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Ideas Festival Emory
September 20-22, 2024 at Oxford College of Emory University
A weekend featuring some of the most impactful and interesting scientists, musicians, writers, filmmakers, and creators of our time.
Friday, September 20
 

7:30pm EDT

Jermaine Dupri and Dr. Joycelyn Wilson/Sing for Science Podcast
Friday September 20, 2024 7:30pm - 8:30pm EDT
Atlanta Music Icon Jermaine Dupri sits down with Georgia Tech Culture Scholar Dr. Joycelyn Wilson for a deep dive on how Atlanta grew to become a global cultural phenomenon. Through her work as an ethnographer, Dr. Wilson has been able to trace the cultural forces that have shaped the city’s unique identity as the thriving epicenter of Hip Hop and R&B. This conversation will be recorded for the Sing For Science podcast and moderated by its host, Matt Whyte. Sing For Science is a Top 10 Music Interview Podcast on Apple’s charts - past guests include David Byrne, SIA, Korn and dozens more.
Speakers
avatar for Dr. Joycelyn Wilson

Dr. Joycelyn Wilson

Joycelyn Wilson is known to many as a "hip-hop scholar," but she's actually an educational anthropologist, exploring hip-hop's intersections with innovation, design, and social justice.As assistant professor of hip-hop studies and digital media, Joycelyn Wilson's courses highlight... Read More →
Friday September 20, 2024 7:30pm - 8:30pm EDT
Student Center
 
Saturday, September 21
 

10:00am EDT

A Better Life for Their Children
Saturday September 21, 2024 10:00am - 10:45am EDT
A Better Life for Their Children: A Rosenwald Schools Journey
Born to Jewish immigrants, Julius Rosenwald rose to lead Sears, Roebuck & Company and turn it into the world’s largest retailer. Born into slavery, Booker T. Washington became the founding principal of Tuskegee Institute. In 1912 the two men launched an ambitious program to partner with black communities across the segregated South to build public schools for African American children. This watershed moment in the history of philanthropy—one of the earliest collaborations between Jews and African Americans—drove dramatic improvement in African American educational attainment and fostered the generation who became the leaders and foot soldiers of the civil rights movement.
Of the original 4,978 Rosenwald schools built between 1912 and 1937 across fifteen southern and border states, only about 500 survive. While some have been repurposed and a handful remain active schools, many remain unrestored and at risk of collapse. To tell this story visually, Andrew Feiler drove more than twenty-five thousand miles, photographed 105 schools, and interviewed dozens of former students, teachers, preservationists, and community leaders in all fifteen of the program states.
The book of this work is, A Better Life for Their Children: Julius Rosenwald, Booker T. Washington, and the 4,978 Schools that Changed America.  Author and photographer Andrew Feiler will share images and stories from his extraordinary journey into the history of Rosenwald schools.  
Speakers
avatar for Andrew Feiler

Andrew Feiler

Photographer, Feiler Photography
Andrew Feiler is a photographer and author who has long been active in civic life. He has created numerous community initiatives, serves on multiple not-for-profit boards, and is an active advisor to political leaders. His art is an extension of his civic values.Feiler’s newest... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 10:00am - 10:45am EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

10:00am EDT

Ensuring a Vibrant Future for American Journalism
Saturday September 21, 2024 10:00am - 10:45am EDT
Consider the many ways the media plays a vital role in our country. Journalists inform us, act as watchdogs, investigate wrongdoing, hold public servants accountable, shape public agenda, disseminate critical information and tell true stories that help us better understand the complex world we inhabit. But we are living in a moment of history in which the Fourth Estate, a pillar of American democracy, is in rapid transition. Disrupted by the digital age, newspapers and magazines are struggling to find sustainable business models and ways to regain dwindling public trust. What is the best path forward at this juncture and how can we ensure a vibrant and free press for generations to come?
Speakers
avatar for Cynthia Tucker

Cynthia Tucker

Cynthia Tucker is a Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper columnist and the co-author, with Frye Gaillard, of a book of essays, “The Southernization of America: A Story of Democracy in the Balance.”She has spent most of her career in newspapers, including 17 years as the editorial... Read More →
avatar for Kamille D. Whittaker

Kamille D. Whittaker

Canopy Atlanta
Kamille D. Whittaker is an Assistant Professor of Journalism and Digital Media at Clark Atlanta University. She teaches in the Mass Media Arts department and serves as the Journalism Sequence Coordinator and Faculty Advisor for the student-led The Panther newspaper and Communication... Read More →
avatar for Keith Pepper

Keith Pepper

Rough Draft Atlanta
Keith Pepper is the owner and publisher of Rough Draft Atlanta, the leading hyperlocal media organization in metro Atlanta.An Atlanta native with deep roots in the community, Keith acquired Rough Draft (née Springs Publishing) a community newspaper publisher, in December 2020 and... Read More →
avatar for Moni Basu

Moni Basu

Moni Basu is the director of the low-residency MFA in Narrative Nonfiction and the Charlayne Hunter-Gault writer in residence at the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication. Previously, she was the Michael and Linda Connelly Lecturer in Narrative... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 10:00am - 10:45am EDT
Student Center

10:00am EDT

Monica Motivates
Saturday September 21, 2024 10:00am - 10:45am EDT
Monica Motivates is a woman-owned business that provides executive coaching, speaking, and
consulting services. Our vision is focused on helping women and underrepresented founders secure
funding to scale their businesses.

Recognizing that female start ups only received 2.7% of the $136.5 billion total invested by venture
capital firms last year, our team became committed to closing the gap and helping women and
underrepresented founders effectively prepare to access the funding that is available to them. As a result, our team launched Pitch University, a comprehensive and interactive workshop, featuring strategies and tactics shared by current and former executives of multinational companies.
Speakers
avatar for Monica McCoy

Monica McCoy

CEO, Pitch University
Monica McCoy, a dynamic business strategy consultant, has left an indelible mark on the corporate landscape and steered her entrepreneurial pursuits with unwavering determination. Widely acclaimed as a game- changer, her distinguished career epitomizes a steadfast commitment to innovation... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 10:00am - 10:45am EDT
Williams Auditorium

10:00am EDT

Oxford Dining Cooking Demo
Saturday September 21, 2024 10:00am - 11:00am EDT
Saturday September 21, 2024 10:00am - 11:00am EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

