Syllabi Reading List

 

 

 

Digital Scholarship Readings

Prepared by the UO Libraries (Franny Gaede, Director of Digital Scholarship Services; Kate Thornhill, Digital Scholarship Librarian)

Ethical Considerations & Copyright

Anderson, J. & Christen, K. Traditional Knowledge Licenses and Labels

Capell, L., & Williams, E. (2018). Implementing Rights Statements. Org at the University of Miami Libraries. Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication, Creative Commons. Accessed: 2/11/2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/

Christen, K. “Press Pause: Slowing Down Digital Humanities Practices”

“Copyright and Cultural Institutions: Guidelines for Digitization for U.s. Libraries, Archives, and Museums.” Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Library, 2009. Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/838384420

Cornell’s Legal Information Institute. “United States Copyright Law.” Accessed: 2/12/22 https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17

Gazi, A. (2014). “Exhibition Ethics – An Overview of Major Issues.” Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies, vol. 12, no. 1, 1, p. Art. 4. www.jcmsjournal.com, https://doi.org/10.5334/jcms.1021213.

Hamilton, G. & Saunderson, F. (2017). Open Licensing for Cultural Heritage. London: Facet Publishing, Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1031776615

Hirtle, Peter. “Copyright Term and the Public Domain in the United States”

Hirtle, P., Hudson, E., Kenyon, A. “Design for Diversity: Exploring Education and Advocacy for More Inclusive Systems”

Li, Y., & Liu, C. (2019). Information resource, interface, and tasks as user interaction components for digital library evaluation. Information Processing & Management, 56(3), 704-720.

Ramos, M. (2013). “Cultural Sensitivity in the Archives: Digitizing Controversial Materials, a Balancing Act” UConn Library Presentations. 42. https://opencommons.uconn.edu/libr_pres/42

Reed, Trevor. “Fair Use as Cultural Appropriation: Why the ‘Forgotten Factor’ Matters.” Accessed: 2/12/2022

Rightsstatements.org (2016). “Rights Statements.” Accessed: 2/11/2022. http://rightsstatements.org/page/1.0/?language=en\\

RightsStatements.org: “Why We Need It, What It Is (and Isn’t) and What Does It Mean for the Digital Public Library of America Network and Beyond.” Accessed: 2/11/2022. https://dp.la/info/get-involved/workshops/

Society of American Archivists. (2009). “Orphan Works: Statement of Best Practices”

Taylor, J. & Kukutai, T. (2016). “Indigenous Data Sovereignty: Toward an Agenda.” http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1162448626

Visual Resources Association. Statement on the Fair Use of Images for Teaching, Research, and Study. https://cmsimpact.org/wpcontent/uploads/2016/01/vra_fairuse_statement.pdf

Digital Preservation & Curation

Ahmed K. (2020). “The Permanent Legacy Foundation Wants to Preserve Your Digital Legacy for Future Generations.” Long Now. Accessed: 2/11/2022. https://longnow.org/ideas/02020/02/26/the-permanent-legacy-foundationwants-to-preserve-your-digital-legacy-for-future-generations/

Bastian, J. & Flinn, A. (2020). “Community Archives, Community Spaces: Heritage, Memory and Identity.” Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1140385523

Brodsky, M. & Getz, K. (2022) “ACRL Data Literacy Cookbook” American College and Research Libraries.

Brown, A. (2013). “Practical Digital Preservation: A How-to Guide for Organizations of Any Size.” Chicago: Neal-Schuman, Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1192881322

Bush, V. (1945). “As We May Think.” The Atlantic Monthly, 176(1), 101-108. The Atlantic Monthly, 176(1), 101-108. http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1945/07/as-we-may-think/303881/

Digital Curation Centre. “Digital Curation Lifecycle Model.” Digital Curation Centre. Accessed: 2/11/2022. https://www.dcc.ac.uk/guidance/curation-lifecycle-model

Dobreva, M. (2015) Digital Archives. London: Facet, 2015. Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/915279992

Dobreva, M., & Duff, W. (2015). “The Ever-changing Face of Digital Curation: Introduction to the Special Issue on Digital Curation.” Archival Science, 15(2), 97-100. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10502-015-9243-7.

