critical DH pedagogy; queer-feminist media technologies; community archives; architecture, space, infrastructure, and the city | educator, writer, editor, public scholar | use: they/he
whospeaksandacts.net
critical DH pedagogy; queer-feminist media technologies; community archives; architecture, space, infrastructure, and the city | educator, writer, editor, public scholar | use: they/he
whospeaksandacts.net
In the context of the disastrous consequences of the ongoing war, this SAH CONNECTS panel will explore the entangled histories of aerial vision and the built environment in Palestine. What role do aerial vision and cartography play in casting light on the dispossession of Palestinians from Palestine, from their homes and territories? Although Palestine (especially Jerusalem) had been a favorite topic of pre-modern cartography due to its centrality to the three monotheistic religions, it was not until the nineteenth century that mapping the region became a significant military-scientific enterprise. Today Israel claims sovereignty over Palestinian airspace. This control has made it difficult to evaluate human loss, damage to archeological sites, infrastructure, environment, the residential fabric, and the land. The program will build on the 2021 exhibition and book “Palestine from Above,” which showcased contemporary art works by local and international artists and practitioners, together with archival and historical documents. It was the culmination of a collaborative research project, also called “Palestine from Above,” and was curated by a committee comprised of Zeynep Çelik, Salim Tamari, Zeinab Azarbadegan and Yazid Anani. The “Palestine from Above” project (on view September 11, 2021 to January 15, 2022 at the A.M. Qattan Foundation, Ramallah, Palestine) traced various imperial, colonial, and Zionist efforts to surveille the territory. Çelik and Tamari and moderator Morton will discuss how and if the historical awareness accumulated by the exhibition and publication project can be leveraged for disciplinary knowledge production among architectural historians. Following their presentations, Patricia Morton will lead a 30-minute Question and Answer discussion, focusing on the implications of their research for our discipline and what architectural historians who are not area experts can learn from this project.
Check out the Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy (JITP) special issue 23 on "The Liberatory Legacy of bell hooks: Pedagogies and Praxes that Heal and Disrupt" (December 2023).
My co-editors and I have loved facilitating this conversation over the past year—and we hope that the featured pieces travel with you even as you and we keep building a new vocabulary of transgression amidst ongoing colonization.
<h3>Edited by Nikki Fragala Barnes, Summer L. Hamilton, Asma Neblett, Kush Patel, and Danica Savonick</h3> <p>“This special issue draws on hooks’s radical, inclusive, disruptive, and recuperative legacy to explore the use of digital technology in teaching, educational organizing, and anti-oppressive praxes within, alongside, and beyond academia. We ask: What kinds of embodied and communal interactions are enabled by teaching with technology? How can we reconcile the inherent contradictions in a learning community where technology functions as a tool for social justice and for surveillance capitalism?”</p>
At DHSI, full tuition scholarships are still available for Course #42 Pedagogy of the Digitally Oppressed: Anti-Colonial DH Critiques & Praxis (June 10-14, 2024): https://dhsi.org/on-campus-courses2024/
Course participation will count toward building a path through the Canadian Certificate in DH: https://ccdhhn.ca/
Apply now and please help boost this invitation for those interested in your networks!