11:15am EDT

Reviving an American Icon
Saturday September 21, 2024 11:15am - 11:45am EDT
I'm Chair of Stuckey's, the roadside chain of stores founded by my grandfather in Eastman, GA in 1937. We're best known for our Southern hospitality, pecan snacks & candies (including our world-famous pecan log rolls), and kitschy souvenirs. My grandfather sold our company, and Stuckey's was out of our family hands for decades. I had the unexpected opportunity to buy the company four years ago and have been working to revive this nostalgic brand. Today, we have about 40 licensed stores and a pecan snack and candy company in Wrens, GA. We sell Stuckey's pecan snacks and candies to retailers nationwide. Prior to acquiring Stuckey's, I practiced law, served in the Georgia General Assembly (representing the Emory area), and was Director of Sustainability for the City of Atlanta. I enjoy talking about entrepreneurship, brand revitalization, female owned businesses, manufacturing, agriculture (pecans), and economic development / tourism / road trips.
Speakers
avatar for Stephanie Stuckey

Stephanie Stuckey

Chair, Stuckey's
I'm Chair of Stuckey's, the roadside chain of stores founded by my grandfather in Eastman, GA in 1937. We're best known for our Southern hospitality, pecan snacks & candies (including our world-famous pecan log rolls), and kitschy souvenirs. My grandfather sold our company, and Stuckey's... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 11:15am - 11:45am EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

11:15am EDT

Little Black Hole
Saturday September 21, 2024 11:15am - 12:00pm EDT
Speakers
avatar for Molly Webster

Molly Webster

In 2018, Molly Webster developed, hosted and produced the award-nominated Radiolab series Gonads. After pursuing biology in college and ultimately graduating from New York University’s science writing program, she has reported and produced for outlets including National Geographic Adventure, Scientific American, Nature and Freakonomics Radio. An Ohio native, when she isn't a... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 11:15am - 12:00pm EDT
Student Center

11:15am EDT

Screening of Harlan County USA and Talkback with Director Barbara Kopple
Saturday September 21, 2024 11:15am - 1:45pm EDT
When J.D. Vance, author of Hillbilly Elegy, became the Republican nominee for Vice President, Appalachian culture and history were again thrust into the national conversation.
Although Barbara Kopple's Oscar-winning 1976 documentary Harlan County USA is nearly fifty years old, it is now more relevant than ever. The film tells the story of a 13-month-long coal mine strike in Brookside, Kentucky.
On its release, Film Comment wrote:
"Few documentaries rivet you to your seat; this one does. The guts it took to make are up there on the screen, in the footage shot by director Barbara Kopple and cameraman Hart Perry during the violent encounters between scabs (mostly KKK members) and strikers. It is obvious that Kopple’s rapport with the miners’ wives was extremely close; the women all come through strongly, especially Lois Scott, the Jane Darwell earth mother of Harlan who totes a gun in her cleavage."
Barbara Kopple will join us for the screening and discuss making the film, its impact and relevance today.
Speakers
avatar for Michael Dunaway

Michael Dunaway

Michael Dunaway is the Editor at Large of Paste Magazine, a Founding Partner of Poitier & Dunaway Motion Pictures, and a Creative Director of the Rome International Film Festival. He is the director of three features and his documentary 21 Years: Richard Linklater was a New York Times... Read More →
avatar for Barbara Kopple

Barbara Kopple

Barbara Kopple is a two-time Academy Award-winning and seven-time Emmy-nominated filmmaker. A director and producer of documentaries, narrative films, and commercial spots, she most recently completed the documentary Gumbo Coalition, which follows visionary Civil Rights Leaders, Marc... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 11:15am - 1:45pm EDT
Williams Auditorium

11:30am EDT

Share the Magic with Malcolm Mitchell
Saturday September 21, 2024 11:30am - 12:15pm EDT
Speakers
avatar for Malcolm Mitchell

Malcolm Mitchell

Malcolm Mitchell is a native of Valdosta, Georgia.As a high school senior, he was an Under Armour All-American and went on to finish in the top ten all time receivers during his playing career at the University of Georgia (UGA). After graduating from UGA with a degree in Communications... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 11:30am - 12:15pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

12:30pm EDT

Can AI change our understanding of the world?
Saturday September 21, 2024 12:30pm - 1:00pm EDT
Justin Burton obtained his B.S. degree in Physics from the University of Cincinnati in 2001 and his Ph.D. degree in Physics from the University of California, Irvine in 2006. After postdoctoral positions at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and the University of Chicago, he joined the Department of Physics at Emory University in 2013, where he is now an Associate Professor of Physics. His interdisciplinary research program is primarily experimental and covers a wide variety of topics focused on complex and nonequilibrium systems. Current projects include interfacial and nanoscale fluid dynamics, machine learning of many-body dynamics in dusty plasmas, and "soft earth geophysics." He is currently a Gordon and Betty Moore Experimental Physics Investigator and is a past recipient of the National Science Foundation's CAREER Award. He also leads a number of K-12 STEM outreach and education activities in the Atlanta area.
Speakers
avatar for Justin Burton

Justin Burton

Justin Burton obtained his B.S. degree in Physics from the University of Cincinnati in 2001 and his Ph.D. degree in Physics from the University of California, Irvine in 2006. After postdoctoral positions at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and the University of Chicago... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 12:30pm - 1:00pm EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

12:30pm EDT

Mike Lowery Draws the World!
Saturday September 21, 2024 12:30pm - 1:15pm EDT
Mike Lowery is a New York Times Best-Selling Illustrator who has worked on more than eighty books for kids, including "The Gingerbread Man Loose in the School" by Laura Murray, "Mac B, Kid Spy" By Mac Barnett, “I Do Not Want to Read This Book.” by actor Max Greenfield and a series with Jeopardy Champion, Ken Jennings. He's also the author of more than a dozen books, including “Pizza Shark,” the "Bug Scouts" series of graphic novels for kids, and the “Everything Awesome” series from Scholastic Books. He collects weird facts and illustrates them every day in his sketchbook. Mike lives with his wife Katrin and their two kids in Atlanta, GA. Visit Mike online at https://www.mikelowery.com or on Instagram at @mikelowerystudio.
Speakers
avatar for Mike Lowery

Mike Lowery

Mike Lowery is a New York Times Best-Selling Illustrator who has worked on more than eighty books for kids, including "The Gingerbread Man Loose in the School" by Laura Murray, "Mac B, Kid Spy" By Mac Barnett, “I Do Not Want to Read This Book.” by actor Max Greenfield and a series... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 12:30pm - 1:15pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

