Fall 2023

  • Conversatorio Sobre la Majestad // In Conversation about the Majesty

    Sept 3 @ 11am EST: Conversatorio Sobre la Majestad // In Conversation about the Majesty (open to the public).

  • Black Beyond Data: Tawana Petty

    Sept 29 @ 12pm EST: The DSL and BBD welcome Tawana Petty, long-time social justice organizer whose work focuses on racial justice, equity issues, data privacy, and consent. (co-sponsored by Black Beyond Data Reading Group)

  • Keywords in Catastrophe

    Sept 14 @ 5pm EST: Dr. Bedour Alagraa (University of Texas-Austin), Erika Dickerson-Despenza (New Orleans-based), and Dr. J.T. Roane joined the DSL to discuss catastrophe's profound impact on Black communities, uncovering its ties to colonial dispossession, Indigenous genocide, and trans-Atlantic slavery.

  • Oral Histories with Jes Neal

    Sept 27 @ 12pm EST: DSL Archivist Jessica Neal of Vanguard Archives Consulting discusses the practice and ethics of oral histories (DSL members only).

  • Black Beyond Data: Nicole Aljoe

    Nov 17 @12pm EST: Nicole Aljoe Assistant Professor of English at Northeastern University joins BBD to discuss embedded slave narratives. (co-sponsored by Black Beyond Data Reading Group).

  • CKL OMEKA Workshop with the OMEKA Team

    Nov 8 @ 2pm EST: OMEKA workshop (DSL members only).

  • Archipelagos of Marronage Soft Launch

    Nov 30 @ 2pm EST: As part of the Harrison Lecture & LifexCode Research Celebration, Archipelagos of Marronage will present their StoryMap in collaboration with Dr. Bryan Wagner from Open Curriculum for New Orleans Culture. This event also includes presentations by Dr. Rachel Breunlin, Dr. Bryan Wagner, and University of Chicago Ph.D. candidate for Black and Indigenous history, Leila Blackbird.

  • Many Small Nations: A Day of Black, Indigenous and Black/Indigenous History

    Nov 30, 2023 at 10am EST: Johns Hopkins History Department in partnership with the Diaspora Solidarities Lab, LifexCode, and the Johns Hopkins Center for Africana Studies hosted the Harrison Lecture with Dr. Elizabeth Ellis, Princeton, Author of: The Great Power of Small Nations: Indigenous Diplomacy in the Gulf South.

  • Digital Humanities 101 with Drs. Nadejda Webb and Jessica Marie Johnson

    Sept-Nov: This lab is a LifexCode: Digital Humanities Against Enclosure Project, co-hosted by the Diaspora Solidarities Lab. Key themes in this course include “humanity at the intersections of technology; “technology of recovery”; community; materiality; precarity; and network [Gallon; Morrison]. (for DSL and LifexCode members only).

Spring 2023

  • CKL Omeka Workshop with the Omeka Team

    January 25, 2023 at 1:00pm EST: The OMEKA team guides our solidarity fellows through a workshop on both OMEKA Classic and S.

  • Alexis Pauline Gumbs

    January 31, 2023 at 1:30pm EST: Alexis Pauline Gumbs joins the DSL for a writing workshop.

  • Brenda Torres-Figueroa

    February 9, 2023 at 12:00pm EST: Brenda Torres-Figueroa (Segundo Ruiz Belvis Center, Chicago) discusses the vision and story behind her art.

  • Footnotes: A Conversation on Things Found and Lost in the Fire

    March 16, 2023 at 5:00pm EST: Hosted by Remains // An Archive, solidarity fellows Jessica Newby and Kevin Ah-Sen will be in conversation with Christopher Lopez on his exhibition “The Fires: Hoboken 1978-1982,” at the Hoboken Historical Museum. They will also be joined by Janet Ayala, a survivor of the fires.

  • Constellations of Relation

    March 21, 2023 at 12:15pm EST: M. Jacqui Alexander joins DSL director Yomaira C. Figueroa Vásquez in a discussion on praxis and poetics of Black feminist interrelationality.

  • Copyrights Workshop with Sandra Enimil

    March 22, 2023 at 12:00pm EST: Sandra Enimil (Yale) joins the DSL to discuss intellectual property.

  • Alive in their Garden

    March-April 2023: Afro-Latinx Lab Exhibition “Alive in their Garden” curated by solidarity fellow Mary Pena (Princeton) in Collaboration with MSU Residential College of Arts & Humanities. This exhibit will include series of in-person artist workshops at MSU and a virtual artist talk featuring all 4 artists in the exhibition. The exhibit will also be digitized and made available online via AbleEyes.

  • "Alive in their Garden" Artist Talk

    May 12, 2023 at 12:00pm EST: Felli Maynard, Star Feliz, and Nitzayra Leonor, three of the “Alive in Their Garden” artists, gather to reflect on their work.

  • "Alive in their Garden" Discussion

    May 25, 2023 at 5pm EST: Gloriann Sacha Antonetty (Revista Étnica, Puerto Rico) and Altagracia Jean Joseph (Fundación Código Humano, Dominican Republic) discuss organizing against femicide. Moderated by Amarilys Estrella.

Speaker Bios

Fall 2022

  • Ibeyi: Casting Spells

    September 1, 2022 at 5pm EST: Join the DSL for an intimate evening of conversation and spell-casting featuring Ibeyi's Lisa-Kaindé Diaz and Dr. Yomaira Figueroa-Vásquez (dir. Open Boat Lab). Moderated by DSL Project Manager Tatiana Esh

  • Catherine Knight-Steele

    September 30, 2022, 12pm-1:30pm EST (co-sponsored with the Black Beyond Data Reading Group and DISCO Network): Catherine Knight-Steele, Associate Professor of Communications at University of Maryland-College Park and Director of the Black Communication and Technology Lab (BCaT) on digital Black feminism, social media, and Black discourse online.

  • Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa

    October 11, 2022, 5pm EST: Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa, author of A Woman of Endurance (Amistad Books) on history, memory, world-building and Afro-Puerto Rican women’s lives. In conversation with Melanie Maldonado. This event also launches the CKL MicroLab Taller Entre Aguas 🌊

  • Beatriz Llenin Figueroa

    November 2, 2022, 4-5pm EST (DSL Only Event) Editor and translator Beatriz Llenin Figueroa (Editorial Educacción Emergente) joined the DSL Solidarity Fellows for a workshop on the ethics of translation, transcription-based projects, and editing oral histories.

  • The Chorus: Saidiya V. Hartman's Trilogy and the Black Feminist Tradition:

    Thursday & Friday November 10 & 11, 2022, the DSL together with the Center for Africana Studies at JHU hosted a two-day event honoring the work of Saidiya Hartman. With a special book talk featuring the work of Maboula Soumahoro (co-sponsored by the JHU European Seminar) and a panel of scholars (that included Marisa Fuentes, Derrais Carter, Asma Naeem, Robbie Shilliam, and more) exploring the Hartman Trilogy (Scenes of Subjection, Lose Your Mother, and Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments), this event drew in scholars from around the country and the world.

  • Dorothy Berry

    December 9, 2022, 12 pm to 1:30 pm EST (co-sponsored with the Black Beyond Data Reading Group): Dorothy Berry, Digital Curator at the National Museum of African American History and Culture, joins the DSL and the Black Beyond Data Reading Group to discuss archives, libraries and Black data.

Speaker Bios