Stories of environmental justice in Charlotte curated by students in HIST 6330: History in the Digital Age, Fall 2022, contributing to the Humanities Action Lab's Climates of Inequality project and traveling exhibit, "Climate Refugees in the City of Creeks." Levine Museum of the New South, May - September 2022.
History Becomes
Ourstory:
Exploring Digital History
Thursday, April 29th, 7 - 8:30 p.m.
What is digital history? Please attend a showcase of digital history projects by graduate students in Dr. Tina Shull’s course “History in the Digital Age” followed by a discussion of tools, methods, and resources on campus for bringing history to life! Topics include African-American history and civil rights, politics, migration and settlement, and material and popular culture. Formats include maps, timelines, oral histories, podcasts, animated short film, and 3-D photogrammetry.
Artwork by Amanda Roberts
Student Projects
The North Caroline Antebellum Mapping Project by Bradley Holt
African American History: Granville County by Kaila Dollard
The Other Side of the Coin: African Americans in United States Numismatics by Wesley Thompson
Historytelling: A Fact & Fiction Podcast by Kayla Schultz
Wilmington Ten: Student Stories by Sydney Johnson
Nourishing the Movement: Georgia Gilmore and the Club from Nowhere by Sylvia Marshall
Talking African-American "HER"story: A Podcast by Kevia Gaddy
Going Viking: Mapping Viking Influence in North America by Amanda Roberts
US-Mexican Relations during the Mid 20th Century by Paul Telljohan