12:30pm EDT

Will D Campbell at 100: What a Civil Rights Pioneer Can Tell Us in 2024
Saturday September 21, 2024 12:30pm - 1:15pm EDT
Will D Campbell was one of the most important southern white religious figures of the Civil Rights Era. He escorted black students during the Little Rock integration and was present at the founding of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. In an era when other Southern Baptists were strongly opposing Civil Rights, Campbell supported Freedom Riders and addressed issues like desegregation and the assassination of Medgar Evers.
Campbell's theology emphasized concern for all souls, including bigots, which sometimes put him at odds with other activists. He protested the Vietnam War, opposed the death penalty and abortion, and distrusted government. He authored numerous works, including "Race and the Renewal of the Church," "The Glad River," and "The Stem of Jesse." His autobiography, "Brother to a Dragonfly," was a National Book Award finalist in 1978.
David Dark is an American writer, the author of We Become What We Normalize: What We Owe Each Other In Worlds That Demand Our Silence, Life's Too Short To Pretend You're Not Religious, The Sacredness of Questioning Everything, Everyday Apocalypse: The Sacred Revealed in Radiohead, The Simpsons, and Other Pop Culture Icons and The Possibility of America: A Meditation on a God-blessed, Christ-haunted Idea, which was included in Publishers’ Weekly’s top religious books of 2005. He also contributed a chapter to the book Radiohead and Philosophy: Fitter Happier More Deductive (Chicago: Open Court, 2009). Following years of teaching high school English, he received his doctorate in 2011 and now teaches at the Tennessee Prison for Women, Charles Bass Correctional Facility, and Belmont University where he is associate professor of Religion and the Arts.
Speakers
avatar for David Dark

David Dark

Educator, Belmont University
I'm a Nashville lifer and lifelong educator who teaches Religion and Science Fiction. I'm the lead developer of Robot Soft Exorcism Theory which is, in large part, the study of creative nonviolence. I love overcoming fear together with others. I'm also finishing up a book about U... Read More →
avatar for John T. Edge

John T. Edge

Writer & Teacher, Greenfield Farm Writers Residency
John T Edge of Oxford, Mississippi, writes and hosts the television show TrueSouth, which airs on the SEC Network and ESPN and streams via Hulu. He’s at work on a memoir, House of Smoke, set to be published in the fall of 2025. His last book, The Potlikker Papers: A Food History... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 12:30pm - 1:15pm EDT
Student Center

1:30pm EDT

Jon Goode Wants to Tell You a Story
Saturday September 21, 2024 1:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Jon Goode is an Emmy nominated writer raised in Richmond, VA and currently residing in Atlanta, GA. Jon’s work has been featured in CNN’s Black in America, HBO’s Def Poetry Jam, BET’s Lyric Café and TVOne’s Verses and Flow. He has written radio commercials for McDonalds, print ads for Nike, and written and appeared in commercials, vignettes and interstitials for MTV, Comedy Central, VH-1 and TVLand/ Nick@Nite. Jon’s work earned him the 2006 Promax Gold for the best copyright in North America. In 2022 he won a gold American Advertising Award for Branded Content and Entertainment Non-Broadcast, a Silver Telly Award, and was again nominated for a Promax. Jon's collection of poems and short stories, Conduit, was #1 on Amazon for sixteen weeks. His debut novel, Mydas, was a #1 new title on Amazon for five weeks. Jon is a Fellow of AIR Serenbe, and a host and storyteller with The Moth.
Speakers
avatar for Jon Goode

Jon Goode

Jon Goode is an Emmy nominated writer raised in Richmond, VA and currently residing in Atlanta, GA. Jon’s work has been featured in CNN’s Black in America, HBO’s Def Poetry Jam, BET’s Lyric Café and TVOne’s Verses and Flow. He has written radio commercials for McDonalds... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 1:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

1:45pm EDT

What's up with Lee Bains and The Glory Fires?
Saturday September 21, 2024 1:45pm - 2:30pm EDT
Since releasing their first album There Is a Bomb in Gilead in 2012, the road-worn Birmingham, Alabama band – singer and guitarist Lee Bains, bassist Adam Williamson, and drummer Blake Williamson – has built a reputation as being what NPR calls “punks revved up by the hot-damn hallelujah of Southern rock” who carry on “the Friday-night custom of burning down the house,” a raw live sound that they captured with Texas punk producer Tim Kerr on studio albums Dereconstructed (2014) and Youth Detention (2017) before recording a full-on live album at their favorite hometown dive, Live at the Nick (2019).
Their work has come to be known, too, for Bains’s lyrics and their literate, incisive social commentary on the band’s beloved homeplace, leading him to publish poetry in the New Yorker and speak at universities from Mississippi to Sweden. Bains and the Williamson brothers can also be found collaborating with artists like Lonnie Holley and Swamp Dogg, lending their bombast to truck-bed protests of Donald Trump and Roy Moore, playing benefit shows for striking Alabama coal miners and Southern Black LGBTQ liberation organizations, and presenting gospel-music live streams for Birmingham and Atlanta food banks.
Speakers
avatar for Lee Bains

Lee Bains

Lee Bains is a songwriter from Birmingham, Alabama, who, with his band The Glory Fires, has released four studio albums of what Rolling Stone calls “Southern gospel punk” since 2012. His most recent album, Old-Time Folks, released by Don Giovanni Records in 2022, explored stories... Read More →
avatar for Bob Townsend

Bob Townsend

Bob Townsend is a contributing writer for the AJC, covering food, dining, arts and entertainment, and the Beer Town column.
Saturday September 21, 2024 1:45pm - 2:30pm EDT
Student Center

2:00pm EDT

AI, DNA, and you: What the science really says
Saturday September 21, 2024 2:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Dr. Yana Bromberg is a professor in the Departments of Biology and Computer Science at Emory University. She joined Emory in January of last year, transferring from Rutgers University. Yana got her BSc/BEng in Biology and Computer Science from State University of NY at Stony Brook and her PhD in Biomedical Informatics from Burkhard Rost’s lab at Columbia University. She is a fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study at the Technical University of Munich, Germany and a Director of the International Society for Computational Biology. 
The primary focus of Yana’s research is the concept of "function" in biology. Specifically, she is interested in understanding the origins and mechanisms of the molecular machinery that underpins life. She believes that machine learning (ML) holds great promise in deciphering these functional details. Accordingly, her long-term goal is to use the advances in ML and other computational techniques to gain a deeper understanding of how biological functionality is encoded in genomic data, whether on the level of individual genes, whole genomes, or metagenomes.
Speakers
avatar for Yana Bromberg

Yana Bromberg

Emory University
Dr. Yana Bromberg is a professor in the Departments of Biology and Computer Science at Emory University. She joined Emory in January of last year, transferring from Rutgers University. Yana got her BSc/BEng in Biology and Computer Science from State University of NY at Stony Brook... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 2:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

2:45pm EDT

Are You Getting Older or is World Getting Younger?
Saturday September 21, 2024 2:45pm - 3:30pm EDT
Sari Botton, editor of Oldster Magazine, explores what it means to travel through time in a human body—of any gender, at every phase of life. It focuses on the good, the bad, and the ugly we experience with each milestone, starting early in life. It’s about the experience of getting older, and what that means at different junctures.
Remember when you were about to turn 20, and it was a big, scary deal? Or 30? Or 40? Remember the first time you realized that moving into a new phase of life—graduating, getting married, becoming a parent, getting a major promotion, retiring—meant that you would be leaving behind another phase of life? Join Sari and Jessica as they talk about how we all navigate these changes. Interviewed by Jessica Handler
Speakers
avatar for Sari Botton

