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  • Winners of the Undergraduate Prize for Excellence in Library Research

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    Brown University Library is pleased to announce that Paulina Gąsiorowska and Amira Haileab are the recipients of the 20th annual Undergraduate Prize for Excellence in Library Research, supported through the Center for Library Exploration and Research. This award, established in partnership with the Office of the Dean of the College, recognizes undergraduate projects that make extensive and creative use of Brown University Library’s collections, including print and primary resources, databases, and special collections.

    The winning projects are honored with a $1,000 prize each and will be recognized at an awards ceremony on Wednesday, April 29 at 3 p.m. in the Racial Justice Resource Center on the second floor of the Rockefeller Library.

    Winners

    Paulina Gąsiorowska ‘27

    On Re-Painting and (Self-)Primitivizing in Mela Muter’s Maternity” 

    Paulina Gąsiorowska’s research project, “On Re-Painting and (Self-)Primitivizing in Mela Muter’s Maternity Cycle,” takes up the life and work of early 20th century Polish-Jewish painter Mela Muter, who made her mark on French modernism by painting and re-painting maternity scenes across the aesthetic modes associated with the great (male) artists of the Western European avant-garde. Turning to exhibition catalogs and artist emigration archives, as well as frameworks of feminist, cultural, and art historians and theorists, the project posits a critical recognition of Muter’s pictorial surfaces as not constituting sites of pure radical subjectivity, but rather as staging dynamic negotiations of her ambivalent positionalities and complicities in modernist discourses of repetition and derivation, cosmopolitanism and primitivism, origin and originality.

    Amira Haileab ‘27

     “A Black Red Sea: Understanding the Red Sea in Black Geography through the Conscript”

    This paper is the introduction to Amira Haileab’s larger honors thesis project for AFRI 1970 with the supervision of Professors Kim Gallon and Jennifer Johnson. The project seeks to answer how The Conscript: A Novel of Libya’s Anticolonial War, by Dr. Abba Gebreyesus Hailu, understands and reimagines the Red Sea as a racialized space, and the significance of Black geography, the study of the relationship between Blackness and space, for understanding the role that the Red Sea plays in the novel. Written in 1927, published in 1950, and translated from Tigrinya to English in 2013, The Conscript is a fictional retelling of the experiences of Eritrean soldiers, known as the ascari. From 1889 to 1941, the ascari were conscripted by Italy to battle anti-colonial nationalist forces across African countries, including Sudan, Ethiopia, and Libya. The fraught journey of the ascari in The Conscript locates the region’s geography as a site of transformation, remembrance, and grief, highlighting the role that geography plays in informing identity. By analyzing two critical geographies in The Conscript — the coast and the desert — Amira’s paper works toward classifying the Red Sea as a particular lens through which the characters begin to understand their conscription and subjugation in relation to other African people.

  • Revolutionary Communication: Printing Independence and the Birth of the American Stamp

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    A promotional poster in a cream color features a heading, "April 30 – December 13, 2026, at the John Hay Library," in a black serif font in the upper left corner. Near the upper right corner, an antique, grey, square postage stamp reads, "POST OFFICE PROV. R.I. FIVE CENTS." Below the top text, the heading, "Revolutionary Communication," in a dark blue script, is centered with a thin red bar beneath. In the middle, the subtext, "Printing Independence AND THE BIRTH OF THE AMERICAN STAMP," in a brown serif font. Below, a brown ink illustration of a colonial figure on a galloping horse with a horn at its lips is centered on a brown ink landscape.
    Revolutionary Communication Exhibit Poster

    Before the first musket was fired, the American Revolution was sparked by messages.

    This spring, the John Hay Library at Brown University invites you to explore our latest exhibition, Revolutionary Communication: Printing Independence and the Birth of the American Stamp, bringing together original maps, newspapers, and artifacts that show how communication became our nation’s first act of sovereignty.

    Discover the story of William Goddard — a Providence printer who founded The Providence Gazette and established The Constitutional Post. This independent postal network bypassed British surveillance and carried revolutionary ideas across the colonies. The simple act of sending a letter became a radical act of defiance for American liberty. As we celebrate the upcoming 250th anniversary of American independence this year, join us to witness where the Revolution truly began.