Gerontakos, T. & Riesenberg, B. (2021). Metadata Application Profiles. Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1268114441

Greenberg, J., Hanson, K., & Verhoff, D. (2021). Guidelines for Preserving New Forms of Scholarship. NYU Libraries. https://doi.org/10.33682/221c-b2xj.

Harvey, R. & Weatherburn, J. (2018) Preserving Digital Materials. Blue Ridge Summit: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2018. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1023551838

Higgins, S. (2011). Digital curation: the emergence of a new discipline. International Journal of Digital Curation, 6(2), 78-88. http://ijdc.net/index.php/ijdc/article/viewFile/184/251

Kramer-Smyth, J. (2019). “Partners for Preservation: Advancing Digital Preservation Through Cross-Community Collaboration.” Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1101914249

Sustainability Heritage Network – The Sustainable Heritage Network (SHN)

Maron, N. L., & Pickle, S. (2014). Sustaining the Digital Humanities: Host Institution Support Beyond the Startup Period. Ithaka S+R. Available: http://www.sr.ithaka.org/sites/default/files/SR_Supporting_Digital_Humanities_20140618f.pdf

Material Memory Podcast. “Climate Displacement and Cultural Resilience.” Season 2, Episode 4.

Miller, S. (2020). “Metadata for Digital Collections.” Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1202972922

Munoz, T. & Renear, A. Issues in Humanities Data Curation

Roued-Cunliffe, H., Copeland, A., JoyEllen F. (2017). Participatory Heritage. Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/986612346

Thornhill, K. & Hayden, G. “Making File Names for Digital Exhibits”

Visual Resources Association. Cataloging Cultural Objects Manual. Visual Resources Association. Accessed: 2/11/2022. https://vraweb.org/resourcesx/catalogingcultural-objects/

Wexelbaum, R. (2015). Queers Online: LGBT Digital Practices in Libraries, Archives, and Museums. , Print. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1104420241

 

Digital Humanities as a Discipline

“Collaboration Works Two Ways: Data Sovereignty and Representation in Indigenous Digital Humanities” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IR1pkUREF-0

Flanders, J. (2009). “The Productive Unease of 21st Century Scholarship.” Digital Humanities Quarterly. 3.3. http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/3/3/000055/000055.html

Gaede, F., Ana-Maurine, L., Reyes Santos, A., Thornhill, K. (2022) “Afro-Indigenous Women Healers in the Caribbean and Its Diasporas: A Decolonial Digital Humanities Project”

Gold, M. K., & Klein, Lauren F. (2016). Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016.

Klein, L. F. and Gold, M. K. (2016). Introduction. M. K. Gold (Ed.) Debates in the Digital Humanities. http://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/debates/text/51

Kretzschmar, W. & Gray Potter, W. (2010). “Library Collaboration with Large Digital Humanities Projects.” Literary and Linguistic Computing, 25(4), 439–445. https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqq022

Mihram, D., & Fletcher, C. (2019). “USC Digital Voltaire: Centering Digital Humanities in the Traditions of Library and Archival Science.” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 19(1), 7-17.

Morgan, Paige C. (2018). “The Consequences of Framing Digital Humanities Tools as Easy to Use.” College & Undergraduate Libraries, 25(3), 211–231.

Risam, R. (2019). “New digital worlds: postcolonial digital humanities in theory, praxis, and pedagogy.” Northwestern University Press. – Introduction

Siemens, L., Cunningham, R., Duff, W., Warwick, C. (2011). “A Tale of Two Cities: Implications of the Similarities and Differences in Collaborative Approaches within the Digital Libraries and Digital Humanities Communities.” Literary and Linguistic Computing, 26(3), 335–348. https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqr028

University of Minnesota Press. – Chapter 21 – “Pedagogies of Race: Digital Humanities in the Age of Ferguson”

Wernimont, J., & Losh, Elizabeth M. (2018). “Bodies of information: intersectional feminism and the digital humanities.” University of Minnesota Press. – Chapters 16, 20, and 22.

