Related Papers
Return to Sender": Confronting Lynching and Our Haunted Landscapes
2002 •
Mark Auslander
Surveillance & Society
Seeing and Not-Seeing: Race and Body-Worn Cameras in Canada
Katrin Roots
This paper explores the racial dimensions of police body-worn cameras (BWCs) in Canada and the contested politics of seeing that they raise. By drawing on interview data with four Canadian police services and analyzing them through the work of anti-racist and anti-colonialist scholars, we argue that BWCs are engaged in the act of not-seeing the state violence that makes racialized communities vulnerable to police brutality in the first place. To include the politics of not-seeing in the story of BWCs changes our understandings of policing’s new visibility and the potential promise of “policing on camera.”
Qualitative Methods for Study Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Among Gay Men Who have Sex with Men of Color in the US: A Review of the Literature
2021 •
Gerald Lemmon
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an effective HIV-prevention method that includes HIV-negative individuals taking a daily anti-retroviral medication and regularly visiting a provider. Since 2012, when Truvada was approved, uptake has been increasing but is still low, and disparities exist among gay and other men who have sex with men (GMSM) of color. This review identifies the qualitative methods used in PrEP studies and compares approaches used in studies with samples of white GMSM and GMSM of color to those only sampling GMSM of color. To locate peer-reviewed studies of the social dimensions of PrEP, published between 2010 and 2020, I searched data bases using key words, excluding quantitative studies, and ended up with a total of 49 articles. Studies using samples of GMSM of color were more likely to take extra steps to study men of color, compared to scholars who sampled GMSM of color and white GMSM. The findings suggest that, to build trust and comfort among GMSM of color, it...
ProQuest
Making Black Public Humanities in South Florida: Fugitive Pedagogies, Self-Making, and Memory Work
2022 •
William Garcia-Medina
“Making Black public humanities in South Florida: Fugitive Pedagogies, Self-Making, and Memory Work” seeks to make a contribution to the field of Black public humanities by examining the history and achievements of the African American Research Library and Cultural Center (AARLCC) in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. I argue that a project like this could serve as a preliminary litmus test by Black public humanities educators and administrators to determine the extent to which their centers are exemplary and inclusive. Although the field of public humanities has been extensively discussed in museum studies, there is little scholarship that examines how Black public humanities initiatives can be exemplary and academically useful to the field of public humanities, museum, and library studies as a whole. My study of the AARLCC through observation, participation, archival research and interviews has revealed that we have to pay attention to what these institutions are doing to maintain a public-facing and publicly-engaged humanities initiative. Their ability to create programming and events that center the general public has generated more public engagement and unity amongst its Black diverse community. Furthermore, they lead by example by creating multimodal events that use social media, virtual tours, and other platforms to achieve a higher public participation. In other words, they are a grassroots-created institution and a public-facing and public-centered one in its praxis.
The end of the Renaissance: old chronologies and new identities in the thought of Erwin Panofsky
Forty-Sixth Annual Conference German Studies Association
2022 •
Camilla Balbi
Panel: Emigration and Immigration in Austrian and German Culture (3): Latin America, Heimat, Film September 15–18, 2022 Houston, Texas
Huckleberry Finn in Nazi Germany: Helmut Dziuba’s Film Adaptation of Auguste Lazar’s Exile Novel "Jan auf der Zille"
Ada Bieber
Calming the Storm: The Role of Bishops in Dalmatian Towns during the Hungarian Takeover in the Twelfth Century
Judit Gál
The Dalmatian towns’ bishops played an important role in both the secular and ecclesiastical life of their cities from the early Middle Ages. They were members of the city councils and assemblies, and diplomatic leaders. The Dalmatian towns went through a chaotic period at the turn of the eleventh and twelfth centuries. After the extinction of the Croatian royal dynasty in 1091, the Hungarian king, Ladislas I, attempted to acquire the Croatian throne. Although Ladislas succeeded to get hold of some parts of Croatia, it was King Coloman who successfully consolidated the Hungarian rule in the region. He was crowned king of Croatia and Dalmatia in 1102, and three years later he took the towns during a military campaign. Coloman’s expedition was a generally non-violent event, because the diplomatic missions of the bishops and archbishops helped to avoid sieges. In this presentation, I will analyze the role of the bishops during Coloman’s takeover. I will discuss how they eased the tension and mediated between the towns and the king and helped setting the Hungarian rule. In the analysis, I will focus on the Hungarian privileges given to the towns, which were the results of the missions, and the rituals that could be connected to the privileges, to show the role played by the bishop in the transition of power, and how the kings of Hungary adapted their policy to the Dalmatian society.
Like Some Good Bishop: Gregory of Tours on Bishops, Illnesses, and Plagues
Amanda Kenney
PDF is entire Kalamazoo program. Please contact me if you would like information on what was presented.
Music in Occupied Southern Italy (AMS 2020)
Elizabeth G. Elmi, Nathan K Reeves
Dinko Fabris (Università della Basilicata), Chair Elizabeth Elmi (Iowa State University), "Pastoral Politics in the Lyric Song of Late-Fifteenth-Century Southern Italy" Nathan Reeves (Northwestern University), "Locating Plebe Communities in Sixteenth Century Neapolitan Song" Zoey Cochran (McGill University), "Scarlatti's Call to 'Arms': Resisting Spanish Rule in the Neapolitan Production of Comodo Antonino (1696)"
Just Urban Design: The Struggle for a Public City
Reinstating Landscapes of Urban Resistance
2022 •
Alison B Hirsch