Denise Frazier and Theo Hilton - NOCGS December Events

EPISODE · Dec 7, 2020 · 14 MIN

Denise Frazier and Theo Hilton - NOCGS December Events

from Cruisin Jams · host Cruisin Records

The Seaway Movement: A Lecture by Richard Campanella Monday, December 7 6:00PM-7:15PM CST Registration Link: https://tulane.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_xElF_smgSkm1wG3A0YWrWA New Orleans Center for the Gulf South invites you to our annual Monroe Lecture with geographer Richard Campanella. Campanella is associate dean and senior professor of practice in Tulane University's School of Architecture. In this illustrated talk, Campanella explores two rival shipping canals of the West Bank, one dug by enslaved laborers and the other by immigrants, and how they reconfigured the urban geography of our region—nearly to the point of calamity. As a geographer, Campanella researches questions of “where” and “why there.” That is, he tries to identify, characterize, and explain spatial patterns—of human settlement, the built environment, and the underlying physical geography—with an emphasis on New Orleans and Louisiana. His approach is empirical and quantitative, using mapping and spatial analysis tools such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and remote sensing, integrated with qualitative sources and humanistic methods. His recent work The West Bank of Greater New Orleans: A Historical Geography examines the West Bank holistically, as a legitimate subregion with its own story to tell. No other part of greater New Orleans has more diverse yet deeply rooted populations: folks who speak in local accents, who exhibit longstanding cultural traits, and, in some cases, who maintain family ownership of lands held since antebellum times―even as immigrants settle here in growing numbers. Campanella demonstrates that West Bankers have had great agency in their own place­-making, and he challenges the notion that their story is subsidiary to a more important narrative across the river. For more information on Richard Campanella, please visit https://richcampanella.com/. For more information on this event, please email [email protected] or call 504-314-2854. Braid and Flow: Power Friday, December 11, 12:00-1:00PM CST and Monday, December 14, 4:00-5:15PM CST Zoom Link: tulane.zoom.us/j/92870457936 Electrical power is measured in watts. The time it takes for power to transfer to an electric circuit is determined by the rate of work done by an object which is held at certain constant velocities. Hurricane Zeta demonstrated how reliant we are on the "constant" of electrical power. The recent election and impending transfer of presidential powers is a reminder of the precarious and delicate balance of democracy amidst national and political divisions. In December, Braid and Flow will tackle the topic of "Power." How is it transferred? At what velocity does it travel? What is its impact? Braid and Flow convenes twice each month to explore themes that stretch across scales and disciplines, such as food and food systems, racial violence, climate, money, cultural institutions, technology and intimacy. Our goal is to strengthen the theories and the practices that guide our work as artists, activists, researchers, policy makers, writers, scientists, designers, teachers, students, and leaders, all working to navigate the Anthropocene and the challenges of climate change, white supremacy, and the global pandemic. These conversations are hosted by the The Blue House/Civic Studio, Water Leaders Institute, PUNCTUATE, Antenna, New Orleans Center for the Gulf South, and the Gulf South Anthropocene Working Group, with the support of the following people: Shana griffin, Aron Chang, Rebecca Snedeker, and Denise Frazier. Please reach out if you'd like to join the team or otherwise support these convenings. Spread the word! Facebook event: https://fb.me/e/DM7C9f5p. For more information, please email [email protected].

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Denise Frazier and Theo Hilton - NOCGS December Events

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Australian Jams Play On Radio Australian Jams is a little podcast about new Australian music. Celebrating recent local releases on a fortnightly basis with different guests from the local music scene. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Music From The Doerfel-Verse The Doerfels Welcome to our Music feed! Want to hear the stories behind the songs, live jams, Doerfel-gossip, and who knows what else from our Doerfel-Vault? You can, and it's free! Just subscribe in a podcasting 2.0 app!We don't make money from streams and there are no ads. We want to share music we love making. We just ask if you find any value, to return whatever it's worth to you with time, talent, or treasure. - The Doerfels Secret Jams Records Secret Jams Records Founder/A&R @daniel-de-romaCONTACT : [email protected] : [email protected] (Before submitting your demo,listen to our music.and get to know the genres we release,this will surely help you)PROMOS: [email protected] EU, NORTH /LATIN AMERICA @ : [email protected] Jams Records is established in april 2013! The label is orientated to bring forward thinking electronic music,that underground sound for the future generation!Including rooster of various international artists Secret Jams is aiming to create one quality trace filled up with originality and excellence in the nova days electronic music scene!We work in an atmosphere filled up with positive energy combined with much passion and motivation from where we charge our unstoppable creativity and inspiration as an artists!Our goal is simple to deliver quality dancefloor gems! Lynn Frank Lynn Frank Everything posted here are music experiments.My solo material are soundscapes and sample-rich productions created through Ableton. This is all a learning process and most of the works posted are crafted in hours and not days. Iterations without refinement; sound drafts that I may return to later in life when I understand my own self and my work better.The songs labeled as jams include the work that I have done with some local friends together.All the solo music and audio that I have provided here is free to use with attribution (Creative Commons Attribution). Which means use it in your game, video, or project and simply include my name and a link back to the material. The link back is important, because it lets other people find and use the music that I have provided.
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