JFI Reading and Resource List

Environmental Racism: Water Stories Dr. Reyes-Santos

  • Barber, Katrine, Chinook Resilence
  • Black, Maggie, Atlas of Water
  • Butler, Octavia E., Parable Of The Sower
  • Dow, K., Downing, T., and Downing, T. E., Atlas of Climate Change
  • Gomez, J., Gumbs, A. P., Gilda Stories
  • Lara, Ana-Maurine, Kohnjehr Woman
  • LaDuke, Winona, All Our Relations
  • May, Theresa, Salmon Is Everything,
  • Nishime, Leilani, Racial Ecologies
  • Noorgard, Salmon and Acorns Feed Our People
  • Pita, Vanport
  • Reid, Joshua L., The Sea is My Country
  • Wald and Vaszquez, Latinx Environmentalisms

 

CRES 610: Culture, Power and Conflict Resolution 1-3 Dr. Reyes-Santos

  • La Rose by Louise Erdrich
  • Kohnjehr Woman by Ana-Maurine Lara
  • Selections from Sister Outside by Audre Lorde: “Age, race, class, and sex : women redefining difference;” “The uses of anger : women responding to racism,” ““The Masters Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House” (24p.)
  • Selections from Identity Complex by Michael Hames-Garcia: “Preface”; “1. Who Are Our Own People?”; and “4. Do Prisons Make Better Men?” (79p.)
  • Selection from Mothers without Citizenship by Lynn Fujiwara: “Refugees Betrayed”
  • Selection from Conflict Mediation Across Cultures: “Introduction”; “Conflict: Creative and Destructive Dynamics,” “Conflict: Gender Differences and Conflict Styles”; “Reconciliation: The Many Faces of Forgiveness”
  • Changó’s Fire by Ernesto Quiñones
  • All Our Relations by Winona La Duke
  • “Halfie” by Ana-Maurine Lara
  • Mediating Across Difference: Oceanic and Asian Approaches to Conflict Resolution, ed by Morgan J. Brigg (Editor), Roland Bleiker (Editor)
  • Diasporas in Dialogue by Barbara Tint
  • Selections from Our Caribbean Kin by Alai Reyes-Santos: “Preface,” “Family Secrets,” “Coda”
  • Broken Treaties, OPB: https://www.opb.org/television/programs/oregonexperience/segment/broken-treatiesoregon-native-americans/
  • Building Intercultural Communities, TedEx: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GeomTrwz-9k
  • Homepage of this website: http://www.justice.gov.za/trc/
  • Commission Activities section of this document, pages 23-36: http://nctr.ca/assets/reports/Final%20Reports/Executive_Summary_English_Web.pdf

Law 610: Environmental Justice Dr. Reyes-Santos

  • Braiding Sweetgrass
  • Butler, Parable Of The Sower
  • All Our Relations
  • Dispossessing the Wilderness
  • Racial Ecologies
  • The Gilda Stories
  • Chinook Resilience : Heritage and Cultural
  • Black Faces, White Spaces : Reimagining
  • Salmon and Acorns Feed Our People : Colon..
  • Vanport Our History Is the Future
  • Keep Me Posted : Logins from Tomorrow
  • Water Law in a Nutshell
  • Contesting Hidden Waters
  • Energy Islands
  • Rise Of The American Conservation Movement
  • Kohjehr Woman What is Critical Environmental Justice?
  • Handbook of Environmental Justice (https://www.laurapulido.org/copy-of-publications)

Supporting articles, videos and other resources

 