Sari Botton

Editor-in-Chief, Botton, Ink.
Sari Botton's memoir in essays, And You May Find Yourself...Confessions of a Late-Blooming Gen-X Weirdo, was chosen by Poets & Writers magazine for the 2022 edition of its annual "5 Over 50" feature. An essay from it received notable mention in The Best American Essays 2023, edi... Read More →
avatar for Jessica Handler

Jessica Handler

Jessica Handler is the author of the novel The Magnetic Girl, winner of the 2020 Southern Book Prize and a nominee for the Townsend Prize for Fiction, a 2019 “Books All Georgians Should Read,” an Indie Next pick, Wall Street Journal Spring 2019 pick, Bitter Southerner Summer... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 2:45pm - 3:30pm EDT
Student Center

2:45pm EDT

Pi in the Face
Saturday September 21, 2024 2:45pm - 3:30pm EDT
What's funnier than a pi in the face? Lew Lefton is the Asst. Dean and Assoc. VP of Research in  IT and research computing at Georgia Tech when it doesn't interfere with his work as a stand-up comedian.
Speakers
avatar for Lew Lefton

Lew Lefton

Assoc. Vice President of Research Computing, Georgia Tech
I am a mathematician by training and a STEAM educator at heart. My day job as an Asst. Dean and Assoc. VP of Research at Georgia Tech focuses on IT and research computing. I am proud to be the Founding Director of Decatur Makers, a welcoming community makerspace in the Atlanta metro... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 2:45pm - 3:30pm EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

2:45pm EDT

The Plant Hunter
Saturday September 21, 2024 2:45pm - 3:30pm EDT
Ever taken an aspirin? Thank a willow tree for that. Have a loved one who has fought cancer? Many of our most important cancer medicines originated in the yew tree, mayapple, and Madagascar periwinkle. Plants are the basis for a vast array of lifesaving and health-improving medicines we all now take for granted. Ethnobotanist Dr. Cassandra L. Quave shows us how important studying plants is while sharing her own incredible journey as told in her memoir The Plant Hunter: A Scientist’s Quest for Nature’s Next Medicines. She’ll be joined by the team from the Emory University Herbarium, which this year is celebrating 75 years of botanical research and education! We’ll have plant specimens on display and copies of The Plant Hunter available for sale and signings.
Speakers
avatar for Cassandra Quave

Cassandra Quave

Associate Professor & Herbarium Curator, Emory University
Cassandra Quave, Ph.D., is a professor, speaker, author, podcast host, explorer, and ethnobotanist. She is an Associate Professor of Dermatology and Human Health, Herbarium Curator, and Assistant Dean of Research Cores at Emory University, where she leads anti-infective drug discovery... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 2:45pm - 3:30pm EDT
Williams Auditorium

3:45pm EDT

Lee Bains
Saturday September 21, 2024 3:45pm - 4:45pm EDT
Speakers
avatar for Lee Bains

Lee Bains

Lee Bains is a songwriter from Birmingham, Alabama, who, with his band The Glory Fires, has released four studio albums of what Rolling Stone calls “Southern gospel punk” since 2012. His most recent album, Old-Time Folks, released by Don Giovanni Records in 2022, explored stories... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 3:45pm - 4:45pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

4:00pm EDT

Against Doom-ism: Ice Age Lessons for a Warming World
Saturday September 21, 2024 4:00pm - 4:45pm EDT
Dr. Jacquelyn Gill is an internationally recognized paleoecologist and multiple award-winning science communicator. She is a Professor of Paleoecology and the Director of the BEAST Lab at the University of Maine. In addition to her passion for research and teaching, Dr. Gill is also dedicated to sharing science with the public. She was the co-creator of one of the first climate podcasts Warm Regards, as well as the forthcoming show Jax & Phoebe Make a Planet. Interviewed by Maryn McKenna.
Speakers
avatar for Jacquelyn Gill

Jacquelyn Gill

Professor, University Of Maine
Dr. Jacquelyn Gill is an internationally recognized paleoecologist and multiple award-winning science communicator. She is a Professor of Paleoecology and the Director of the BEAST Lab at the University of Maine. In addition to her passion for research and teaching, Dr. Gill is also... Read More →
avatar for Maryn Mckenna

Maryn Mckenna

journalist, National Geographic, Wired
Maryn McKenna is a journalist and author covering public health and global health, a contributing writer at Scientific American, and a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Human Health at Emory University, where she teaches health and science writing and storytelling. She... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 4:00pm - 4:45pm EDT
Student Center

4:00pm EDT

Picturing the Music
Saturday September 21, 2024 4:00pm - 4:45pm EDT
Michael Wilson was born in 1959 in Cincinnati, Ohio. Discovering a love of photography in college he began work as a freelance photographer in 1987. His work in the music industry is the most recognizable face of hisfreelance work. Among the artists Michael has photographed are: Lyle Lovett, David Byrne, B.B.King, Emmylou Harris, Bill Frisell, Joshua Redman, Philip Glass, Robert Plant, Doctor John and Doc Watson.His work has been featured in numerous exhibitions including the The Annenberg Space for Photography (Los Angeles, California), Cincinnati Art Museum, the Contemporary Arts Center (Cincinnati, Ohio), Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art (Cleveland, Ohio) and the J.B. Speed Museum (Louisville, Kentucky).He is Resident Instructor of photography at Manifest Drawing Center in Cincinnati. Interviewed by Randy Sue
Speakers
avatar for Michael Wilson

Michael Wilson

Michael Wilson was born in 1959 in Cincinnati, Ohio. Discovering a love of photography in college he began work as a freelance photographer in 1987. His work in the music industry is the most recognizable face of hisfreelance work. Among the artists Michael has photographed are: Lyle... Read More →
avatar for Randy Gue

Randy Gue

Randy Gue is the Curator of Political, Cultural, and Social Movements Collections at Emory University’s Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library. He is responsible for the Rose Library’s collections about the history, culture, and politics of Atlanta, Georgia... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 4:00pm - 4:45pm EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

