top of page

ASA announces new Vice President

  • appalstudies
  • May 18, 2023
  • 1 min read

Sophia M. Enríquez (she/her/ella) works at the intersections of Latinx, Appalachian, and Southern music, migration, and regional culture. She is the Andrew W. Mellon Assistant Professor of Music at Duke University where she also teaches in the Program for Latino/a Studies in the Global South. Sophia earned her PhD in ethnomusicology at Ohio State University as well as graduate certificates in folklore and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality studies. Her monograph in progress, tentatively titled "Canciones de Los Apalaches: Latinx Music, Migration, and Belonging in Appalachia" is the first full-length study of Latinx creative practices in the Appalachian region and shows how longstanding narratives of Appalachia as a monolith have obscured the movement of Latinx people to and through the region over the past century.


Sophia is passionate about community-engaged scholarship and has worked on several public folklore projects across the Appalachian region and the South. She is also a practitioner of both Mexican and Appalachian folk music. Sophia performs with the Lua Project, a Mexican-Appalachian fusion band in Charlottesville, Virginia, and recently co-founded Son de Carolina, a Durham, NC-based collective dedicated to the study of the Mexican folk music tradition son jarocho.

Recent Posts

See All
Flooding in Eastern Kentucky

Appalachian Studies Association is devastated by the recent floods and damages this week in Eastern Kentucky. Community leaders like...

 
 
 
Transgender Awareness Week

Transgender Awareness Week, also known as Trans Awareness Week, is observed every year from November 13-19 and leads up to the...

 
 
 

Commenti


OUR SPONSORS ↓

↓ SUBSCRIBE TO RECEIVE UPDATES FROM ASA! ↓

CONTACT ↓

Mary Thomas,

Executive Director, 

mthomas@clapforsuccess.space

Ann E. Bryant,

Office Manager, 

mullins88@clapforsuccess.space

Telephone: (304) 696-2904
Mailing Address:

Appalachian Studies Association

One John Marshall Drive

Huntington, WV 25755

ABOUT US ↓

The Appalachian Studies Association was formed in 1977 by a group of scholars, teachers, and regional activists who believed that shared community has been and will continue to be important to those writing, researching, and teaching about Appalachia. The ASA is headquartered at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • LinkedIn

Website designed by: Aaron Nelson, Ann E. Bryant, Caleb Pendygraft, Kayden Fox, Lumina Fioravante, and Raithlyn Godfrey

bottom of page