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  • Jason Cerrato: STEM Instruction Librarian

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    The Library welcomes Jason Cerrato, the inaugural STEM Instruction Librarian. 

    Jason’s expertise in instructional design, working within project-based curricula, and library instruction delivered in a multi-modal, interdisciplinary education setting strengthens the Library’s support for STEM instruction. In this position, Jason will build and strengthen teaching partnerships and related library services in STEM disciplines, including designing, delivering, and assessing curriculum-aligned educational programming, conducting outreach to STEM aligned academic programs and groups, and providing reference and consultative support to students and faculty. Jason joins us from Worcester Polytechnic Institute, where he has served as the Online Learning and Instruction Librarian. His previous library experience includes serving as Reference Librarian at Emmanuel College and Instructional Librarian and Department Head at the East Providence Public Library. He has taught at Bronx Community College (CUNY) for over a decade and has local experience from his time as an Archival Processing Assistant at the Rhode Island Historical Society in 2018.

    Jason is completing his PhD at Simmons University in Library and Information Sciences with a focus on critical librarianship, critical informatics, and information literacy pedagogies. He earned his MLIS from Simmons University, MA in Political Science and Sociology from The New School for Social Research, and a BA in Political Science from Fordham University. 

    Jason’s first day will be Monday, July 24, 2023.

  • Rediscovering Forgotten Stories: Unraveling the Lives of African Heritage Women in Rhode Island

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    Article by Christopher D. West, PhD, Curator of the Black Diaspora at the John Hay Library; excerpted from “The Origins Newsletter” from the Rhode Island Black Heritage Society.

    black and white photo of sign "The Home for Aged Colored Women Member Agency Providence Community Fund, Inc.
    Photo courtesy of Rhode Island Black Heritage Society

    The Rhode Island Black Heritage Society (RIBHS) is the living vessel of the hopes, dreams, desires, aspirations and vernacular culture of African Heritage communities of Rhode Island.  The vernacular culture of African Heritage in the Ocean State is in the records of the churches, civic organizations, and individuals that have walked the cities of Newport, Providence, Church Falls, and other communities in Rhode Island.

    There are hundreds of boxes in the RIBHS collection but there is one that calls to me whenever I am in its presence and the people who inhabit it demand I share their story.  In the communities of African Heritage women in the late 19th century of Rhode Island being of service to the community was as routine as tithing on Sunday.  That desire to serve was coupled with a glaring need, a facility for elderly African Heritage women without the resources to care for themselves.  The Home for Aged Colored Women was established in April 1890 for retired Black female domestic laborers.

    In the acid free box that contained the records of the home is a ledger…as you turn to the first page in careful penmanship are the lives of the women they served.  The name, age and other data is noted along with the date of their arrival into the facility.  As you move to the far right side of the ledger that begins in the 1890’s and runs through the 1950s is one final column, when that African Heritage woman took her last breath on this earth.

    That transition from this earth was facilitated by Black women who sought no support from Federal, State, County, City, Township or other entities to fund their endeavor.  They are an example of the tradition of African Heritage women in the Ocean State who have formed civic organizations with political and philanthropic focuses. The records of these organizations have much to tell us about the lives, experiences and stories of Black people in Rhode Island.

    There are two other records in that acid free box, incorporation documents for home with minutes of meetings and a dues ledger of contributions by the women to fund the home.  Without the Rhode Island Black Heritage Society these and thousands of objects, and photos that tell the complete story of Rhode Island would forever be lost to history.

  • New Project with Michelle Clayton Selected for Brown University Digital Publications

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    The University Library and the Dean of the Faculty, together with the Digital Publications Faculty Advisory Committee, are pleased to announce the selection of the next scholarly work to be developed by Brown University Digital Publications.

    headshot of Michelle Clayton

    Articulations: Dancing Across Modernities, by Michelle Clayton, Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies and Comparative Literature, explores the place of dance as image and practice in the early twentieth century. Tracing the ways in which painters, poets, filmmakers, and critics turned to dance and the dancer as models for connecting times and places, it emphasizes that the dancer was herself not just a muse but a creative practitioner, student, and collector. She immersed herself in source materials, Clayton argues, collecting artifacts and ideas on tour, engaging in transregional and interdisciplinary dialogues, and writing her own histories of the artform through essays, interviews, and choreographies. A media-rich project that draws upon a wide array of artifacts including books, press clippings, films, snapshots, artworks, poems, maps, and anecdotes, this digital publication will incorporate a wealth of material to help readers travel with dancers across regions, stages, texts, and languages.

