Upcoming Symposium: Still the ‘Black Mecca’? Race, Social Inequality, &; Urban Displacement in 21st-Century Atlanta

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Upcoming Symposium: Still the ‘Black Mecca’? Race, Social Inequality, &; Urban Displacement in 21st-Century Atlanta


Source: Events – Atlanta Studies
URL: https://www.atlantastudies.org/2016/10/24/upcoming-symposium-still-the-black-mecca-race-social-inequality-urban-displacement-in-21st-century-atlanta/

Upcoming Symposium: Still the ‘Black Mecca’? Race, Social Inequality, & Urban Displacement in 21st-Century Atlanta

On Wednesday, November 9, from 1:00 pm to 7:00 pm at the Georgia State University Law School, the Atlanta Studies Network is co-sponsoring the public symposium “Still the ‘Black Mecca’? Race, Social Inequality, & Urban Displacement in 21st-Century Atlanta” which has been arranged by the James Weldon Johnson Institute for the Study of Race and Difference at Emory University in conjunction with the Facing Race Local Host Committee, Georgia State University Department of Sociology, Clark Atlanta University Department of Sociology and Criminology, Candler School of Theology Moral Leadership Program at Emory University, Georgia State University Center for Neighborhood and Metropolitan Studies, and Georgia State University Urban Studies Institute.



Organized in partnership with the National Facing Race Conference (to be held in Atlanta, November 10–12), three goals are at the center of this symposium:

1. to showcase research initiatives of area universities concerning the vectors of structural racism in the greater metropolitan area;

2. to critically examine and uplift political, cultural, and economic solutions with viable potential to advance racial justice locally; and

3. to connect local and national scholar-activists, academics, grassroots leaders, policy-makers, and students as collaborators in justice-oriented transformation.

For more information about the symposium, including an in-depth agenda with session descriptions and a list of featured speakers, as well as details on the location and parking please visit the official symposium website, raceinatl.com.

This event is free and open to the public but advance registration is required. Please register at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/still-the-black-mecca-race-in-atlanta-symposium-tickets-27795792965?ref=ebtnebregn.

Data Services & Support @ GSU Library – Check It Out!

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Data Services & Support @ GSU Library – Check It Out!


Source: CURVE
URL: http://sites.gsu.edu/curve/2016/08/26/data-services-support-gsu-library-check-it-out/

Need to find existing data to analyze for your dissertation or thesis? Using SPSS, SAS, R, or Excel to do statistical analysis and need help with the software? Doing qualitative research and wondering if you should use NVivo software or other text analysis tools? Want to visualize data on maps or in other visually-pleasing ways […]

Students: Enter a Data Viz in Tableau’s Data Viz Assignment Contest!

Source: GSU CURVE Blog
URL: Students: Enter a Data Viz in Tableau’s Data Viz Assignment Contest!
Students: Been using Tableau for data visualizations, or want to try it out? You can enter this contest and maybe win a Tableau swag bag! To enter the Contest, complete the following steps – entry deadline is May 30: If you do not already have a copy, download the software at https://public.tableau.com/s/ (a free trial copy […]
Read More: Students: Enter a Data Viz in Tableau’s Data Viz Assignment Contest!

THATCamp Shakespeare

Source: UGA Digital Humanities Initiative
URL: THATCamp Shakespeare
by Maria Chappell, English PhD candidate and UGA HASTAC scholar On Wednesday, April 5, the UGA’s Willson Center Digital Humanities Lab and the Folger Shakespeare Library hosted the THATCamp Shakespeare “unconference.” THATCamps (The Humanities And Technology Camps) are informal conferences…
Read More: THATCamp Shakespeare

CURVE Hosts the WIT Girls for STEM Career Event

Source: GSU CURVE Blog
URL: CURVE Hosts the WIT Girls for STEM Career Event
On a Thursday evening last week, CURVE hosted a group of exceptional young women interested in STEM fields. The high schoolers are part of an organization called WIT, or Women In Technology, which “passionately supports women at every stage of their STEM careers—from the classroom to the boardroom,” according to the WIT website. The girls participate in activities […]
Read More: CURVE Hosts the WIT Girls for STEM Career Event

Human Anatomy 3D Showcase

Source: GSU CURVE Blog
URL: Human Anatomy 3D Showcase
On April 12, students in Dr. Carmen Eilertson’s Biology 4687/6687 Surgical Anatomy demonstrated some of the  3D models of human organs they have created this semester using the NextEngine laser scanner in CURVE’s 3D Modeling Lab.  Here, they are presenting 3D models of a human kidney, brain, and lung.               […]
Read More: Human Anatomy 3D Showcase

Application of Copper Tape to Neoprene Sheets

Source: Georgia Tech Digital Humanities Lab
URL: Application of Copper Tape to Neoprene Sheets
The determining factor that will ensure that the touch matrix will work when each of the three separate neoprene layers are put together is the accuracy with which we apply the copper tapes to the outer layers of neoprene. Furthermore, the copper tapes have also been soldered with wires that have been measured to a certain length in order to reach the Arduinos that will be stored on the extra neoprene that will be left over on one side of the 1 meter x 1 meter matrix. Thus, the copper tapes have to be applied to the neoprene in a…
Read More: Application of Copper Tape to Neoprene Sheets

March 28 Atlanta Studies @ Emory

Title: March 28 Atlanta Studies @ Emory
Source: Events – Atlanta Studies
URL: https://www.atlantastudies.org/2017/03/02/march-28-atlanta-studies-emory/

Upcoming Event: Atlanta Studies @ Emory

On Tuesday, March 28, 2017 in the Jones Room (3rd floor) of the Robert W. Woodruff Library at Emory University, the Emory Center for Digital Scholarship, in collaboration with the Emory Center for Faculty Development and Excellence and The Bill & Carol Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry will host a discussion of the research platforms, projects, and publications about Atlanta that are currently facilitated by the Emory Center for Digital Scholarship. Lunch will be provided. […]

All Things Fabric: Testing, Printing, Pricing

Source: Georgia Tech Digital Humanities Lab
URL: All Things Fabric: Testing, Printing, Pricing
Fabric Testing As outlined in ‘Face’ of the Quilt, I am testing fabric to see how it diffuses, affects affect, and obscures or reveals hardware. I quickly tested a broad array of swatches. Their textures included felt, mid-weight cotton, a polyester-stretch mix, and lightweight linen. The colors included black, brown, grey, beige, and white. The colors are kept neutral because the background of the quilt will be similar to the original beige. I was first intrigued by how introductory physics principles became useful: light colored or white fabrics tended to diffuse light while dark colored or black fabrics tended to absorb light and reveal the shape of the LED beneath.…
Read More: All Things Fabric: Testing, Printing, Pricing

Georgia DH Consortium Launch

Welcome to the Georgia Digital Humanities Consortium!

This consortium was born from conversations at the Georgia DH Meetup in December 2016. Participants from across Georgia met to discuss the kinds of projects and resources they are doing or interested in exploring. One of the major themes that emerged was the need for a network of shared resources, information, and contacts that would help each group or institution develop its digital humanities or scholarship initiatives.

We have built this website as a central hub in the DH network that we’re building here in Georgia. The essential function is to provide a directory of people, institutional resources, projects, and more. Another function is our Georgia DH News feed, which collects blog posts from various DH sites and reposts them for some signal boost. If we can all see what is happening across the state, partnerships and sharing are much easier.

Membership is open to all, and with more members, the consortium will flourish.

Please visit the Join page to get started! And if you have comments or suggestions about the site, submit them here.

Georgia Digital Humanities Meetup, December 9, 2016
The Georgia DH Meetup