Zine: The Disability Of Police, 2020 Xavier University, Cincinnati, OH
Zine: The Disability Of Police, Christian J. Orse, Katherine Mary Schiller, Jadon Means-Simonsen
First Year Seminar Prof. ShaDawn Battle, Ph.D.The Lives of Black Women and Girls. Anti-Black State-Sanctioned Violence in the U.S.
Social Justice Zines
Topic: Police Violence Targeting Black Women and Girls
Subtopics Include: gender- and sexuality-specific police violence, with a focus on Black trans women; the histories of violence against Black women; policing (dis)ability; and the relevance of intersectional identities
Zine: Do You See Me, 2020 Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio)
Zine: Do You See Me, Alise Chavis, Anna Kahle
First Year Seminar Prof. ShaDawn Battle, Ph.D.The Lives of Black Women and Girls. Anti-Black State-Sanctioned Violence in the U.S.
Social Justice Zines
Topic: Police Violence Targeting Black Women and Girls
Subtopics Include: gender- and sexuality-specific police violence, with a focus on Black trans women; the histories of violence against Black women; policing (dis)ability; and the relevance of intersectional identities
John Holmes And The Shifting Partisan Politics Of Slavery In Early Maine, 2020 Brigham Young University
John Holmes And The Shifting Partisan Politics Of Slavery In Early Maine, Matthew Mason
Maine History
The longevity and shifting partisan allegiances of the political career of John Holmes illuminate many of the issues animating Maine politics in the broad statehood era. None of these issues dogged Holmes or revealed the intersection of Maine and national politics better than that of slavery. His seemingly endless political flexibility makes Holmes an unusually good barometer of the mainstream position in Maine on slavery and related issues across this broad period. Matthew Mason is a professor of history at Brigham Young University. He is the author of books including Slavery and Politics in the Early American Republic(2006) and …
Photo Essay: State Of Mind: Becoming Maine, 2020 The University of Maine
Photo Essay: State Of Mind: Becoming Maine, Maine Historical Society
Maine History
The separation from Massachusetts in 1820 had different meanings and implications for residents grounded in geography, culture, race, and economic standing. Understanding that the history of how Maine became a state is rooted in the stories of people, State of Mind: Becoming Maine focuses on four distinct communities—Wabanaki, Acadien French, Black, and English-speaking people all who have deep ties to the land now known as Maine. While multitudes of distinct cultural communities have, and continue to call Maine home, the Wabanaki have cared for this land for millennia. The French, Black, and English-speaking people have resided here since the early …
Book Reviews, 2020 University of Maine
Book Reviews, Sean Cox, Eileen Hagerman, George Kotlik, Thomas Peace, Hannah Schmidt, Eric Toups
Maine History
Reviews of the following books: Historic Acadia National Park, The Stories Behind One of America's Great Treasures by Catherine Schmitt; Without Benefit of Insects: The Story of Edith M. Patch of the University of Maine by Elizabeth Gibbs; French and Indian Wars in Maine by Michael Dekker; Wabanaki Homeland and the New State of Maine: The 1820 Journal and Plans of Survey of Joseph Treat edited by Micah Pawling; The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright by Ann M. Little; Our Beloved Kin: A New History of King Philip's War by Lisa Books
Ua77/1 Wku Spirit, 2020 Western Kentucky University
Ua77/1 Wku Spirit, Wku Alumni Relations
WKU Archives Records
WKU's alumni magazine. Contents:
- Trabue, Amanda. VP Notes
- WKU Increases Access with Hilltopper Guarantee, Other Scholarship Program Changes
- WKU Sets Records in Freshman Class Growth, Quality
- Four New Members Join WKU Board of Regents – Currie Millikin, Jan West, Garrett Edmonds, Shane Spiller
- Ethan Logan Named Vice President for Enrollment & Student Experience
- WKU Celebrates World Teachers’ Day by Announcing Two Scholarship Programs
- WKU Student Publications Earns Three National Pacemakers
- WKU to Go Test Optional for Admission
- WKU’s Panhellenic Council Earns National Recognition
- WKU Department of Art is Now WKU Department of Art & Design
- WKU Food Recovery Network Redirects …
Zine: Police Sexual Violence, 2020 Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio)
Zine: Police Sexual Violence, Kathryn Nerlinger, Ethan Hall, Cade Jenkins
First Year Seminar Prof. ShaDawn Battle, Ph.D.The Lives of Black Women and Girls. Anti-Black State-Sanctioned Violence in the U.S.
Social Justice Zines
Topic: Police Violence Targeting Black Women and Girls
Subtopics Include: gender- and sexuality-specific police violence, with a focus on Black trans women; the histories of violence against Black women; policing (dis)ability; and the relevance of intersectional identities
Zine: Fleeting Innocence, 2020 Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio)
Zine: Fleeting Innocence, Azaria Lewis, Madeleine Felkel
First Year Seminar Prof. ShaDawn Battle, Ph.D.The Lives of Black Women and Girls. Anti-Black State-Sanctioned Violence in the U.S.