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     Self-Portrait (1916), Sonia Delaunay.  https://louisiana.dk/en/exhibition/sonia-delaunay/

    Brown University Digital Publications

    A collaboration between the University Library and the Dean of the Faculty, launched with generous support from the Mellon Foundation and further supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum and Library Services, Brown University Digital Publications creates exciting new conditions for the production and sharing of knowledge. 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.

    Enhanced Digital Works

    Projects that are selected by the program’s Faculty Advisory Committee are developed as enhanced digital works that draw on the capabilities of the Library’s Center for Digital Scholarship. These scholarly works are then submitted to leading university presses that have corresponding academic interests and the infrastructure for peer review and digital publication.

    Published Works

    The previously published born-digital scholarly works developed by Brown University Digital Publications are 

    Works in Development

    Thirteen other faculty publication projects are currently in development: 

    • The Sensory Monastery: Saint-Jean-des-Vignes co-authored by Sheila Bonde, Professor of History of Art and Architecture and Professor of Archaeology, and Clark Maines, Professor Emeritus of Art History at Wesleyan University; 
    • Standing Still Moving: Arts of Gesture in Lateral Time by Rebecca Schneider, Professor of Modern Culture and Media; 
    • Chika Sagawa, Japanese Modernist Poet by Sawako Nakayasu, Assistant Professor of Literary Arts;
    • Travels in Search of the Slave Past: Monuments, Memorials, Sites of Slavery by Renée Ater, Provost’s Visiting Professor of Africana Studies; 
    • Imperial Unsettling: Indigenous and Immigrant Activism Toward Collective Liberation by Kevin Escudero, Assistant Professor of American Studies and Ethnic Studies;
    • Art, Secrecy, and Invisibility in Ancient Egypt by Laurel Bestock, Associate Professor of Archaeology and the Ancient World & Egyptology and Assyriology;
    • Trojan Women in Performance by Avery Willis Hoffman, Inaugural Artistic Director, Brown Arts Institute, Professor of the Practice of Arts and Classics; 
    • The Ruin Archive: Art and War at the Ends of Empire by Vazira Fazila-Yacoobali Zamindar, Associate Professor of History; 
    • Border Assemblages: Re-collecting Moria by Yannis Hamilakis, Joukowsky Family Professor of Archaeology and Professor of Modern Greek Studies; 
    • Going through the Motions: Animations of Black Being in the Breaks by Rebecca Louise Carter, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Urban Studies; 
    • In Networked and Programmable Media: Language Art with Personal Computation by John Cayley, Professor of Literary Arts; 
    • The Chisolm Massacre: Reconstruction and the Politics of Violence by Christopher Grasso, Professor of History; and 
    • Grounds for Reclamation: Fascism and Postfascism in the Marshes by Suzanne Stewart-Steinberg, Professor of Comparative Literature and Italian Studies. 

    Brown University Digital Projects

    In addition, Brown University Digital Publications has produced University projects such as the revised and expanded edition of Brown’s Slavery and Justice Report and the 13-volume Race &…in America digital series. With funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Brown University Library has established a training institute, Born-Digital Scholarly Publishing: Resources and Roadmaps, designed for scholars who wish to develop innovative born-digital publications but may lack the necessary resources and capacity at their home institutions. A recently awarded grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian Program establishes a cross-organizational training and support program, with the HBCU Library Alliance and University of Michigan Press, for HBCU library professionals seeking to gain or expand expertise in developing open access born-digital scholarship. BUDP has also partnered with MIT Press on a new multimodal book series, “On Seeing,” to explore under-examined questions in visual culture, including an innovative community engagement component. 

    Contact

    To learn more about Brown University Digital Publications, contact Director Allison Levy (allison_levy@brown.edu). 

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