โIโM NOT WEIRD,โ reads the back cover of Nuevo Southโs inaugural issue. โSOY UN DURAMITA.โ
Rodrigo Dorfman, the visionary behind the magazine, says that there is no static definition of โDuramitaโโinstead, itโs an invitation to second-generation Latino immigrants living in Durham to carve their own identity.
โYou ask someone โWhere are you from?โ And they say โWell, I was born in Durham but I’m from Mexico, really. My parents are from Mexico, or from Guatemala, El Salvador,โโ Rodrigo says. โThey don’t say โI’m a Duramite,โ But if you say โWhat if you’re a Duramita? What does that mean?โโ says Dorfman. He doesnโt expect people to use the label that much but loves that it pushes people to examine their own identity.
Sure, the โDURAMITASโ edition of Nuevo South isnโt โweird.โ But the new quarterly publication is lots of other things: independent, grounded, and ambitious. Itโs also impressive to experience, with over 100 full-color pages of local Latino artistsโ photojournalism, speculative fiction, and more, bound together into one tangible, bilingual, multi-generational collaboration.
Dorfman, a Durham documentarian and head of local culture and media organization the Center for the Nuevo South, sees projects like the magazine as a way to address the cultural needs of the Southeastโs Latino community. Most recently, Dorfman and the Center for the Nuevo South collaborated with PBS and Firelight Media to create Bulls and Saints, a film about an undocumented family returning home to Mexico after 20 years in the United States.
โ[Latinos] have been here for centuries, passing through the night in many ways, mostly as you know, migrant workers or academics or doctors or nannies of academics,โ Dorfman explains, referencing immigration to the Southeast. โMostly it was just people never settling down.โ
โAt first, all the needs were so urgent,โ he continues โYou needed security, you needed translators, you needed a way to get a bank account, you needed to get your kids in schools. These needs were urgent, and they took over all the services given to our community because we were in a constant emergency situation. So culture was never institutionalized.โ

Itโs easy to see the connection between Dorfman, who speaks about his work and community with an energy that spills out in paragraph-long sentences, and the magazine, an artistic product of content that is so varied and yet tells a continuous story from front cover to back.
The story, told in parts, is that of the young Latinos who call Durham home.
In its early pages, the magazine describes โThe Great Latino Migration,โ a phrase coined by Chapel Hill journalist Paul Cuadros, to describe the waves of Latinos who arrived in the South following President Ronald Reagan’s 1986 Reform and Control Act, which gave 2.7 million undocumented migrants a path to citizenship. Around the same time, industries like agriculture, construction, and manufacturing began recruiting cheap labor from south of the U.S. border.
Decades after the Great Latino Migration, itโs up to the next generation to build their own sense of selfโwhether thatโs as a โDuramitaโ or not.
One science-fiction comic in the magazine, created by daughter-father duo Alegrรญa Rojas-Patino and Miguel Rojas Sotelo,shows pieces of the cityโDuke Chapel, the Lucky Strike water towerโtaking off into space like rocket ships. Another piece shows the results of a community portrait studio set up in various locations around Durham.
Dorian Gomez, a filmmaker and storyteller whose feature on the Latino-owned businesses of Roxboro Street appears in the issue, says that her generation is characterized by a โDIY spirit.โ
โThe lack of spaces, the lack of particular resources pushes you to get creative,โ says Gomez of her work. โItโs about using minimal resources to create something big, using something as simple as your phone or using an old camera that was used for family photos, and without having to think too much about all of the fancy stencils or the mirrorless cameras. It’s exposure to the most raw version of a medium. And it becomes something much bigger than what was intended or imagined.โ
โA record that we existโ
For both Gomez and Dorfman, the analog nature of the magazine is part of what made the concept so appealing from the beginning. In an era when print publications are thinning out, Spanish-language publications are rarer still. Those that do exist often serve larger metros like New York or Los Angeles, and few prioritize visual culture the way Nuevo South does.
โWe’re completely bound to the digital age because that is how we communicate with the folks back home,โ says Dorfman. But he also describes a connection to the built because so much of the labor done by Latino migrants over the decades has been so physical. โThey came to build factories, they came to build houses. They came to work in the chicken plants and pork industry and carpet industry. Thereโs this feeling that what we value is that which we can touch with our hands.โ
Gomez adds that thereโs value, too, in leaving something physical for future generations.
โMy grandmother used to make some of my clothes,โ she says. Similarly, creating a magazine involves โbeing able to craft something that is also connected to history, that is your history and other people’s histories, a record of the fact that we exist and we will exist.โ

Nuevo South, which is fiscally backed by the Southern Documentary Fund, launched with a grant from Durhamโs Office on Youth. But going forward, Dorfman and his collaborators hope that the magazine will attract enough buyers and subscribers to continue with a quarterly edition. For those interested in buying a copy, you can find one at the Scrap Exchange, the Regulator, or Tienda Don Becerra. You can also subscribe for future editions at docupainting.com/nuevo-south-magazine.
By excellent coincidence, the boxes containing the first run of the magazine arrive at Dorfmanโs door as our video-chat interview concludes. On-screen, Gomez and I watch as he pulls out the first copy. Although he knows exactly whatโs in the magazine, he looks just as impressed as someone seeing it for the very first time.
โOh my god, there are 40 boxes. [Gomez], get your ass down here,โ he says to us. โIt looks freaking amazing.โ
Reach Reporter Chase Pellegrini de Paur at [email protected]. Comment on this story at [email protected].


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