4:00pm EDT

What We Owe to Boardinghouse Women
Saturday September 21, 2024 4:00pm - 4:45pm EDT
Elizabeth Engelhardt argues that modern American food, business, caretaking, politics, sex, travel, writing, and restaurants all owe a debt to boardinghouse women in the South. From the eighteenth century well into the twentieth, entrepreneurial women ran boardinghouses throughout the South; some also carried the institution to far-flung places like California, New York, and London. Owned and operated by Black, Jewish, Native American, and white women, rich and poor, immigrant and native-born, these lodgings were often hubs of business innovation and engines of financial independence for their owners. Within their walls, boardinghouse residents and owners developed the region's earliest printed cookbooks, created space for making music and writing literary works, formed ad hoc communities of support, tested boundaries of race and sexuality, and more. Dr. Engelhardt will be in discussion with southern entrepreneur Stephanie Stuckey.
Speakers
avatar for Elizabeth Engelhardt

Elizabeth Engelhardt

 Distinguished Professor and Senior Associate Dean for Fine Arts and Humanities in the College of Arts and Science at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, is a scholar of food, gender, and the US South, as well as the co-convener of Southern Futures - a university-wide network... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 4:00pm - 4:45pm EDT
Williams Auditorium

5:00pm EDT

Soul Food Cypher
Saturday September 21, 2024 5:00pm - 5:30pm EDT
Speakers
avatar for Soul Food Cypher

Soul Food Cypher

Soul Food Cypher is a non-profit organization that uses freestyle rap and lyricism to transform individuals and communities. SFC promotes the positive aspects of rap and Hip-Hop through their CYPHER events, performances, and educational outreach. Their mission is to provide rappers... Read More →
Saturday September 21, 2024 5:00pm - 5:30pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle
 
Sunday, September 22
 

12:00pm EDT

Collin Kelley: Thirty Years of ATL
Sunday September 22, 2024 12:00pm - 12:45pm EDT

Collin Kelley is an award-winning poet, novelist, and journalist from Atlanta, GA. His latest book is "Wonder & Wreckage: New & Selected Poems, 1993-2023" (Poetry Atlanta Press). His next project is co-editing an anthology of Stevie Nicks-inspired poetry coming from Madville Publishing in 2026.
Speakers
avatar for Collin Kelley

Collin Kelley

Collin Kelley is an award-winning poet, novelist, and journalist from Atlanta, GA. His latest book is "Wonder & Wreckage: New & Selected Poems, 1993-2023" (Poetry Atlanta Press). His next project is co-editing an anthology of Stevie Nicks-inspired poetry coming from Madville Publishing... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 12:00pm - 12:45pm EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

12:00pm EDT

Eden Undone
Sunday September 22, 2024 12:00pm - 12:45pm EDT
At the height of the Great Depression, Los Angeles oil mogul George Allan Hancock and his crew of Smithsonian scientists came upon a gruesome scene: two bodies, mummified by the searing heat, on the shore of a remote Galápagos island. For the past four years Hancock and other American elites had traveled the South Seas to collect specimens for scientific research. On one trip to the Galápagos, Hancock was surprised to discover an equally exotic group of humans: European exiles who had fled political and economic unrest, hoping to create a utopian paradise. One was so devoted to a life of isolation that he’d had his teeth extracted and replaced with a set of steel dentures.
As Hancock and his fellow American explorers would witness, paradise had turned into chaos. The three sets of exiles—a Berlin doctor and his lover, a traumatized World War I veteran and his young family, and an Austrian baroness with two adoring paramours—were riven by conflict. Petty slights led to angry confrontations. The baroness, wielding a riding crop and pearl-handled revolver, staged physical fights between her two lovers and unabashedly seduced American tourists. The conclusion was deadly: with two exiles missing and two others dead, the survivors hurled accusations of murder.
Using never-before-published archives, Abbott Kahler weaves a chilling, stranger-than-fiction tale worthy of Agatha Christie. Set against the backdrop of the Great Depression and the march to World War II, with a mystery as alluring and curious as the Galápagos itself, Eden Undone explores the universal and timeless desire to seek utopia—and lays bare the human fallibility that, inevitably, renders such a quest doomed.
Speakers
avatar for Abbott Kahler

Abbott Kahler

Abbott Kahler, formerly writing as Karen Abbott, is the New York Times bestselling author of Sin in the Second City; American Rose; Liar, Temptress, Soldier, Spy; and The Ghosts of Eden Park. She is also the host of Remus: The Mad Bootleg King, a podcast about legendary Jazz... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 12:00pm - 12:45pm EDT
Student Center

12:00pm EDT

More to Say
Sunday September 22, 2024 12:00pm - 12:45pm EDT
Covington Regional Ballet will perform More to Say, a contemporary dance performance that explores the passage of time, existence, and the human experience. Written by the young performers aged 11-17, the piece delves into life's mysteries and our place in the universe, offering a fresh perspective through the lens of youth. The choreography captures the balance between the vastness of the cosmos and the personal reflections of the dancers, weaving together themes of growing up, memories, and the search for meaning. By inviting the audience to reflect with a sense of nostalgia and wonder, the performance encourages a deeper appreciation for the fleeting moments that shape our lives and a renewed curiosity about the world.

More to Say was created by Jillian Mitchell, CRB's Creative Director and Resident Choreographer. Jillian trained at Harid Conservatory and Canada's Royal Winnipeg Ballet School and performed professionally with New Jersey Ballet, Rebecca Davis Dance, Roxey Ballet, Georgia Ballet, gloATL, Proia Dance Project, and The Atlanta Opera. In addition to working with CRB, Jillian is the founder of the celebrated Atlanta-based company Kit Modus and is currently on staff at The University of Georgia Dance Department.
Speakers
avatar for Covington Regional Ballet

Covington Regional Ballet

Covington Regional Ballet inspires a diverse community to explore dance as a creative expression. Our technique-focused school and company foster excellence in dance through joy-filled rigor and discipline, promoting continuous learning and personal growth to cultivate a lifelong... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 12:00pm - 12:45pm EDT
Williams Auditorium

12:00pm EDT

Bon Appetit, Y'all
Sunday September 22, 2024 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT
Virginia Willis, James Beard-award winning chef, healthy eating guru, and culinary icon shares recipes from the brand new edition of her classic cookbook, Bon Appetit, Y'all. 
Speakers
avatar for Virginia Willis

Virginia Willis

chef, Virginia Willis Culinary Enterprises
Georgia-born French-trained chef Virginia Willis has foraged for berries in the Alaskan wilderness, harvested capers in the shadow of a smoldering volcano in Sicily, and executed the food styling for a Super Bowl commercial seen by over 160 million people.She is a James Beard award-winning... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

1:00pm EDT

Bespoken
Sunday September 22, 2024 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
The title, BE-SPOKEN, is a nod to the term ‘bespoke.’ The work uses sacred texts and music genres to address themes of Black empowerment, justice for police violence within Black and Brown communities, and hope for a more prosperous future. During the worldwide shutdown, violent atrocities committed upon the Black community were unavoidably visible. Our nation, once again, struggles to reconcile its original sin of slavery and its lasting institutionalized legacy, racism. BE-SPOKEN is a cantata that explores the themes of loss and joy, and celebrates Blackness. The work begins with a field song and moves through gospel, funk, and hip-hop. The text and music for the work was written by Emorja Roberson, Anthony T. Walker, Pamela Blair, and Chavis Gill (aka “King Chav”).
Speakers
avatar for Emorja Roberson

