Jasmine Wells, a Public Relations major at UA (and the person unknowingly featured in the photo which was taken during our recent downtown tour and creates room to push our thinking about the "public feminine" as defined by Gunther Barth and others), is helping with publicity. She even made a Facebook page. Ben Smith, who works in technology for the Athletic Department, has threatened to remaster my edited video. I welcome his skills.
On other fronts, yesterday we discussed Clarence King and Ada Copeland's relationship in New York City during the Gilded Age as presented in Martha Sandweiss' study. We pondered black-white interactions in and outside of the urban space by watching a good part of Muscle Shoals, a documentary highlighting the white musicians who played behind many African American singers in the 1960s and early 1970s. Next week, we will continue this conversation by bringing the urban space into fuller view although in the context of Dublin, Ireland, via the 1991 Alan Parker film The Commitments.
I am vigilant about historicizing black-white encounters and pushing the students to do the same. What happened in 19th century New York that couldn't or could happen in 1960s rural Alabama or 1980s Dublin (or 1863 New York for that matter) when it comes to how black and white bodies come together - and part?
Finally, I just received the best news. Dr. Robert Mellown, a recently retired, but ever-busy UA Professor of Art History will be our guest speaker at the Dec. 3 music video launch at Jemison Mansion. We are truly honored to hear him discuss his efforts to aid the restoration of local structures including Jemison and Bryce Hospital. He will sign copies of The University of Alabama: A Guide to the Campus and Its Architecture (University of Alabama Press, 2013) at this event.
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