释义 |
- Karida Brown Degrees Awards Grants Significance Exhibition public arts Radio broadcasts Publications
- References
- External links
{{AFC submission|d|prof|u=KingreaL6719|ns=118|decliner=Bkissin|declinets=20190403144419|reason2=not|ts=20190403095215}} {{AFC comment|1=Reminder that Wikipedia is not a place for your resume. Look at our guidelines for professors and academics and that may help you see if Dr. Brown qualifies. Bkissin (talk) 14:44, 3 April 2019 (UTC)}}
Karida Brown Karida BrownDepartment of Sociology, Brown University Degrees - 2016 PhD, Sociology, Brown University
- 2012 M.A., Sociology, Brown University
- 2009 M.P.A., Government, University of Pennsylvania
- 2004 B.B.A, Risk Management, Temple University
Awards - 2017 ASA Dissertation Award
Grants - 2018: Fulbright Global Scholar Award, two-year grant
- 2017: Mellon Foundation (reference # 11700641): Community-Based Archives, co-PI, three-year grant
Significance We emphasize Karida Brown's relevance as a sociological theorist, an aspect of her work that has not received the attention it deserves. Brown's research focuses on the culture and history of the African Americans who migrated in and out of the coalfields of eastern Kentucky throughout the 20th Century. Brown's collections include over 200 interviews with African Americans from eastern Kentucky. Brown's strategy is to use the historical documentation from the Kentucky mountains, and the cities across the United States. Exhibition public arts - "The Black Shackle: African Americans and the Coal Economy", The Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, Brown University. Dated May 24 – October 10, 2016
- "Gone Home: Race and Roots through Appalachia", Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, Wilson Special Collections Library, UNC at Chapel Hill. Dated April 28 – August 26, 2015
- The Eastern Kentucky African America Migration Project. Dated:2013–Present
The Eastern Kentucky African America Migration Project remains present as an ongoing participatory archival assemblage intrigued on the African American Great Migration. The project is fabricated from the ground up by associates of African Americans/Appalachian roots, whom afterward take part in a mass migration crisis by their community, "Great Migration". Project combines oral history interviews, photos and primary materials that will be archived, digitized, and made publicly available through the Southern Historical Collection at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Radio broadcasts - Interview with Frank Stasio on The State of Things: "Gone Home, The Stories of Black Coal Miners in Appalachia", WUNC: North Carolina Public Radio. Aug. 4th, 2015
- Rebroadcast on West Virginia Public Broadcasting on Aug.- News Coverage
- Chapel Hill News Services. "UNC-Chapel Hill exhibit follows black migration to coal fields". Chapel Hill News. 30 June 2015
Publications - Brown, Karida, (2018) Gone Home: Race and Roots through Appalachia. In-Print in August, University of North Carolina Press
- Itzigsohn, José and Brown, Karida, The Souls of Sociology: Du Bois, Race, and Modernity. Forthcoming with NYU Press
- Brown, Karida, (2018) "A Love Letter to Black Graduate Students". The New Black Sociologist. Forthcoming with Routledge Press
- Brown, Karida, (2016) "The Hidden Injuries of School Desegregation" American Journal of Cultural Sociology, 4(2): 196–220.
- Brown, Karida, (2016) "On the Participatory Archive: An ethnography of the Eastern Kentucky African American Migration Project" Southern Cultures 22(1): 113–127, Special issue: Documentary Arts
- Brown, Karida, Murphy, Michael, and Porcelli, Apollonya, (2016) "Ruin's Progeny: Race, Environment and Appalachia's Coal Camp Blacks" Du Bois Review special issue: Race and Environmental Equity.
- Itzigsohn, José and Brown, Karida, (2015) "Sociology and the Theory of Double Consciousness: W. E. B Du Bois' Phenomenology of Racialized Subjectivity" Du Bois Review 12(2): 231–248.
References - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ucla_headshot_2.jpg
- https://www.soc.ucla.edu/faculty/karida-l-brown
- http://ekaamp.web.unc.edu/about-karida-brown
- https://www.soc.ucla.edu/sites/default/files/cv_karida_brown_april_2018.pdf
External links - [https://www.facebook.com/karida.brown.5 Facebook page]
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