The Tulane Hullabaloo

Amazon rainforest

Beyond the burning of the Amazon Rainforest: the Bolsonaro regime’s centuries long genocide of indigenous peoples

Hugo Fajardo, Senior Staff Writer November 20, 2019

Loggers ventured illegally into the Amazon Rainforest in the northeastern state of Maranhão, Brazil earlier this month. For the people that live within this part of the Amazon Rainforest, the Guajajara...

latinx

Members of Tulane Latinx community reflect on heritage

Meg García, Intersections Editor October 17, 2019

Tulane’s Latinx community is not a monolith. Though unified by heritage, many aspects of a person’s identity can make their experiences different. Whether they can speak the language, where their...

Complicating Womens History Month: powerful voices from margins

Complicating Women’s History Month: powerful voices from margins

Hugo Fajardo, Intersections Editor March 13, 2019

As the nation celebrates Women’s History Month this March, citizens reflect on the significance and impact of what it means to be a woman. As the years go by, women are rightfully attaining more opportunities...

Columbus, Australia Days must commemorate indigenous communities

Columbus, Australia Days must commemorate indigenous communities

Robin Boch, Senior Staff Writer October 5, 2017

Columbus Day and Australia Day have both been recognized as controversial holidays for some time now, as both commemorate the colonization of native land by Europeans. This colonization is directly associated...

Brain Waves: What I really hear when you call me Spicy

Brain Waves: What I really hear when you call me ‘Spicy’

Anonymous May 2, 2017

I throw a funeral for myself on four days of the year. Four days of the year that have been edged onto the insides of my eyelids, so even when I close my eyes I cannot forget. I cannot unsee. It...

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