Emorja Roberson

Assistant Professor of Music and African American Studies, Oxford College of Emory University
Sunday September 22, 2024 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Williams Auditorium

1:00pm EDT

Deliver Me from Nowhere: The Making of Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska
Sunday September 22, 2024 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT

Without Nebraska, Bruce Springsteen might not be who he is today. The natural follow-up to Springsteen’s hugely successful album The River should have been the hit-packed Born in the U.S.A. But instead, in 1982, he came out with an album consisting of a series of dark songs he had recorded by himself, for himself. But more than forty years later, Nebraska is arguably Springsteen’s most important record—the lasting clue to understanding not just his career as an artist and the vision behind it, but also the man himself.
 
Nebraska is rough and unfinished, recorded on cassette tape with a simple four-track recorder by Springsteen, alone in his bedroom, just as the digital future was announcing itself. And yet Springsteen now considers it his best album. Nebraska expressed a turmoil that was reflective of the mood of the country, but it was also a symptom of trouble in the artist’s life, the beginnings of a mental breakdown that Springsteen would only talk about openly decades after the album’s release.

This session will be moderated by Paste Magazine's Josh Jackson and have songs from the album performed by Joe Henry.
Speakers
avatar for Warren Zanes

Warren Zanes

Dr. Warren Zanes is a New York Times bestselling author and a Grammy-nominated documentary producer. For ten years he was the Executive Director of Steven Van Zandt’s Rock and Roll Forever Foundation (RRFF). A former VP of Education and Programs at The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame... Read More →
avatar for Jordan Reynolds

Jordan Reynolds

Under the moniker Rose Hotel, Atlanta-based singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Jordan Reynolds crafts nuanced indie-rock that pulls from a palette of psychedelic shimmer and folk influence via her Southeastern roots. With a drive to pay homage to the legends of the art... Read More →
avatar for Joe Henry

Joe Henry

In a career spanning more than 35 years, Joe Henry has left an indelible and unique imprint on American popular music. As a songwriter and artist, Henry is celebrated for his exploration of the human experience. A hyper-literate storyteller, by turns dark, devastating, and hopeful... Read More →
avatar for Josh Jackson

Josh Jackson

Paste magazine
Since co-founding and serving as editor-in-chief of the award-winning Paste Magazine in 2002, Josh Jackson is now president of Paste Media, overseeing such storied publications as The A/V Club and former Gawker titles Jezebel and Splinter. Jackson has been a regular music and film... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Student Center

1:15pm EDT

The Best Storyteller in the South
Sunday September 22, 2024 1:15pm - 1:45pm EDT
Ray  escaped the urban slums of Richmond, VA by joining the United States Army at the age of 17. As an infantryman and paratrooper, he served around the world and was awarded The Bronze Star and Combat Infantryman’s Badge, among many other decorations for his service. After 20 years, he retired and went back to school, earning his BS in Liberal Arts, MA in Public History, and EdS/EdD in Education Leadership, researching the relationship between parental behavior and African American academic success for his dissertation.  During his time as an adjunct professor at Appalachian State University, his most popular courses were “The Souls of Black Folks: An Examination of African American Social Culture” and “Storytelling: Life in the Narrative,” which explored historic and contemporary uses of storytelling and oral history in America. 

Ray’s stories have appeared in Readers Digest’s  Best Stories in America (2016) and  American Hero’s (2017) editions. He was selected as the 2017 Serenbe France Focus Storytelling Fellow (Atlanta, GA) and his stories have been featured on NPR radio shows such as The Moth Radio Hour, Snap Judgment, and Backstory as well as the Risk podcast, among many others.  As a competitive storyteller, Ray is a ten-time Moth Story Slam Champion, and winner of the 2016 National Storytelling Festival Story Slam. Sharing his stories across the US and Canada, Ray has made several appearances on Moth Mainstage, The National Storytelling Festival Exchange Place (2019) , and was part of the 2018 tour of Snap Judgment Live! 

In 2018, Ray has been named as the best known story teller in the south by Bitter Southerner magazine. Glynn Washington, host and producer of Snap Judgement, calls him “a storyteller’s storyteller.” He is distinguished for his exceptional accomplishments as a performer and spoken word performer and his training and experience as an educator and motivator.
Speakers
avatar for Ray Christian

Ray Christian

Ray escaped the urban slums of Richmond, VA by joining the United States Army at the age of 17. As an infantryman and paratrooper, he served around the world and was awarded The Bronze Star and Combat Infantryman’s Badge, among many other decorations for his service. After 20 years... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 1:15pm - 1:45pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

1:15pm EDT

What does civility look like in 2024?
Sunday September 22, 2024 1:15pm - 2:00pm EDT
Doug was elected the President of the Atlanta City Council in December 2021 and assumed office January 2022.   Doug has led an array of organizations including the Woodruff Arts Center, BrightHouse Consulting and as Founding CEO of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights.Doug has served in a number of civic roles including President of the Emory Alumni Board (2014), Trustee for the Carter Center, Harvard Alumni Association Board Member and numerous other volunteer leadership roles. He has lectured at various institutions including the CDC, Duke University, Bard College and TEDx anytime online.He is an avid runner, girl dad, scuba diver, bridge player and sci-fi junkie.


Speakers
avatar for Doug Shipman

Doug Shipman

City Council President, City of Atlanta
Doug was elected the President of the Atlanta City Council in December 2021 and assumed office January 2022.   Doug has led an array of organizations including the Woodruff Arts Center, BrightHouse Consulting and as Founding CEO of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights.Doug... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 1:15pm - 2:00pm EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

2:15pm EDT

Zach Person
Sunday September 22, 2024 2:15pm - 2:45pm EDT
Speakers
Sunday September 22, 2024 2:15pm - 2:45pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

