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Divided America: Religious Dissent and Freedom Exhibition
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Divided America: Religious Dissent & Freedom
On view starting October 21, 2024 in the Harriette Hemmasi Exhibition Gallery at the John Hay Library
20 Prospect St., Providence, RI
HoursThrough The Divided America Project, the John Hay Library is digitizing and making freely available the bulk of the Hall-Hoag Collection, the country’s largest research compilation of materials produced by dissenting and extremist political organizations across the ideological spectrum. Containing nearly 1.5 million individual items representing more than 30,000 organizations across the country, and covering the period from 1946 to 1999, the collection provides a deep and nuanced look at American politics and political culture from the end of the Second World War to the eve of the September 11 attacks.
Unparalleled in breadth and depth, Hall-Hoag is unique for aggregating material from organizations with faint, if any, traces in the archival record. A particular strength of Hall-Hoag is documenting many dissenting and extremist organizations at the local level, where materials are most ephemeral and least visible in the historical record.
As one of the Library’s premier collections, the Hall-Hoag Collection forms the anchor for the strategic collecting initiative Ideology & Power, which seeks to provide coherence and promote public access to more than 200 years of original material that documents the evolution of political, social, and religious ideologies in the United States.
The Divided America: Religious Dissent and Freedom exhibit highlights material from the Hall-Hoag Collection dating from the 1950s to 1990s on topics including the separation of church and state, the development of inclusive theology and churches, Christian Nationalism, Christian Peace Activism, the development of the Nation of Islam, and the U.S. atheist movement.
The Divided America Project is funded through grants from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission’s Access to Historical Records: Major Initiatives program and Arcadia, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin.
Explore the Hall-Hoag Collection digitally in the Brown Digital Repository. Additional material will be added through December 2025.
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Brown University Library Releases Multimodal Publication Centered on Consent, Introduces New Form of Visual Literacy
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[Providence, RI] Brown University Digital Publications has launched the multimodal edition of Mortevivum: Photography and the Politics of the Visual, the inaugural title in the On Seeing series published by the MIT Press. Authored by Kimberly Juanita Brown, inaugural director of the Institute for Black Intellectual and Cultural Life at Dartmouth College, Mortevivum is a powerful examination of the unsettling history of photography and its fraught relationship to global antiblackness.
With subject matter that may be triggering, particularly images of violence and harm done to Black bodies, the open access multimodal edition employs a Consentful Tech framework, or the intentional development and use of technology to create safety, to prioritize care, and to foreground consent in order to mitigate trauma.

Readers are given agency in determining how and for how long they view challenging images. No images of dead bodies have been included, at least not in their original form. Exploring a space between evidence and erasure, the BUDP design team deeply considered how to transform these images for various audiences. An icon indicates that viewers may opt to see more of an altered image, but only if they choose to do so. This innovative treatment of bodies borrowed heavily from the Carrie Mae Weems cover art, creating a haunting confrontation that attempts to rewrite harm into regard.By including images that do the work without doing the damage, the multimodal edition introduces a new form of visual literacy that comes through agency. Indeed, Colin Edgington, writing for Aperture, calls the book “a necessary addition to the archive of photographic thought. It will change the way readers look at images of all kinds.”

The multimodal edition also offers readers a Community Engagement Toolkit, a guide to having open conversations about antiblackness, visual culture, and death. Other uniquely digital content includes video recordings of author Kimberly Juanita Brown in dialogue with Brown University professors Kim Gallon, Juliet Hooker, Kevin Quashie, and Avery Willis Hoffman; and with Vievee Elaure Francis of Dartmouth College.

Publications in the On Seeing series foreground the political agency, critical insight, and social impact inscribed in visuality and representation. The MIT Press will publish each On Seeing volume as a print book, ebook, and open access multimodal edition created by Brown University Digital Publications. The next title in the series is Black Elegies: Meditations on the Art of Mourning.

Brown University Digital Publications — a collaboration between the University Library and the Dean of the Faculty, generously launched with support from the Mellon Foundation with additional support from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum and Library Services — creates exciting new conditions for the production and sharing of knowledge. Brown partners with leading scholarly publishers to ensure that these groundbreaking works are validated via rigorous academic review and reach the broadest possible audience for the greatest possible impact. Widely recognized as accessible, intentional, and inclusive, Brown’s novel, university-based approach to digital content development is helping to set the standards for the future of scholarship in the digital age.
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Hot to Go (to the Library): Coming Out Day 2024
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Friday, October 11, 2024 is National Coming Out Day! Celebrate and explore the joys and pleasures of queerness with a day of crafting, food, community, and history at the Brown University Library!
This year’s theme, Playing with Queer Futures, invites you on a pride-filled and playful journey across four Brown Library stations plus the Main Green to connect, celebrate, and create our visions for queer futures!
Visit each of the following Library sites, collect a limited-edition sticker at each Coming Out Day station, and enter to win a raffle at our table on the Main Green, where you’ll find us hanging out with our friends from Stonewall House.
- THE ROCK: Cruising Crafts from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.: Cruise by the crafting table in the Lobby of the Rock where you can play with collage, button-making, t-shirt transfers, and more!
- ORWIG: Queer Joy Vinyl Listening Party from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Come to Orwig 109 for an hour-long listening party featuring queer deep cuts from Orwig’s vinyl record collection. Come for ABBA, stay for Bikini Kill. Refreshments provided!
- SCI-LI / SCI-FI from 1 to 3:30 p.m. Beam yourself up at the SciLi’s queer playscape. Contribute to the collective scroll and “picture” your queer future at our color-filled selfie space.
- THE HAY: Time Traveling with Queer Collections Open House from noon to 4 p.m. in Hay 321: Time travel through queer history with a hands-on open house featuring materials from the Hay’s collections. Refreshments in the Lobby!
- THE HAY: Queer Community Reception from 4 to 5 p.m. in the Hay Lobby: Join us for a community gathering at 4 p.m. to enjoy snacks (and each other!) as we listen to the Coming Out Day 2024 Spotify Queer Play-List.
MAIN GREEN from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Stop by our table at the Main Green to explore Library materials related to queer life and say hello to our friends and collaborators @ Stonewall House and the Sarah Doyle Center.