River to Sea: History and Literature, Ecology, and Culture in Southeast Georgia, “Ecology of a Cracker Childhood”: Lecture by Janisse Ray

The Learning Center of Senior Citizens, Inc. 3025 Bull Street, Savannah, GA, United States

Memoirist and nature writer Janisse Ray recounts and redeems her unique upbringing in a junkyard near the Altamaha River. Her book, Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, is the inspirational embrace of humble origins and has been celebrated as a classic of American writing.

River to Sea: History and Literature, Ecology, and Culture in Southeast Georgia, “Poetry of the Water”: Lecture by Carlyn Bland

The Learning Center of Senior Citizens, Inc. 3025 Bull Street, Savannah, GA, United States

Poet and writing teacher Carlyn Bland explores the many and varied literary reactions to rivers and marshes, coastlines and beaches, islands and estuaries. Using Lanier's "Marshes of Glynn" as a starting point, she leads a literary journey centering on the water.

River to Sea: History and Literature, Ecology, and Culture in Southeast Georgia, “Rivers of Power on Georgia’s Coast”: Lecture by Christopher Manganiello

The Learning Center of Senior Citizens, Inc. 3025 Bull Street, Savannah, GA, United States

Historian and policy expert Chris Manganiello demonstrates how through the centuries humans have exploited Georgia's rivers to fit their needs. He shows that rivers can give or take away the power of humans, and how the human spirit adapts.

River to Sea: History and Literature, Ecology, and Culture in Southeast Georgia, “The Savannah: The Story of a River and Its City”: Lecture by William Bryan

The Learning Center of Senior Citizens, Inc. 3025 Bull Street, Savannah, GA, United States

Environmental historian Will Bryan examines the history of the Savannah River from the pre-colonial era to European settlement and into the modern day. He also contextualizes the historic city of the banks of the Savannah that shares the river's name.

River to Sea: History and Literature, Ecology, and Culture in Southeast Georgia, “The Tragedies of Ebo Landing”: Lecture by Dionne Hoskins-Brown

The Learning Center of Senior Citizens, Inc. 3025 Bull Street, Savannah, GA, United States

The 1803 mass suicide of enslaved people at Glynn County's Dunbar Creek is recounted by historian Dionne Hoskins-Brown. She reveals the desperation of slavery through lyrical motifs about the Back body, water, and life and death in coastal Georgia.

Common Good Atlanta: Breaking Down the Walls of Mass Incarceration with the Liberal Arts

Decatur First Baptist Church 308 Clairemont Avenue, Decatur, GA

This Georgia Seminar will take a behind-the-scenes look at the nationally recognized prison education program, Common Good Atlanta (CGA), founded by Sarah Higinbotham of Oxford College and Bill Taft. Since 2008, an all-volunteer consortium of 70 faculty from six universities have taught the liberal arts in four prisons, plus a downtown course for prison-impacted people. […]

Common Good Atlanta: Behind the Scenes, Part 1 (Alumni)

Emory University Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry 1635 North Decatur Road, Atlanta, GA

The seminar will bring together Common Good Atlanta alumni to share their experience s and the program’s impact on the community. The following topics are ripe for discussion: efforts of those in higher education to reach across the community, the detrimental effects of mass incarceration on the community, an American penal system that is more focused […]

Common Good Atlanta: Behind the Scenes, Part 2 (Founders)

Emory University Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry 1635 North Decatur Road, Atlanta, GA

The seminar will bring together Jamil Zainaldin, Emory faculty, and Common Good Atlanta founders Sarah Higinbotham (Oxford College) and Bill Taft, to share their experience s and the program’s impact on the community. The following topics are ripe for discussion: efforts of those in higher education to reach across the community, the detrimental effects of […]

Common Good Atlanta: Behind the Scenes, Part 3 (Faculty)

Emory University Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry 1635 North Decatur Road, Atlanta, GA

The seminar will bring together Common Good Atlanta faculty from Morehouse, Georgia State State University, and Georgia Tech to share their experience s and the program’s impact on the community. The following topics are ripe for discussion: efforts of those in higher education to reach across the community, the detrimental effects of mass incarceration on […]

Chasing Me to My Grave: An Artist’s Memoir of the Jim Crow South by Winfred Rembert

Auburn Avenue Research Library 101 Auburn Avenue, N.E., Atlanta, GA, United States

Join Georgia Humanities and the Auburn Avenue Research Library for a discussion of the book Chasing Me to My Grave: An Artist’s Memoir of the Jim Crow South, by Winfred Rembert and Erin I. Kelly. A professor at Tufts University, Erin Kelly will be in conversation with Patsy Rembert, widow of Winfred Rembert, who died […]

Start typing and press Enter to search