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*NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks*

*Panel, "The Digital Black Atlantic"*

*February 10 19, 3:30-5pm (Eastern)*

Dear all,

Please join us on *February 10, from 3:30-5pm (Eastern)* for a panel on
cutting-edge scholarship in the emerging field of the Digital Black
Atlantic, featuring:

   - Annette Joseph-Gabriel, Associate Professor of Romance Studies, Duke
   University
   - Kelly Baker Josephs, Professor of English, City University of New York
   - Kelsey Moore, doctoral candidate in History, Johns Hopkins University
   - Roopika Risam, Associate Professor of Secondary and Higher Education
   and English, Salem State University

*This virtual event is free and open to the public, but registration is
required: for more details see the event page
<http://calendar.northeastern.edu/event/panel_the_digital_black_atlantic#.YessoljML0o>.
To RSVP, see here <https://bit.ly/digital-black-atlantic>.*

Panelists will speak on a range of important projects and topics related to
the Digital Black Atlantic:

   - Annette Joseph-Gabriel will share Mapping Marronage
   <http://mapping-marronage.rll.lsa.umich.edu/>, a digital visualization
   of enslaved people’s mobility in the Atlantic world. Professor
   Joseph-Gabriel will present an overview of the site and its visualization
   of enslaved people’s flight and networks. She will discuss the process of
   transcription, translation, and data mining applied to the digital map’s
   primary documents sourced from archives around the
   world. Professor Joseph-Gabriel will share her work asynchronously, via a
   recorded presentation.
   - Roopika Risam will discuss areas of growth and reflect on the
   limitations of *The Digital Black Atlantic* and connect the work of the
   volume to her current work with the Digital Ethnic Futures Consortium.
   - Kelly Baker Josephs will discuss the theoretical framework for, and
   challenges encountered in publishing the edited volume, *The Digital
   Black Atlantic*. She will close with brief connections between the
   volume and her current work.
   - Kelsey Moore will speak on her experience with the Mardi Gras Indian
   Traditions project and broadly discuss her digital praxis around
   researching, archiving, and documenting The Black South.

The event will be moderated by Nicole Aljoe
<https://cssh.northeastern.edu/faculty/nicole-aljoe/>, Professor of English
and Africana Studies, and Elizabeth Maddock Dillon
<https://cssh.northeastern.edu/faculty/elizabeth-dillon/>, Distinguished
Professor of English; Co-Director, NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks.
After each panelist speaks about their current research in the Digital
Black Atlantic, we will have an open discussion with all attendees.


*Speaker Biographies*
*Kelly Baker Josephs
<https://gc.cuny.edu/Page-Elements/Academics-Research-Centers-Initiatives/Doctoral-Programs/English/Faculty-by-Field/Kelly-Baker-Josephs>*
is Professor of English at York College, CUNY and Professor of English and
Digital Humanities at the CUNY Graduate Center. She is the author of
*Disturbers
of the Peace: Representations of Insanity in Anglophone Caribbean
Lit­erature <https://www.upress.virginia.edu/title/4572>* (2013), co-editor
of The *Digital Black Atlantic
<https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/the-digital-black-atlantic>*
(University of Minnesota Press, 2021), and co-organizer of the annual Caribbean
Digital <http://caribbeandigitalnyc.net/2021/> conferences. She is
currently at work on a second monograph that explores the intersections
between new technologies and Caribbean cultural production.

*Annette Joseph-Gabriel <https://www.annettejosephgabriel.com/>* is an
Associate Professor of Romance Studies at Duke University. Her research
focuses on race, gender, and citizenship in the French-speaking Caribbean,
Africa, and France. She is the author of *Reimagining Liberation: How Black
Women Transformed Citizenship in the French Empire* (University of Illinois
Press), winner of the 2020 MLA Prize for a First Book. She has published
articles in peer-reviewed journals, including *Small Axe, Slavery &
Abolition*, *Eighteenth-Century Studies*, and *The French Review*, and her
public writings have been featured in *Al Jazeera*, *HuffPost*, and *The
Washington Post*. She is a recipient of the Carrie Chapman Catt Prize for
Research on Women and Politics. She is also the managing editor of *Palimpsest:
A Journal on Women, Gender, and the Black International* and production
editor of *Women in French Studies*.

*Kelsey Moore <https://history.jhu.edu/directory/kelsey-moore/>* is a Ph.D.
Candidate in the Department of History at the Johns Hopkins University,
focusing on southern African American History. She is also the Lead Chair
of the Mardi Gras Indian Traditions: Going Global, Going Online under
LifexCode: Digital Humanities Against Enclosure. She received a Dual BA in
Africana Studies and Public Policy from New York University, where she
graduated as the 2019 Valedictorian of the College of Arts and Science. Her
current dissertation tentatively titled “What the Dead Witnessed: Clearing
of Black Knowledges in Jim Crow South Carolina,” focuses on the removal and
flooding of over 9,000 graves which was required of the Santee-Cooper
Hydroelectric Project in the 1930s. In addition to her dissertation, Moore
created thefolk in 2020, a digital archive dedicated to highlighting black
southern culture both past and present. Her digital praxis centers on
preserving and rethinking The Black South as an essential landscape of
black knowledge.

*Roopika Risam <https://www.roopikarisam.com/>* is Chair of Secondary and
Higher Education and Associate Professor of Education and English at Salem
State University. She is the author of *New Digital Worlds: Postcolonial
Digital Humanities in Theory, Praxis, and Pedagogy*, and the director of
the Mellon-funded Digital Ethnic Futures Consortium, a network of scholars
teaching at the intersections of digital humanities and ethnic studies.

*We will be including automated live captioning during the event. To make
space for informal discussions, this event will not be recorded. If you
have questions, please contact **[log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>**.*

Please also share this information with anyone who may be interested.

 Kind regards,

Javier

Javier Rosario
Graduate Fellow
NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks
Northeastern University

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