Environmental Racism Laura Pulido

  • Robert Bullard, Paul Mohai, Robin Saha, and Beverly Wright (2007) “Preface,” “Chapter 1, Environmental Justice in the 21st Century,” “Chapter 3, Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in the Distribution of Environmental Hazards: Assessing the Evidence Twenty Years after Toxic Wastes and Race,” in Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty: 1987-2007. Cleveland: United Church of Christ. pp. X-XV; 7-15; 38-47.
  • Dina Gilio-Whitaker (2019) “Environmental Justice Theory and Its Limitations for Indigenous by Peoples” in As Long as the Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice, from Colonization to Standing Rock. Beacon Press, Chpt. 1, pp. 15-33.
  • Bullard, Robert (2000) Dumping in Dixie: Race, Class and Environmental Quality. Westview Press, 2nd edition (originally published 1990).
  • Pulido, Laura, Steve Sidawi and Robert Vos (1996) “An Archaeology of Environmental Racism in Los Angeles” Urban Geography 17 (5): 419-439.
  • Cushing, Lara, Rachel Morello-Frosch, Madeline Wander and Manuel Pastor (2015) “The Haves, the Have-Nots, and the Health of Everyone: The Relationship between Social Inequality and Environmental Inequality” Annual Review of Public Health 36: 193-209.
  • Cole, Luke and Sheila Foster, “A History of the Environmental Justice Movement,” in From the Ground Up, New York University Press, pp. 19-32.
  • Perkins, Tracy (2021) “The Multiple People of Color Origins of the US Environmental Justice Movement: Social Movement Spillover and Regional Racial Projects in California” Environmental Sociology, pp. 1-13 https://doi.org/10.1080/23251042.2020.1848502
  • Principles of Environmental Justice – 1 page
  • Robert Bullard, Paul Mohai, Robin Saha, and Beverly Wright (2007) “Chapter 2, Environmental Justice Timeline – Milestones, 1987-2007” in Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty: 1987-2007. Cleveland: United Church of Christ. pp. 16-37.
  • Beyond Toxics, “Beautician Turned Environmentalist” https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/48fe0964451d44f28e7dba0f7f05bb62
  • Beyond Toxics, “Air Quality” https://www.beyondtoxics.org/work/environmental-justice/air-quality/
  • Beyond Toxics, “Accomplishments” https://www.beyondtoxics.org/donate/accomplishments/
  • Beyond Toxics, “Statewide Pesticide Policy” https://www.beyondtoxics.org/work/pesticide-reform/statewide-pesticide-policy/
  • Beyond Toxics, “Climate Justice” https://www.beyondtoxics.org/work/climate-justice/
  • Beyond Toxics, “Resilient Forestry” https://www.beyondtoxics.org/work/pesticide-reform/resilient-forestry/
  • Oregon Legislative Assembly (2021) Senate Concurrent Resolution 17
  • Dalton, M., and E. Fleishman, editors. 2021. Fifth Oregon Climate Assessment. Oregon Climate Change Research Institute, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon. https://blogs.oregonstate.edu/occri/oregon-climate-assessments/ 1-46.
  • Susan Cutter, Bryan Boruff, and W. Lynn Shirley (2003) “Social Vulnerability to Environmental Hazards” Social Science Quarterly https://doi.org/10.1111/1540-6237.8402002
  • Oregon Health Authority (2020) “Climate and Health in Oregon: 2020” https://www.adaptationclearinghouse.org/resources/climate-and-health-in-oregon-2020-report.html
  • Oregon Health Authority (2015) “Vulnerability Assessment” https://www.oregon.gov/oha/ph/HealthyEnvironments/climatechange/Pages/Climate-Ethics-and-Health-Equity.aspx
  • Oregon Live (nd) “Social Vulnerability in the Northwest” (interactive map) https://projects.oregonlive.com/coronavirus/vulnerability/
  • Oregon Public Broadcasting (2020) “Broken Treaties” (1 hour video) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHq6ncJJ35w
  • Lola Loustaunau and Robert Bussel (2021) “Immigrants in the Oregon Workplace: Essential Work, Covid-19 and Strategies for Integration” in A State of Immigrants, ed. Bob Bussel, University of Oregon, pp. 93-109.
