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Handbook for Preliminary Dissertation Fieldwork: A Practical Guide for the International Student Researcher

With support from a Susan Abbott-Jamieson Award, Kevin Talbert spent Summer, 2013, conducting preliminary fieldwork in Tanzania.  This practicum report is designed to be a handbook for any Anthropology graduate students conducting field research abroad, but It will be of interest to graduate students and other researchers conducting field research, especially internationally, for the first time.  The presentation covers such topics as entering the field, locating an appropriate field site, seeking local institutional affiliations, the research permit process, etc.  This roundtable is designed to be useful for anyone seeking to embark on first fieldwork, not just in Africa but elsewhere as well.  It focuses especially on the preliminary fieldwork stage in preparation for a longer, PhD fieldwork length immersion later. 

Date:
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Location:
Lafferty Hall Rm. 213

Kentucky Poetry Festival

Come celebrate National Poetry Month during first annual Kentucky Poetry Month, sponsored by the University of Kentucky's MFA in Creative Writing!

2015 Kentucky Poetry Festival Events

April 24 - May 01

 

  • Off the Ground Featuring Bianca Lynne Spriggs

    • Common Grounds on High Street

    • Friday April 24, 2015

    • 7:30pm

    • Affrilachian Poet and Cave Canem Fellow, Bianca Lynne Spriggs is a multidisciplinary artist who lives and works in Lexington, Kentucky. She is the author of Kaffir Lily (Wind Publications, 2010), How Swallowtails Become Dragons (Accents Publishing, 2011), and the forthcoming titles, Call Her By Her Name (Northwestern University Press, 2016), The Galaxy is a Dance Floor (Argos Books, 2016), and Circe's Lament: An Anthology of Wild Women (Accents Publishing, 2015). Her work may be found in numerous journals and anthologies. Open mic to follow!

       

  • KFP College Showcase

    • James F. Hardymon Theater, inside the Davis Marksbury Building on the UK's campus, 329 Rose Street

    • Saturday April 25, 2015

    • 2:00pm

    • Creative writing college students from around Kentucky will read their poetry.

  • A Reading by Louisvillian Poets, feat. Jeremy Clark, Adam Day, Lynnell Edwards, Michael Estes, and Martha Greenwald

    • James F. Hardymon Theater, inside the Davis Marksbury Building on the UK's campus, 329 Rose Street

    • Saturday April 25, 2015

    • 7:00pm

    • Louisville Poets will read their work.

  • Verse in Type

    • Clark Art & Antique, 801 Winchester Rd, Lexington, KY 40505

    • Sunday April 26th

    • 3:00pm

    • Broadside display from the King Library Press.

  • UK Libraries King Library Spring Seminar

    • Boone Center

    • Tuesday April 28th

    • 7:00pm

    • Dara Wier and Emily Pettit will lecture for the King Library as Keynote Speakers. King Library Press Broadside Contest Award winner will read.

       

  • Waxing Gastronomic: Food Poetry Open Mic

    • Donut Days on Southland

    • Wednesday April 29

    • 4:00pm

 

  • Dara Wier & Emily Pettit, Visiting Writers Series

    • UK Art Museum

    • Wednesday April 29th

    • 7:00pm

    • Dara Wier is the author of numerous collections of poetry, including You Good Thing (Wave Books, 2013); Selected Poems (2009); Remnants of Hannah (2006); Reverse Rapture (2005), and many others. She teaches workshops and form and theory seminars and directs the M.F.A. program for poets and writers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

    • Emily Pettit is the author of Goat in the Snow (Birds LLC), and two chapbooks How (Octopus Books) and What Happened to Limbo (Pilot Books). Her poems can be found in Skein, Thethe, Sixth Finch, Wolf in a Field, Le Petite Zine, Forklift Ohio, Glitterpony, Diagram, Octopus, H_ngM_n and elsewhere.  She has a MFA from the University of Iowa where she was a Maytag Fellow. She teaches writing and literature at Elms College, poetry workshops at Flying Object and is publisher and editor of jubilat (the literary magazine) and at factory hollow press.She is an editor for notnostrums (notnostrums.com) and Factory Hollow Press. More poems can be found online (Octopus, Sixth Finch, Strange Machine) and in print (Invisible Ear, and, soon, Skein and SUPERMACHINE.)

