The Sea is History: Moun Kanntè, Yoleros, Balseros, Boteros
A Symposium on Human Dispersion in the Caribbean
Thursday, April 16, 2009
2:00 – 5:30 PM
John Hope Franklin Center for International Interdisciplinary Studies,
Room 240
"Exile and Remembrance: Haitian Artist Edouard Duval-Carrié and Prof.
Laurent Dubois (Duke) In Conversation"
"(Dis)Placements, Entanglements, Mo(ve)ments: Issues of Citizenship &
Citizenness"
Michaeline Crichlow, Professor of African & African American Studies, Duke
"Under the Jurisdiction of La Sirène: The Underwater World in Turner,
Dessalines, & Haitian Painting"
Deborah Jenson, Professor of Romance Studies, Duke University
"Sea Exodus and Alternative Political Imaginaries: 1960-2008"
Holly Ackerman, PhD, Perkins Library, Duke University
Exhibition opening follows program at 5:30 PM (see below).
=============
The Sea is History - Moun Kantè, Yoleros, Balseros, Boteros
An Exhibition on Human Dispersion in the Caribbean Sea
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 16, 5:30 PM
John Hope Franklin Center for International & Interdisciplinary Studies,
First Floor Gallery
Curated by Holly Ackerman, PhD, Librarian for Latin American and Iberian
Studies and 2008-09 Library Fellow, Franklin Humanities Institute Annual
Seminar, Alternative Political Imaginaries
|