  • State of Oregon, Climate Equity Blueprint (2021) https://www.oregon.gov/lcd/CL/Documents/2021_Jan_Climate-Equity-Blueprint.pdf
  • Jack Healy and Mike Baker (2021) “As Miners Chase Clean-Energy Minerals, Tribes Fear a Repeat of the Past” New York Times, December 27.
  • Liévanos, Raoul (2020) “Racialized Uneven Development and Multiple Exposure: Sea Level Rise and High-Risk Neighbourhoods in Stockton, CA” Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy, and Society 13 (2): 381-404.
  • Susan Cutter (2021) “The Changing Nature of Hazard and Disaster Risk in the Anthropocene” Annals of the American Association of Geographers 111(3): 819-827
  • Oregon Environmental Justice Taskforce https://www.oregon.gov/gov/policy/environment/environmental_justice/Pages/default.aspx
  • Schlosberg, David (2004) “Reconceiving Environmental Justice: Global Movements and Political Theories” Environmental Politics 13 (3): 517-540.
  • Catalina de Onis, Emilia Cubelos, and Maria del Rocio Ortiz Chavarria (2021) “No Habia Humanidad: Critiquing Monolinguism and Other Systems of White Supremacy in Local Emergency Management Responses” Social Justice 47
  • Emily Eisenhauer, Kathleen Williams, Camilla Warren, Tami Thomas-Burton, Susan Julius and Andrew Geller (2021) “New Directions in Environmental Justice Research at the U.S. EPA: Incorporating Recognitional and Capabilities Justice Through Health Impact Assessments” Environmental Justice 14 (5): 322-331.
  • Schlosberg, David (2007) “Defining Environmental Justice in the USA” in Defining Environmental Justice: Theories, Movements, and Nature. Oxford University Press, pp. 45-78.
  • Dalton, M., and E. Fleishman, editors. 2021. Fifth Oregon Climate Assessment. Oregon Climate Change Research Institute, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon. https://blogs.oregonstate.edu/occri/oregon-climate-assessments/ 47-94
  • “Built Environment” “Public Health” “Social Systems” Dalton, M., and E. Fleishman, editors. 2021. Fifth Oregon Climate Assessment. Oregon Climate Change Research Institute, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon. https://blogs.oregonstate.edu/occri/oregon-climate-assessments/
  • Coleman, Zack (2021) “Wildfires Threaten all of the West – and One Group More than Others” Politico, July 6.
  • Christopher Flavelle and Kalen Goodluck (2021) “Dispossessed Again: Climate Change Hits Native Americans Especially Hard” New York Times, June 27.
  • Walidah Imarisha (2013) “Oregon Black History Timeline” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fo2RVOunsZ8
  • Philip Thoennes and Jack Landau “(2019) “Constitutionalizing Racism: George H. Williams’ Appeal for a White Utopia” Oregon Historical Quarterly 120 (4): 468-487.
  • Greta Smith (2018) “Congenial Neighbors”: Restrictive Covenants and Residential Segregation in Portland, Oregon” Oregon Historical Quarterly 119 (3): 358-364.
  • John Linder (2019) “Liberty Ships and Jim Crow Shipyards: Racial Discrimination in Kaiser’s Portland Shipyards, 1940-1945” Oregon Historical Quarterly 120 (4): 518-545.
  • Portland Bureau of Planning (1993) “The History of Portland’s African American Community”
  • “Natural Systems” and “Tribal Cultural Resources” in Dalton, M., and E. Fleishman, editors. 2021. Fifth Oregon Climate Assessment. Oregon Climate Change Research Institute, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon. https://blogs.oregonstate.edu/occri/oregon-climate-assessments/
  • David Lewis and Thomas Connolly (2019) “White American Violence on Tribal Peoples on the Oregon Coast” Oregon Historical Quarterly 120 (4): 368-381.
  • Mario Jimenez Sifuentes (2016) “Many Miles from Home: The Bracero Program in the Pacific Northwest” in Of Forests and Fields, pp. 10-35.
  • Gerardo Sandoval and Shawn Rodine (2020) “Ranchitos: Immigrant Integration via Latino Sustainable Agriculture” Latino Studies, pp. 1-23 https://doi.org/10.1057/s41276-020-00242-y
  • Lynn Stephen (2017) “Guatemalan Immigration to Oregon: Indigenous Transborder Communities” Oregon Historical Quarterly 118 (4): 554-583.