 

  • Holler, featuring Normandi Ellis, Roger Bonair-Agard, AlexanderSings

    • Al’s Bar

    • Wednesday April, 29, 2015

    • 8:00 PM

    • Open mic starts at 8:00pm

    • We celebrate national poetry month with the return of Normandi Ellis, author of Words on Water, and the debut of two-time National Poetry Slam Champion, Roger Bonair-Agard, his latest Bury My Clothes, a long list finalist for the National Book Award. Providing music is Louisville based old time/folk artist AlexanderSings! Alejandro Udisco Kentucki). As usual open mic opens and closes the show. Bring some extra bones for the Holler bucket. Support your local arts. See y'all there!

       

  • Write or Die Poetry Slam (Presented by Bianca Spriggs/Hosted by the Raven House)

    • Ravenhouse 3229 Raven Cir, Lexington, Kentucky

    • Thursday April 30, 2015

    • 8:30pm, doors open at 8:00pm

    • Eight poets from around the state and region will compete in a three-round elimination spoken word competition for a first prize of $500 (sponsored by The Morris Book Shop) and a second prize of $300 (Sponsored by UnderMain). The feature and celebrity judge for the night is award-winning poet, Roger Bonair-Agard. Opening musical performances by Designer Flow and J. Cannon. DJ Warren Peace will be on the one's and two's. And special bonus, Thomas Kirkland, veteran slam emcee, will be dusting off his mic for the occasion! There will be a full spread, BYOB. Admission is $20. Capacity is 80 attendees, so get there early for this fast-paced, one-of-a-kind event! You can purchase tix in advance here: http://theravenhouse.brownpapertickets.com. A portion of the proceeds will go towards each of the performers that night as well as the Carnegie Center for Literacy and Learning!

 

  • Roger Bonair-Agard Interview

    • William T. Young Auditorium

    • Thursday April 30th, 2015

    • 5:30pm

    • Poet and spoken-word artist Roger Bonair-Agard was born in Trinidad and Tobago and moved to the United States in 1987. His collections of poetry include Tarnish and Masquerade (2006); Gully (2010); and Bury My Clothes (2013), which was a long-list finalist for a National Book Award. A Cave Canem fellow, Bonair-Agard performs his work and leads workshops internationally. He is the cofounder and artistic director of the louderARTS Project and teaches poetry at the Cook County Temporary Juvenile Detention Facility in Chicago.

       

  • Ekphrastic Poetry Prize DEADLINE

  • The Art Museum at the University of Kentucky and the University of Kentucky MFA Program in Creative Writing present The Kentucky Poetry Festival’s Ekphrastic Poetry Prize. First prize: $100. Deadline: May 01st. Entries must pertain to the permanent collection, or a current or past exhibit at The Art Museum at the University of Kentucky. Please indicate the name of the work and the artist’s name with entry. Contest is open to all poets, excluding current MFA poetry students at the University of Kentucky. Entrants may submit up to 3 poems as a single attached file with the format firstname_lastname2015 to: kpfpoetrycontest@gmail.com. For inquiries contact us at kpfpoetrycontest@gmail.com

  • Poetry in the Greenhouses

    • Michler's Florist, Greenhouses & Garden Design, 417 E Maxwell St, Lexington, KY 40508

    • Friday, May 01

    • 5:30pm

    • Readings by Steven Alvarez, Dan Howell, Leatha Kendrick, George Ella Lyon, Maurice Manning, Christopher McCurry, Kimberly Miller, Gurney Norman, Katerina Stoykova-Klemer, Richard Taylor, and Jeff Worley
    • Open mic to follow.

