VIRTUAL EVENT—Ballot Access, Voter Fraud, and Voter Suppression

Ballot Access, Voter Fraud, and Voter Suppression The virtual panel discussion, “Ballot Access, Voter Fraud, and Voter Suppression,” hosted by the Jean Beer Blumenfeld Center for Ethics at Georgia State University, will discuss criticisms of the upcoming election in the United States, focusing on such issues as ballot access (particularly in underrepresented communities), the evidence […]

Founding Stories: Oral Histories of Grassroots Atlanta

Founding Stories: Oral Histories of Grassroots Atlanta Join Art Papers for Founding Stories: Oral Histories of Grassroots Atlanta, a decade-by-decade series of virtual talks exploring the founding stories of a selection of Atlanta’s DIY and artist-run spaces. Founders of some of Atlanta’s most beloved and remembered spaces will discuss how these organizations came into existence. What […]

VIRTUAL EVENT—”Is it OK to Ignore Politics?”

"Is it OK to Ignore Politics?"  Christopher Freiman, author of Why it's OK to Ignore Politics (2020), argues there is no obligation for individuals to be politically aware or politically active, and suggests that people can do more good in other ways. In "Is it OK to Ignore Politics?," a virtual panel discussion, Freiman will […]

VIRTUAL—The Savannah History Remix Meet and Greet

The Savannah History Remix Meet and Greet The Savannah History Remix walking tours were researched and written by Georgia Southern University graduate students of history.  The tours focus on narratives that are often left out of commercial tours in Savannah, including stories of immigrants, laborers, those in the LGBTQ community, and domestic life in Savannah. Join […]

VIRTUAL EVENT—”Vote with your Hands or your Feet?”

"Vote with your Hands or your Feet?"  The virtual panel discussion, "Vote with your Hands or your Feet?," is presented as part of the Jean Beer Blumenfeld Center for Ethics at Georgia State University's “Ethics and the 2020 Elections” discussion series. This discussion will explore whether voting in place or exercising a freedom to move […]

From Being Property to Owning Property

From Being Property to Owning Property This virtual presentation from the Mitchell Young Anderson Museum in Thomasville will provide a brief history of the Stevens Street District in Thomasville, one of the few remaining and intact African American neighborhoods built after the Civil War. Included in this presentation is part of the museum’s story itself—it […]

VIRTUAL—Nothing Is Stable: Diana Al-Hadid artist talk

Nothing Is Stable: Diana Al-Hadid artist talk Syrian American artist Diana Al-Hadid will give a talk in conjunction with her exhibition Nothing Is Stable at the Ernest G. Welch Gallery of Georgia State University (GSU). The New York-based artist is acclaimed for her intricate sculptures and wall panels that combine traditional and contemporary materials and […]

VIRTUAL EVENT—A Conversation with Charlayne Hunter-Gault and Calvin Trillin

An Education in Georgia: Then and Now To kick off a campus-wide reading event to celebrate the 60th anniversary of desegregation at the University of Georgia, UGA alumna Charlayne Hunter-Gault will participate in a conversation with longtime New Yorker columnist and author Calvin Trillin to discuss his book An Education in Georgia: Charlayne Hunter, Hamilton […]

Lillian Smith: Anti-Racist Ally Panel Discussion

Online

Lillian Smith: Anti-Racist Ally Panel Discussion Join the Athens branch of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH), in partnership with the Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library at the University of Georgia, for a virtual panel discussion of Lillian Smith and a screening of the documentary film Lillian Smith: […]

Free

VIRTUAL EVENT—Centering the Native South: A Roundtable on Native Pasts and Futures

Centering the Native South: A Roundtable on Native Pasts and Futures In this roundtable conversation hosted by the Society of Early Americanists, three scholars of Indigenous histories in the Southeast will discuss their scholarship, while reflecting on the ways that early Indigenous histories bear on the present and future. The conversation will highlight and build […]

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