 

 

AAAP/ARCH 408/508: Race and Place Over Time Dr. James Buckley

  • Ned Kaufman. Race, Place, and Story
  • Dolores Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes as Public History
  • Karen J. Gibson. “Bleeding Albina: A History of Community Disinvestment, 1940–2000,” Transforming Anthropology
  • Hayden, D. The power of place: Urban landscapes as public history
  • Max Page and Marla R. Miller. Bending the Future: Fifty Ideas for the Next Fifty Years of Historic Preservation in the United States
  • Donna Graves, The Necessity of Interpretation
  • Steven Lubar, Preservation Demands Interpretation
  • Christen McCurdy, “A New Vision for Albina,” The Skanner News (27 September 2017) http://www.theskanner.com/news/northwest/25972-a-new-vision-for-albina
  • Carter William Ause, “Black and Green: How Disinvestment, Displacement and Segregation Created the Conditions For Eco-Gentrification in Portland’s Albina District, 1940-2015” (2016). University Honors Theses.
  • Erica Avrami, “Spatializing Values in Heritage Conservation: The Potential of Cultural Mapping,” in Myers, David, et al, Values in Heritage Management: Emerging Approaches and Research Directions
  • Casey Cep, “The Fight to Preserve African-American History,” The New Yorker, 2/3/2020 https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/02/03/the-fight-to-preserve-african-american-history
  • Molly Garfinkel, “Place Matters: Rooting Conservation in Community,” Journal of American Folklore
  • Claudia Guerra, “Cultural Mapping: Engaging Community in Historic Preservation,” Forum Journal
  • Lee, Antoinette J. “From Historic Architecture to Cultural Heritage: A Journey Through Diversity, Identity, and Community,” Future Anterior
  • Lee, Antoinette J. “The Social and Ethnic Dimensions of Historic Preservation.” In A Richer Heritage: Historic Preservation in the Twenty-First Century, Robert E. Stipe, ed.
  • Brent Leggs, Kerri Rubman, and Byrd Wood. Preserving African American Historic Places. National Trust for Historic Preservation, 2012.
  • Stephanie Ryberg-Webster, “Beyond Rust and Rockefeller: Preserving Cleveland’s African American Heritage,” Preservation Education & Research
  • Oregon Public Broadcasting: “Black Seniors Reminisce on a Changing Portland in Brain Health Study,” (2017) https://www.opb.org/news/article/portland-black-neighborhood-gentrification-brain-health/
  • Randy Gragg, “Black in Portland: 130 years of dislocation,” Portland Monthly
  • Galen Cranz, Ethnography for Designers (Routledge, 2016)
  • Mindy Thompson Fullilove, “Root Shock: The Consequences of African American Dispossession,” Journal of Urban Health: Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, 78, No. 1
  • Quintard Taylor, In Search of the Racial Frontier: African Americans in the American West, 1528-1990
  • Ned Kaufman, “Prologue” and “Chapter 2” in Race, Place, and Story (Routledge, 2009), 1-18 and 38-71
  • Cheng, Irene; Davis, Charles L.; Wilson, Mabel O., “Racial Evidence,” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Vol.76:4 (2017), 440-442.
  • Douglas Allen, Mary Lawhon, Joseph Pierce, “Placing race: On the resonance of place with black geographies,” Progress in Human Geography 43:6 (2019), 1001–1019
  • Alderman DH and Inwood JFJ, “Street naming and the politics of belonging: Spatial injustices in the toponymic commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr.,” Social & Cultural Geography 14:2 (2013), 211–233.
  • Bledsoe A, Eaves LE, and Williams B, “Introduction: Black geographies in and of the United States South,” Southeastern Geographer 57:1 (2017), 6–11.
  • Richard H. Schein, “Urban Form and Racial Order,” Urban Geography, 33:7 (2012), 942-960
  • Brahinsky R, Sasser J and Minkoff-Zern L-A, “Race, space, and nature: An introduction and critique,” Antipode 46:5 (2014), 1135–1152.
  • Laura Pulido. “Rethinking environmental racism: White privilege and urban development in Southern California,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 90:1 (2000), 12–40.
  • Laura Pulido, “Geographies of race and ethnicity II: Environmental racism, racial capitalism and state-sanctioned violence,” Progress in Human Geography 41:4 (2017) ,524–533
  • Carmen P. Thompson, “Housing Segregation and Resistance: An Introduction,” 355-357
  • Greta Smith, “‘Congenial Neighbors’: Restrictive Covenants and Residential Segregation in Portland, Oregon,” 358-364
  • Melissa Cornelius Lang, “‘A place under the sun’: African American Resistance to Housing Exclusion,” 365-375
