Sources

  1. Carrera, Patricia Carrillo. “Gertrudis Blues.” Instituto Mexicano de Cinematografía., 2003. 10 min. 20 sec. 4 min., 20 sec., https://youtu.be/yaOk83TuSpc?si=j1BHSZO7_sF6_KFa.
  2. Clouser, Todd. Maher, Molly. “‘Capeyuye’ Odo a la Libertad Mascogo Community Documentar.,” YouTube., Music Mission: June 2, 2023. 17 min. 45 sec. 10 min. 56 sec. https://youtu.be/7DHVjOFTL_s?si=6zGkWIGl6KKx_mfi.
  3. Longoria, Eva, and Gomez, Maite, Hosts. "From Enslavement to Freedom: Black Seminoles and the Mascogos." iHeart, 2021. Podcast, 35 minutes, 11 seconds. https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-hungry-for-history-with-e-102809913/episode/from-enslavement-to-freedom-black-seminoles-262720272/. 
  4. Madrid, Alejandro L. “Transnational Identity, the Singing of Spirituals, and the Performance of Blackness among Mascogos” Transnational Encounters: Music and Performance at the U.S.-Mexico Border, edited by Alejandro L. Madrid. Oxford University Press, 2011.
  5. Rivera, Karla. Murales en “El Nacimiento de los Negros Mascogos.” Ichan Tecolotl, 2022. https://ichan.ciesas.edu.mx/murales-en-el-nacimiento-de-los-negros-mascogos/.
  6. Sieff, Kevin. “Her ancestors fled to Mexico to escape slavery 170 years ago. She still sings in English to this day.” Washington Post, April 12, 2019. https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2019/world/amp-stories/descendants-of-american-slaves-fled-to-mexico-mascogos/.