    The event will feature the first official commemorative stamp cancellation event in Rhode Island since 1990, with Jeanne Jackson, the first female postmaster in Providence. Bring your own envelope — or collect our customized-designed postcard on-site — to receive a unique, limited-edition cancellation stamp from Jeanne: a tangible piece of American postal history and a testament to the enduring power of free, open communication.

    Exhibit Opening & Stamp Cancelation Event

    Opening Reception: April 30th, 2026
    Time: 2:00pm – 4:00pm EDT
    Location: Room 321, John Hay Library, 20 Prospect Street, Providence, RI
    Co-sponsor: Brown University Library, David Winton Bell Gallery, Brown Arts Institute, Brown 2026
    Cost: Free
    MUST RSVP Here

  • Forging the Future of Digital Scholarship: People, Projects, Priorities

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    A symposium co-organized by Brown University Digital Publications and the Center for Digital Scholarship on Friday, May 1, 2026.

    This one-day symposium, held both in-person and virtually, focuses on future directions in the field of digital scholarship, including community-engaged research, uses of AI in the field, the rapidly evolving landscape of multimodal publishing, and more.

    Keynote speaker: Brett Bobley, advisor for Schmidt Sciences’ Humanities and AI Virtual Institute grant program and former founding director of the NEH Office of Digital Humanities.

    Registration

    Free and open to the public. Registration required.

    Schedule

    8:30 a.m. – Arrivals

    8:45 a.m. – Welcome and Introduction 

    9:15 a.m. – Keynote Address

    Brett Bobley, Advisor for Schmidt Sciences and former Director of the Office of Digital Humanities at the National Endowment for the Humanities

    10:15 a.m. – Break

    10:30 a.m. – Multimodal Publishing: Innovation and Impact

    Participants

    • Sarah McKee, Project Manager, Amplifying Humanistic Scholarship, American Council of Learned Societies
    • Tara Nummedal, Professor and Chair of History, Brown University
    • Leah VanWey, Dean of the Faculty, Brown University
    • Victoria-Lola Leon Guerrero, Director of the University of Guam Press
    • Chair: Allison Levy, Director of Brown University Digital Publications 

    12 p.m. – Lunch

    1 p.m. – Community-Centered Research I: Our Priorities and Concerns (Case Studies)

    Participants

    • Kim Gallon, Associate Professor of Africana Studies, Brown University
    • Kimberley Toney, Coordinating Curator for Native American and Indigenous Materials for the John Carter Brown Library and Brown University Library
    • Michael Running Wolf (Northern Cheyenne and Lakota), Co-Founder and Lead Architect of First Languages AI Reality at Mila/IndigiGenius and former AI startup executive
    • Co-Chairs:
      • Patrick Rashleigh, Head of Digital Scholarship Technology Services, Brown University Library
      • Tarika Sankar, Digital Humanities Librarian, Brown University Library

    2 p.m. – Break

    2:15 p.m. – Community-Centered Research II: Your Priorities and Concerns (audience breakouts) 

    3:15 p.m. – Break

    3:25 p.m. – Future Directions for Digital Scholarship 

    Participants

    • Eliza Bettinger, Director of Digital Scholarship Services, Cornell University Library
    • Meaghan J. Brown, Associate Director of Digital Asset Management, John Carter Brown Library
    • Lynda Kellam, Snyder-Granader Director of Research Data & Digital Scholarship, University of Pennsylvania Libraries
    • Nirmala Menon, Professor of English, Indian Institute of Technology Indore and Chair of the newly established Jay Prakash Narayan National Centre of Excellence in the Humanities
    • Cecilia Smith, Director of Digital Scholarship, University of Chicago Library
    • Co-Chairs:
      • Ashley Champagne, Director of Center for Digital Scholarship, Brown University Library
      • Allison Levy, Director of Brown University Digital Publications, Brown University Library

    4:45 p.m. – Closing Remarks

    Speakers

    • Ashley Champagne, Director of Center for Digital Scholarship, Brown University Library
    • Allison Levy, Director of Brown University Digital Publications, Brown University Library

    5 p.m. – Reception

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