Social Justice Zines
Topic: Police Violence Targeting Black Women and Girls
Subtopics Include: gender- and sexuality-specific police violence, with a focus on Black trans women; the histories of violence against Black women; policing (dis)ability; and the relevance of intersectional identities
Military Occupation, Sexual Violence, And The Struggle Over Masculinity In The Early Reconstruction South, 2020 Gettysburg College
Military Occupation, Sexual Violence, And The Struggle Over Masculinity In The Early Reconstruction South, Cameron T. Sauers
Student Publications
This inquiry centers on the way that sexual violence became the terrain upon which the struggles of the postemancipation and early Reconstruction South were waged. At the start of the Civil War, Confederate discourse played upon the fears of sexual violence engulfing the South with the invasion of Union armies. The nightmare never came to Southern households; rape was infrequently reported. However, Southern women, especially if they were African American, were subjected to sexual violence, which likely increased as the war dragged on. Sexual violence includes, but is not limited to, rape. Destruction of clothing, invasion of domestic spaces, and …
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 96, No. 6, 2020 Western Kentucky University
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 96, No. 6, Wku Student Affairs
WKU Archives Records
WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:
- Reynolds, Easton. 8 Juveniles Responsible for Recurring Water Throwing Harassment
- Thornton, Maggie. Marching at a Distance – Marching Band
- Reynolds, Easton. Local Small Businesses Work to Recover from Pandemic Losses
- Hendricks, Allie & Preston Romanov. Art for All – SoKY Marketplace
- Cox, Alex. Editorial Cartoon re: Breonna Taylor
- Bunton, Gabrielle. I Choose Black Women Every Time
- Nash, Slim. Commissioner Candidate Slim Nash: Your Right to Vote is Special
- Hargrove, Matthew. Hilltoppers Look to Bounce Back Against Middle Tennessee State University – Football
- Kieser, Nick. Budget …
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 96, No. 5, 2020 Western Kentucky University
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 96, No. 5, Wku Student Affairs
WKU Archives Records
WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:
- Murray, Debra. Voting in College
- Reynolds, Easton. WKU and Barnes & Noble Partner in 10-year Deal
- Latimer, Jacob. Online & Hybrid Courses Pose Challenge to Professors
- Dobbs, Jack & Anna Leachman. Last Ride: Beech Bend Park
- Lowe, Julianna. A Call to Mitch McConnell – Ruth Bader Ginsburg
- Stack, Madalyn. Editorial Cartoon re: Ruth Bader Ginsburg
- Bailey, Carlos. Bowling Green City Commissioner Candidate Shares Statement on the Importance of Voting in Local Elections
- Kieser, Nick. Football Fans Use New Ticketing App at Home Opener
- Hargrove, Matthew. …
Rondo Days, 2020 Minnesota State University, Mankato
Rondo Days, Kellian Clink
Library Services Publications
The Rondo Days Festival, inaugurated in 1983, is a reunion of the Black community of the Twin Cities. It memorializes and mourns a neighborhood gone, a neighborhood where residents “learned to fill the gaps in American history (Fairbanks 1999, 141), learned about the contributions and tribulations of their people. The celebration remembers when the creation of I-94 meant the destruction of a vibrant neighborhood, moving hundreds of families from a community of truly gracious homes to “substandard housing with bad wiring” (Baker 1994). Rondo Days celebrates a sense of community sustained in defiance of institutional racism and urban planning run …
The Meaning Of Mcdonald's [(R)], 2020 William & Mary Law School
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 96, No. 4, 2020 Western Kentucky University
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 96, No. 4, Wku Student Affairs
WKU Archives Records
WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:
- Bertucci, Leo. System Upgrade from Local Health Department Affects WKU’s COVID-19 Case Count
- Holland, Kelley. WKU Alum Works as Photojournalist for USA Today – Harrison Hill
- Latimer, Jacob. Nursing Students Employed at On-campus Clinic Assist with COVID-19 Testing
- Frazier, Keilen. Dried Out – Tobacco
- Gray, Tim. Better Together: Black Lives Matter
- Stack, Madalyn. Editorial Cartoon re: Social Distancing
- Send Students Home: WKU’s Campus Isn’t Safe
- Kieser, Nick. To the Mountains – Brooks LeCompte, Track & Field
- Warner, Casey. Hilltoppers to Host Liberty for Home Opener …
White America May Have Amnesia, But Don't Ask Blacks To Forget, 2020 University of Nebraska at Omaha
White America May Have Amnesia, But Don't Ask Blacks To Forget, Preston Love Jr.