2:15pm EDT

Imagining the Future of Play
Sunday September 22, 2024 2:15pm - 3:00pm EDT
Carrie Buse is Head of Design for Mattel’s Future Lab, an innovation team focused on pioneering the future of play through tech-enhanced products, virtual collectibles, and mixed reality experiences. She also spearheads Mattel’s Design & Development initiative to ethically integrate AI-enabled processes into workflows and consumer-facing products.During her 20-year career at Mattel, Carrie has championed the intersection of physical and digital play through advanced concepts that put the needs of the user first. Her credits include Hello Barbie, a fashion doll powered by speech recognition and natural language processing; Hello Dreamhouse, a tech-enabled playset designed to give the child more control over bringing their stories to life; and Barbie Video Girl, a doll inspired by YouTube trends in which kids made videos with their dolls. (Keep an eye out for Video Girl’s cameo appearance at the Weird Doll’s house in The Barbie Movie.) Carrie also co-created the content and curriculum for the Barbie™ You Can Be Anything™ programming experience on Tynker, teaching over 1M kids basic coding concepts via playful Barbie themes. In addition to the Barbie brand, Carrie has supported Monster High (both OG and the reboot), Hot Wheels, Mattel Games, and Fisher Price.Prior to Mattel, Carrie freelanced as a Writer/Producer/Experience Designer crafting award-winning interactive content for Universal Pictures, Women in Film, and Philips Media Games.
Speakers
avatar for Carrie Buse

Carrie Buse

Head of Design, Mattel Future Lab, Mattel
I’ve spent the last 2 decades living a "master class" in branding and innovation. How can my experience make your experience better?___________Carrie Buse is Head of Design for Mattel’s Future Lab, an innovation team focused on pioneering the future of play through tech-enhanced... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 2:15pm - 3:00pm EDT
Student Center

2:30pm EDT

Let's talk about 2024
Sunday September 22, 2024 2:30pm - 3:15pm EDT
Andra Gillespie is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the James Weldon Johnson Institute for the Study of Race and Difference at Emory University. She earned her Ph.D. in Political Science from Yale University. Her research focuses on the political leadership of African American politicians who attempt to transcend race and how Black voters respond to them. She is the author of The New Black Politician: Cory Booker, Newark and Post-Racial America (2012) and Race and the Obama Administration: Symbols, Substance and Hope (2019). She is also the editor of Whose Black Politics? Cases in Post-Racial Black Leadership (2010).
Speakers
avatar for Andra Gillespie

Andra Gillespie

Assoc. Professor of Political Science/Director, James Weldon Johnson Institute, Emory University
Andra Gillespie is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the James Weldon Johnson Institute for the Study of Race and Difference at Emory University. She earned her Ph.D. in Political Science from Yale University. Her research focuses on the political leadership... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 2:30pm - 3:15pm EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

2:30pm EDT

The Authentic South
Sunday September 22, 2024 2:30pm - 3:15pm EDT
Chef Virginia Willis and writer Janisse Ray team up to talk not only about the nature of food and story, but about cultivating the ways we think about ourselves—how we return to authenticity, how we lighten up, how we ground, and how we tell the narratives of our lives.
Speakers
avatar for Janisse Ray

Janisse Ray

author
Janisse Ray is an award-winning American author who explores the borderland of nature and culture. Her bestselling first book, Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, was a New York Times Notable. This environmental memoir tells the story of growing up in the disappearing longleaf pine flatwoods... Read More →
avatar for Virginia Willis

Virginia Willis

chef, Virginia Willis Culinary Enterprises
Georgia-born French-trained chef Virginia Willis has foraged for berries in the Alaskan wilderness, harvested capers in the shadow of a smoldering volcano in Sicily, and executed the food styling for a Super Bowl commercial seen by over 160 million people.She is a James Beard award-winning... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 2:30pm - 3:15pm EDT
Williams Auditorium

3:00pm EDT

Rose Hotel
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Under the moniker Rose Hotel, Atlanta-based singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Jordan Reynolds crafts nuanced indie-rock that pulls from a palette of psychedelic shimmer and folk influence via her Southeastern roots. With a drive to pay homage to the legends of the art form, she uses the trappings of psychedelic rock not as source material, but as ornamentation, as she explores relationships, feminine rage, lust, temptation, blissful ignorance, frightening apathy, delusions, and illusions.
Speakers
avatar for Jordan Reynolds

Jordan Reynolds

Under the moniker Rose Hotel, Atlanta-based singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Jordan Reynolds crafts nuanced indie-rock that pulls from a palette of psychedelic shimmer and folk influence via her Southeastern roots. With a drive to pay homage to the legends of the art... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

3:15pm EDT

The Future of Media: Engaging Diverse Audiences in a Changing Landscape
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:15pm - 4:00pm EDT
The importance of engaging diverse audiences is critical if today’s legacy media and modern media companies are to survive. Atlanta Journal Constitution industry experts will explore the role diversity plays in the future of media consumption and the strategies needed to effectively reach and resonate with these growing audiences, including the launch of UATL, the AJC’s new Black culture vertical.
They’ll also discuss the challenges and opportunities in ensuring that the media reflects today's multicultural society. Attendees will gain insights into how diversity drives innovation, influences consumer behavior, and shapes the media landscape for years to come.
Speakers
avatar for Christopher Daniel

Christopher Daniel

Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Christopher A. Daniel is a Black Culture Reporter for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Black culture brand, UATL, an award-winning cultural critic and ethnomusicologist.An alumnus of Johnson C. Smith University and The University of Georgia's Grady College of Mass Communication... Read More →
avatar for Mike Jordan

Mike Jordan

Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Mike Jordan is senior editor at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Black culture brand, UATL, and a longtime culture journalist. Prior to joining the AJC, his reporting has been frequently published in The Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, National Geographic, Rolling Stone, Southern... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:15pm - 4:00pm EDT
Student Center

3:45pm EDT

Joe Henry
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:45pm - 4:30pm EDT
In a career spanning more than 25 years, Joe Henry has left an indelible and unique imprint on American popular music. As a songwriter and artist, Henry is celebrated for his exploration of the human experience. A hyper-literate storyteller, by turns dark, devastating, and hopeful, he draws an author’s eye for the overlooked detail across a broad swath of American musical styles — rock, jazz and blues — rendering genre modifiers useless.
Henry has collaborated with many notable American artists on his own body of work, from T Bone Burnett, Daniel Lanois, and Van Dyke Parks on one side of the spectrum, to Don Cherry, Ornette Coleman, Brad Mehldau, and Bill Frisell on the other. A three-time-Grammy-winning producer, Henry has made records for Bonnie Raitt, Hugh Laurie, Lisa Hannigan, Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens and Solomon Burke among many others.
Additionally, Henry has taken his musical talents to film and television. He has scored music for the films Jesus’ Son, Knocked Up, and Motherhood, as well as produced tracks for the film I’m Not There. His song “Stars” was featured in the closing credits in the fourth season of HBO’s Six Feet Under.
In 2013, Algonquin Press published, “Furious Cool: Richard Pryor and the World that Made Him,” a book co-written by Joe and his brother Dave Henry.
In 2016, Henry teamed up with Billy Bragg on the collaborative album Shine A Light: Field Recordings From The Great American Railroad. The pair were subsequently nominated as “Duo/Group of the Year” by the Americana Music Association.
American Songwriter called his 2017 release Thrum “Audacious and auspicious…akin to Van Morrison at his most impressionistic.”
Henry released his 15th solo album The Gospel According To Water on November 15th 2019 :
“These are simple, wise and sonically gorgeous songs.”—Rosanne Cash“
Here is the voice of a friend and brother who had been away too long. There is enough anger, enough misery in the world. Too many tears, fires and trampled flowers, so make room in your life for some beauty like this.”—Elvis Costello“.
In every track, there is gentleness and strength. His music is poetry.”-Gloria Steinem
Included in Barack Obama’s Favorite Music of 2019+ New York Times Best Songs of 2019
Henry’s 16th solo album “All The Eye Can See” will be released January 27th 2023. Henry is joined by more than 20 musicians, among them his trusted long-time musical companions and friends – his son Levon Henry on saxophone & clarinet, David Piltch on bass, Patrick Warren on piano & keys and John Smith on acoustic guitar.
It is an intimate album, highly emotional, amazingly quiet and beautiful, and relaxed, with simple yet skillful tunes, touching lyrics featuring 12 new and unforgettable songs, framed by an instrumental prelude and prologue.
Speakers
avatar for Joe Henry

