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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240201T080000
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UID:10000081-1706774400-1709240400@research.uncg.edu
SUMMARY:Culture of Ghana Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:NOSTALGIA: AN EXPLOSIVE COLLECTION OF SCENES REPRESENTING THE RICH COLORS\, TRADITIONS\, AND CULTURE OF GHANA \nAn Artistic Celebration of Black History Month \nGreensboro\, NC\, February 1 –29\, 2024 – The University of North Carolina Greensboro Department of Public Health Education in collaboration with the Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies will host a free\, month-long art display\, Nostalgia: An Explosive Collection of Scenes Representing the Rich Colors\, Traditions\, and Culture of Ghana\, by artist Belinda Hodasi Jones. \nBelinda Hodasi Jones was born in Ghana\, West Africa and has been creating art since she was a small child. She received her Graphic Design degree from the College of Art\, University of Science and Technology in Kumasi\, Ghana and began working for the Art Gallery at the Center of National Culture. It was there that Ms. Jones realized\, “the freedom of creating from my soul was what I had always yearned to do.” \nMs. Jones’ professional career includes working for the Kakum National Forest\, the Museums and Monuments Board in Cape Coast\, Ghana\, and eventually the Smithsonian Institute in Washington\, DC. At the Smithsonian\, Ms. Jones worked on “Crossroads of People. Crosswinds of Trade.” As a black\, educated women from West Africa\, this was the first time that she had encountered the history of the slave trade\, and it was an honor to use her talent while learning to help tell this important story. \nNostalgia: An Explosive Collection of Scenes Representing the Rich Colors\, Traditions\, and Culture of Ghana opens Thursday\, February 1st at 5 pm at the Gatewood Studio Arts Building\, 527 Highland Ave.\, Greensboro\, NC. The artist will be in attendance and guests can enjoy light hors d’oeuvres. \nThe exhibit is free and open to the public\, February 1st – February 29th\, 8 am – 9 pm. Free parking can be accessed in the parking lot at the corner of Highland Ave. and Oakland Ave. Please view our website for samples of Ms. Jones’ artwork\, www.phe.uncg.edu.
URL:https://research.uncg.edu/event/nostalgia-an-explosive-collection-of-scenes-representing-the-culture-of-ghana/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240208T153000
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CREATED:20240116T192503Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240116T192503Z
UID:10000083-1707406200-1707413400@research.uncg.edu
SUMMARY:Black Feminism and Abolition on Contested Lands
DESCRIPTION:“Unsettled: Black Feminism and Abolition on Contested Lands” \nWhat does it mean to organize for Black liberation on contested lands within an ongoing U.S. settler colonial project? Drawing upon over twenty years of grassroots organizing\, education\, and scholarship\, this talk will discuss the historical and conceptual stakes of Black feminist organizing in this moment. \nCharlene A. Carruthers (she/her) is a writer\, filmmaker\, community organizer\, and Black Studies PhD Candidate at Northwestern University. A practitioner of telling more complete stories\, her work interrogates historical conjunctures of Black freedom-making post-emancipation and decolonial revolution\, Black governance\, and Black feminist abolitionist geographies. She is author of _Unapologetic: A Black\, Queer and Feminist Mandate for Radical Movements_ (Beacon Press\, 2018)\, and she served as the executive director of BYP 100. \nCharlene Carruthers will be coming to campus to give a talk on Thursday February 8 from 3:30-4:30pm in the Alumni House (Oakley Family Reception Room)\, followed by a reception.  The event is sponsored by the Linda Arnold Carlisle Professorship and the Women’s\, Gender\, and Sexuality Studies Program.https://www.charlenecarruthers.com/
URL:https://research.uncg.edu/event/black-feminism-and-abolition-on-contested-lands/
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