Date:
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Location:
Lexington and UK's campus
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Tribute to Jan Oaks and GWS end of year celebration

Dear GWS students, faculty, and friends,

On Monday May 4, 2015, from 3:00-4:30, GWS will host a tribute to Dr. Jan Oaks, followed by a reception from 4:30-5:00 at the Commonwealth House (part of the Gaines Center) at 226 East Maxwell Street.  We are hoping that you will join us for this celebration and acknowledgement of Jan’s life and her generous contributions to students, colleagues, and the university. We would also like to invite you to participate in this tribute by sharing your memories, stories, or thoughts about Jan. We would like to post them, with your permission, on our GWS website. We plan to finalize our program for the tribute byThursday, April 30, so please send us your remembrances to Michelle Del Toro at michelle.deltoro@uky.edu by then, and let us know if you would like to read them at the tribute or have someone read them for you. Your participation would be greatly appreciated. We will also announce the details about donating to the GWS Jan Oaks Award Fund for undergraduates that we are establishing.

Following the reception, we will hold our annual end-of- the- year awards ceremony from 5:00-6:30 and we hope you will join us for that event as well.

Please feel free to circulate this invitation widely. We hope to see you on May 4th.

 

Date:
-
Location:
Commonwealth House

21st Annual Black Women's Conference

 

21st Annual Black Women’s Conference - Leap for Joy: Black Women and Dance

The 2015 conference focuses on Black women’s bodies in motion.  Dance, both sacred and secular, has been a critical space for expression and community building. This year the conference will include dancers, scholars of dance and dance workshops as ways to explore the import of dance in the lives and history of black women.  We move from Lexington, Kentucky to Martinique to West Africa to the West side of Philadelphia to South America and back to the Bluegrass in celebration of the transcendent nature of rhythm, motion and muscle memory. 

Friday, April 24, 2015

1:00 pm - Dancing to Make Freedom: SOLHOT, Dance and Empowering Black Girls

104/105 Breckinridge Hall

University of Kentucky

6:00 – 9:00 pm - Zora Neale Hurston Community Event: Move Your Body Family Dance (all ages are welcome)

Lyric Theatre and Cultural Arts Center

300 E. 3rd Street - Lexington, KY

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Lyric Theatre and Cultural Arts Center

(Please dress in comfortable clothes that allow for dancing)

9:00 am - Welcome and Introduction - Melynda Price, Director of African American and Africana Studies Program

Julia Cooper Lecture and Workshop

Jacqueline CoutiAssistant Professor, Modern and Classical Languages, Literatures, and Cultures

(please bring a scarf or piece of fabric to tie around your waist for this workshop)

11:30 am - Mary McLeod Bethune Cookman Luncheon

Melanye White DixonAssociate Professor, Dance, Ohio State University

2:00 - Doris Y. Wilkinson Lecture and Workshop

Aminata Cairo, Assistant Professor, Anthropology, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville

Accompanied by Joan Brannon, Drummer, Teacher and Artist

(please bring a handkerchief or bandana for this presentation)

4:30 - Freestyle, Reflection, and Fellowship

**Free and open to the public. 

Black Women's Conference Invited Speakers and Participants:



 Aminata Cairo

 

 

 

 

 

Dr. Aminata Cairo was born and raised in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, but her family is originally from Suriname – a small country on the coast of South America.  Aminata came to the United States after completing high school to pursue her college education in 1984.  While in college she started dancing and working in the Lexington, Kentucky community in 1989.  Since 1989 she has worked throughout Kentucky, Maryland, and internationally, promoting the dance of the African Diaspora.  She studied dance and activism with the Urban Bush Women Summer Instituted and has had several study and performance tours in Suriname, specializing in traditional Afro-Surinamese dance.  She has been a company member of Syncopated Inc. in Lexington, and the Sankofa African dance company in Baltimore.  She also founded and directed her own Lexington based dance company Sabi Diri, so be it, a multi-ethnic company dedicated to uplifting the richness of our diversity.  She has infused her dance work with spiritual lessons from her Native American godmother Mama Wapajea, and her own family’s spiritual traditions.  She is the only scholar on traditional Afro-Surinamese dance and has recently been invited to give the Rudolf Van Lier Lecture at the University of Leiden on Traditional Afro-Surinamese Dance.  In 2015 she will dedicate her sabbatical year to publishing a book on Traditional Afro-Surinamese dance in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture and Development in Suriname.  She has always been interested in what makes people feel good about themselves, and has specialized in studying the combination of mental health, the arts, and culture.  She has a Bachelor’s degree in physical education, Master’s degrees in both psychology and anthropology, and her Ph.D. in medical anthropology.  Combing her love for the arts, community, and mental well being, she intends on spreading her lessons learned from African and indigenous people about living well with ourselves and each other through dance.  