Black Studies Faculty Publications
In 1775, Patrick Henry spoke to both his fellow colonists and to the British when he said, “Give me liberty or give me death.”
Nearly 250 years later, I too, scream for liberty.
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 96, No. 3, 2020 Western Kentucky University
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 96, No. 3, Wku Student Affairs
WKU Archives Records
WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:
- Reynolds, Easton. Coping with Crisis – Hurricane Katrina, COVID-19
- Bunton, Gabrielle. Students Adjust to Hybrid Classes During COVID-19 Pandemic
- Latimer, Jacob. WKU Student Lorena Silva Releases Springhouse
- Celebration Despite Separation
- Stack, Madalyn. Editorial Cartoon re: Zoom Meetings
- Marshall, Olivia. Navigating My Sorority in a Global Pandemic – Delta Zeta
- Warner, Casey. Review: Bowling Green Punk-rock Duo Releases Album – Dos Cobros
- Kieser, Nick. WKU Coaches Adapt to Postponed Season – Soccer, Volleyball
- Warner, Casey. Piggy-T – Tyrell Pigrome, Football
- Gaylord, Kaden. Support the Players – …
Recalling The (Afro)Future: Collective Memory And The Construction Of Subversive Meanings In Janelle Monáe’S Metropolis-Suites, 2020 University of Copenhagen
Recalling The (Afro)Future: Collective Memory And The Construction Of Subversive Meanings In Janelle Monáe’S Metropolis-Suites, Anders Liljedahl
Third Stone
Focusing on the intersection of collective memory, technology, and African American popular music, this paper use aspects of the sonic narratives in Janelle Monáe’s Metropolis-Suites I–V to introduce core concepts of Afrofuturism. The paper challenges the positioning of collective memory as being exterior to the sphere of individual cognitive memory. By inhabiting past, present, and future at once, Afrofuturism is able to critically revisit collective memory not only as a social framework but also as actual individual memory. Afrofuturist discourse questions the status of the human being by examining African Americans as always already robotic, and posits African American …
Norman Lewis: Linearity, Politics, And Pedagogy In His Abstract Expressionism, 1946–1964, 2020 The Graduate Center, City University of New York
Norman Lewis: Linearity, Politics, And Pedagogy In His Abstract Expressionism, 1946–1964, Andrianna T. Campbell-Lafleur
Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects
This dissertation focuses on Norman Lewis’s studio practice between the years 1946-1964 in particular his associations with the painters Romare Bearden, Robert Motherwell, Ad Reinhardt, and David Smith. Lewis’s influence extended far into the twenty-first century. As told by numerous contemporary art practitioners—Firelei Baez, Mark Bradford, David Kennedy Cutler, Charles Gaines, Rashid Johnson, Julie Mehretu, RJ Messineo, and Jack Whitten—Lewis was the mentor, friend, father and grandfather figure of an innovative black artist working with abstraction. In Chapter 1: An Integrative Line of Becoming, I trace Lewis’s change from Social Realism in the 1930s to semi-abstract portraits and genre paintings …
Representations Of Hustling Women: The Figure Of The Black Sex Worker In Ann Petry’S The Street And Louise Meriwether’S Daddy Was A Number Runner, 2020 The Graduate Center, City University of New York
Representations Of Hustling Women: The Figure Of The Black Sex Worker In Ann Petry’S The Street And Louise Meriwether’S Daddy Was A Number Runner, Deborah L. Uzurin
Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects
This thesis provides a close reading of Ann Petry’s The Street (1946) and Louise Meriwether’s Daddy Was a Number Runner (1970) by analyzing how these two black women authors wrote about sex work and black women sex workers in their novels. Black women writers in the mid-twentieth century were reluctant to write about black women’s sexuality as a result of discourses of racial uplift that rejected the white supremacist stereotype of the hypersexual black woman. While not the focus of their novels, the inclusion of sex workers in their fictional narratives provide a complicated representation of a particular form of …
All Day In The Trey-Fold: Sound, Objecthood, And Place In The Mixtapes Of Dj Screw, 2020 The Graduate Center, City University of New York
All Day In The Trey-Fold: Sound, Objecthood, And Place In The Mixtapes Of Dj Screw, Matthew K. Carter
Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects
This dissertation traces the impact of the mixtapes of DJ Screw on the emergence of Houston hip hop culture in the 1990s. The relationship between these “screwtapes” and local culture resists demonstration through conventional modes of representational analyses, due in part to the screwtape’s preponderant use of hip hop tracks that originally represent other places. I suggest that representation itself is the result of the structuring tension emerging from a threefold field of representation of sound, objecthood, and place, and that when a hip hop artist or critic or fan claims to "represent" Houston (or any other constituted and constituting …