe 42: 152-165[7] (2014) “Remembering the songwriter: The life and legacies of Michel-Rolph Troulliot” Cultural Dynamics Vol 26(2) 163-172[8] (2015) “#Ferguson: Digital Protest, Hashtag Ethnography, and the Racial Politics of Social Media in the United States” American Ethnologist Vol 00 No.

0: 4-16[9] (2015) “Fast Writing: Ethnography in the Digital Age” Antrhodendum (2016) “Visualizing Sovereignty: Cartographic Queries for the Digital Age” Archipelagos[10] (2017) “Deprovincializing Trump, decolonizing diversity, and unsettling anthropology” American Ethnologist Vol 44, No 2: 201-208[11] Bonilla is currently Section Editor of Public Anthropologies for the journal American Anthropologist.

Bonilla’ second book project, Aftershocks of Disaster: Puerto Rico Before and After the Storm[14] gives voice to many of those affected by Hurricane Maria.

The book compiles the narratives of Puerto Rican journalists, poets, artists, and community leaders in order to show how Puerto Ricans seek to come to terms with not just the impact of Maria, but also the larger, deeper traumas produced by the island’s longer socio-political history and enduring colonialism.

The Syllabus Wordpress site also connects users with groups and initiatives in Puerto Rico and the diaspora organizing around the debt crisis, student struggles, and Hurricane Maria recovery.