  • Leanne Serbulo, “Small Steps on the Long Journey to Equality: A Timeline of Post-Legislation Civil Rights Struggles in Portland,” 376-399
  • Katrine Barber et al, “Invisible Walls: Mapping Residential Segregation in Portland,” 400-405
  • Linder, John, “Liberty Ships and Jim Crow Shipyards: Racial Discrimination in Kaiser’s Portland Shipyards, 1940–1945,” Oregon Historical Quarterly 120:4 (2019)
  • James Michael Buckley, “Just Fieldwork: Exploring the Vernacular in the African American Community in Portland Oregon’s Albina District,” Future Anterior 12:2 (Winter 2020)
  • Groth, Paul, “Frameworks for cultural landscape study,” In P. Groth & T. W. Bressi (Eds.), Understanding ordinary landscapes (Yale University Press, 1997),
  • San Francisco Heritage. 2014. “Sustaining San Francisco’s Living History: Strategies for Conserving Cultural Heritage Assets.” San Francisco: San Francisco Heritage. https://www.sfheritage.org/cultural-heritage/
  • Paul A. Shackel.Civic Engagement, Representation, and Social Justice: Moving from CRM to Heritage Studies,” in Phyllis Mauch Messenger and Susan J. Bender, eds., History and Approaches To Heritage Studies (Florida, 2021?)
  • James Michael Buckley, “People in Place: Local Planning to Preserve Diverse Cultures,” in Angela M. Labrador and Neil Asher Silberman, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Public Heritage Theory and Practice (Oxford, 2018)
  • Woods, C. (1995). The blues epistemology and regional planning history: The case of lower Mississippi Delta Development Commission. Planning Theory 13, 79.
  • Andrew Hurley: Beyond Preservation: Using Public History to Revitalize Cities (Temple, 2010) – Chaps 1, 2, 3
  •  Eleonora Redaelli, “Cultural Planning in the United States: Toward Authentic Participation Using GIS,” Urban Affairs Review 48:5 (2012)
  • Hooks, bell. “Homeplace: A site of resistance,” in Yearning: Race, gender and cultural Politics (1990)
  • Rachel Pain, Geoff Whitman and David Milledge, “Participatory Action Research Toolkit: An Introduction to Using PAR as an Approach to Learning, Research and Action,” (Durham University, 2017),
  • Max van Balgooy, ed. Interpreting African-American History and Culture (Rowan & Littlefield, 2015) [Chaps. 7, 12, 14, and 17]
  • Preservation Alliance for Greater Philadelphia. “The Alliance’s New African American Outreach Initiative” and “Preserving Philadelphia’s African American Churches,” Preservation Matters, Winter 2009 VICTORIA
  • Page & Miller: Tia Myles and Rachel Miller: “Critical Place-based Story Telling: A Mode of Creative Interaction at Historical Sites” CAYLA
  • Davarian L. Baldwin. “It’s Not the Location; It’s the Institution,” Buildings and Landscapes 23:2 (2016)
  • Andrew Potts, “A Missing Lesson from Charlottesville: Heritage as a Driver of
  • Inclusion” (8/30/17) MIRA http://forum.savingplaces.org/blogs/andrew-potts/2017/08/30/a-missing-lessonfrom-charlottesville-heritage-as-a-driver-of-inclusion
  • Andrea Roberts, “When Does It Become Social Justice? Thoughts on Intersectional Preservation Practice” (7/20/17) http://forum.savingplaces.org/blogs/special-contributor/2017/07/20/when-does-itbecome-social-justice-thoughts-on-intersectional-preservation-practice
  • Jeremy C. Wells, “In Stakeholders We Trust: Changing the ontological and epistemological orientation of built heritage assessment through participatory action research”
    in Bogusław Szmygin, ed.,
  • How to assess built heritage? assumptions, methodologies, examples of heritage assessment systems (Romualdo Del Bianco Foundatione, 2015)
  • Erin Aubry Kaplan, “Excavating the Future: Gentrification in Black Los Angeles” Capital and Main LINDSAY https://capitalandmain.com/excavating-the-future-author-erin-aubry-kaplan-on-gentrification-in-black-los-angeles
  • Page & Miller, Angel David Nieves: “Digital Reconstruction as Preservation”
  • New York Times: “Revitalizing Black Neighborhoods by Preserving Their History” (11/23/2021) https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/23/business/black-neighborhoods-history-revitalization.html?referringSource=articleShare

 

LITERATURE AND DIGITAL CULTURE: Culture as Data, Data as Culture Dr. Mattie Burkert

  • Bo Burnham, Inside (streaming on Netflix) – Serial Productions
  • Nice White Parents, New York Times
  • Ana Castillo, So Far From God (PDF)
  • Toni Morrison, “Récitatif”
  • Ta-Nehisi Coates, “The Case for Reparations”
  • Safiya Umoja Noble, Algorithms of Oppression
  • Catherine D’Ignazio and Lauren Klein, Data Feminism,
  • Claus Wilke, Fundamentals of Data Visualization
  • Jeffrey Pomerantz, Metadata (MIT Press, 2015)