Joe Henry

In a career spanning more than 35 years, Joe Henry has left an indelible and unique imprint on American popular music. As a songwriter and artist, Henry is celebrated for his exploration of the human experience. A hyper-literate storyteller, by turns dark, devastating, and hopeful... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:45pm - 4:30pm EDT
Oxford College of Emory University Quadrangle

3:45pm EDT

The Journey of Common Good
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:45pm - 4:30pm EDT
Common Good Atlanta (CGA) began in 2008, with one Ph.D. student, Sarah Higinbotham, who felt called to volunteer to teach at a prison as a response to her uncle's incarceration. After writing fourteen Georgia prisons, Phillips State Prison finally accepted her offer to teach a course. That semester, Sarah provided all the books for the course on world literature. The class filled in twenty minutes, with ninety incarcerated men on the waiting list.
 
In 2010, after two years of teaching by herself, her graduate school friend Bill Taft joined the work. Together, they co-direct Common Good Atlanta, which has grown to more than sixty faculty members teaching over thirty-five courses across four prisons.
Speakers
avatar for Sarah Higginbotham

Sarah Higginbotham

Emory University, Oxford College
 Sarah Higinbotham co-founded Common Good Atlanta, a nonprofit that bridges Georgia’s colleges and universities with Georgia’s prisons since 2008. The program offers accredited college courses inside seven prisons five days a week, with more 70 volunteer faculty from six Atlanta universities teaching. They also offer a weekly, accredited course to people recently released from prison. Sarah’s work is rooted the belief that human dignity flourishes — and communities become stronger — when people have more equitable access to higher... Read More →
avatar for Shanard Linsey

Shanard Linsey

Axiom Chance Home Inspections
Shanard Linsey is a Common Good Atlanta (CGA) Alumnus and current Board Member. He studied Liberal Arts while incarcerated, and joined CGA’s Board upon his release. Additionally, Shanard sits on Georgia State University’s Advisory Board for incarcerated students, Atlanta Regional... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:45pm - 4:30pm EDT
Williams Auditorium

3:45pm EDT

Vagabond Princess: A conversation with Ruby Lal
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:45pm - 4:30pm EDT
Situated in the early decades of the magnificent Mughal Empire, this first ever biography of Princess Gulbadan offers an enthralling portrait of a charismatic adventurer and unique pictures of the multicultural society in which she lived. Following a migratory childhood that spanned Kabul and north India, Gulbadan spent her middle years in a walled harem established by her nephew Akbar to showcase his authority as the Great Emperor. Gulbadan longed for the exuberant itinerant lifestyle she’d known. With Akbar’s blessing, she led an unprecedented sailing and overland voyage and guided harem women on an extended pilgrimage in Arabia. Amid increasing political tensions, the women’s “un-Islamic” behavior forced their return, lengthened by a dramatic shipwreck in the Red Sea.
 
Gulbadan wrote a book upon her return, the only extant work of prose by a woman of the age. A portion of it is missing, either lost to history or redacted by officials who did not want the princess to have her say.
 
Vagabond Princess contemplates the story of the missing pages and breathes new life into a daring historical figure. It offers a portal to a richly complex world, rife with movement and migration, where women’s conviviality, adventure, and autonomies shine through.
Speakers
avatar for Ruby Lal

Ruby Lal

Los Angeles Times Finalist and Emory University Professor, Ruby Lal is the author, most recently, of VAGABOND PRINCESS: The Great Adventures of Gulbadan (Yale University Press, February 2024).  Selected as one of the most anticipated 2024 non-fiction books by Ms. Magazine, and by... Read More →
avatar for Beth Ward

Beth Ward

Beth Ward is a veteran arts journalist, writer, and editor whose work has appeared in publications including Oxford American, Bitter Southerner, Hyperallergic, The Rumpus, Atlas Obscura, Burnaway, Atlanta magazine, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, ArtsATL, and elsewhere. Her essays... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 3:45pm - 4:30pm EDT
Tarbutton Performing Arts Center Oxford, GA 30054, USA

4:30pm EDT

SOFI TUKKER and Dr. Maria Ortiz on the Science of Serving Bread
Sunday September 22, 2024 4:30pm - 5:30pm EDT
Global dance music stars SOFI TUKKER celebrate the release of their new album “Bread” in a chat about the beloved food staple and the chemistry that makes it so delicious with food scientist, Dr. Maria Ortiz. Dr Ortiz runs the popular Instagram page "All You Knead Is Bread” where she illustrates the fascinating science behind bread chemistry and her delectable sourdough recipes. This conversation will be recorded for the Sing For Science podcast and moderated by its host, Matt Whyte. Sing For Science is a Top 10 Music Interview Podcast on Apple’s charts - past guests include David Byrne, SIA, Korn and dozens more.
Speakers
avatar for Maria Montserrat Ortiz de Erive Miguel

Maria Montserrat Ortiz de Erive Miguel

Dr. Maria Ortiz is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Functional Food Lab of North Carolina A&T State University, specializing in the development of healthy, high-fiber bakery products. Originally from Spain, she earned her B.S. and M.S. in Chemical Engineering from the University... Read More →
avatar for SOFI TUKKER

SOFI TUKKER

SOFI TUKKER, the GRAMMY-nominated, genre-defying duo comprised of Sophie Hawley-Weld and Tucker Halpern, have released their new third studio album BREAD, their most daring, innovative and infectious body of work to date.In addition to being a symbol of abundance, energy, sensuality... Read More →
Sunday September 22, 2024 4:30pm - 5:30pm EDT
Student Center
 
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