Joan Brannon and Sisters of the Sacred Drum





Joan Brannon, known as “She who carries the Spirit of the DRUM”, has been playing percussion instruments for over 15 years and founded the drumming collective, Sisters of the Sacred Drum.

Sisters of the Sacred Drum presents the drum as a connector of cultures, and a conduit of Spirit.  SSD performs from a feminine perspective; offering traditional rhythms of West Africa, and original work featuring various world percussion instruments, spoken word, song and dance.

 

Jacqueline Couti

Jacqueline Couti is an Assistant Professor of French and Francophone Studies in the Department of Modern and Classical Languages, Literatures and Cultures at the University of Kentucky.  She specializes in Francophone Caribbean, African, and New World literatures and cultures. She probes the literary constructions of eroticized and sexualized images of bodies for the promotion and propagation of identity politics and nationalistic awareness in former French colonies from the Caribbean and West Africa. She studies notions of self, gender, race and ethnicity as social and national constructs, which present the body as a reflection of colonial and postcolonial societies. The motif of the dancing body in the French Caribbean particularly intrigues her. She sees dance as a contemporary site of resistance and healing in traditional and contemporary genres such as ladjagwo-kaBel-air, raravodou, hip-hop and dance-hall. She intends to constitute an archeology of representations of dance and dancers as the expression of creolization and awareness of self in Francophone Caribbean Studies. She has published articles on masculine discourse, women writers, diasporic identities, memory, and exile as well as on issues of nationhood, sexuality, gender, and violence.  Her recent publication includes “The Mythology of the Doudou: Sexualizing Black Female Bodies, Constructing Culture in the French Caribbean, in Provocations: A Transnational Reader in the History of Feminist Thought  (2015) edited by Susan Bordo, M. Cristina Alcalde, Ellen Rosenman.

Melanye White Dixon

 

 

 

 

 



Dr. Melanye White Dixon is an associate professor of dance and coordinator of dance education in The Ohio State University Department of Dance. She teaches courses in dance history and dance pedagogy and is entering her 29th year at Ohio State university.

She began her professional dance preparation at the Dance Theatre of Harlem and as a merit scholarship recipient at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center. She is an accomplished performer and served as a choreographer, performer, and master teacher for the International Festival of Dance Academies at the Hong Kong Academy for the Performing Arts in Wan Chai, China. Professor Dixon has served on the Board of Directors for American Dance Guild, OhioDance, and as a cultural competence consultant for the Ohio Department of Education and PARCC. She has been honored as a Temple University Alumni fellow and maintains an active schedule presenting research at national conferences and promoting community outreach and engagement in the arts. Professor Dixon has received several grants for her research including a Critical Difference for Women Professional Development Award, College of the Arts Faculty Development Grant for research in multimedia computer technology for dance documentation, Arts and Humanities Publication Grant and an Arts Initiative Grant to support the OSU Dance Uptown Young People’s Concert. She has done extensive research on African American women in concert dance, and her work has been published in SAGEDance Research Journal,Black Women in AmericaAfrican American Dance in History and ArtAfrican American Lives and Harvard University's African American National Biography Project. She is author of Marion Cuyjet and Her Judimar School of Dance: Training Ballerinas in Black Philadelphia (2011). Dr. Dixon is the recipient of the  2015 Educator/Scholar award from International Association of Blacks in Dance. She is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha, married to Dr. Kevin L. Dixon and her daughter Maya is a graduate student studying film at Howard University.  BA, Spelman College, MA, Columbia University and Doctorate in dance from Temple University.

 

Date:
-
Location:
Breckenridge Hall on UK's Campus and The Lyric Theater
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