Remixing the Future: Hip Hop as Afrofuturism, Part 1
OnlineJoin award-winning writer and editor Sheree Renee Thomas and writer-teacher Danian Darrell Jerry as they discuss the role of hip hop in Afrofuturism.
Join award-winning writer and editor Sheree Renee Thomas and writer-teacher Danian Darrell Jerry as they discuss the role of hip hop in Afrofuturism.
Learn about efforts to build in Indiana a statewide sustainable farming organization that brings together eaters, farmers and people working to strengthen the food system.
Hear women farmers from around Indiana share what it’s like to be a farmer in a world where everyone expects farmers to be male.
Hear from three Indianapolis-area BIPOC farmers who are working against the food apartheid systems in their communities.
Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day by previewing a documentary about the history of Elkhart's predominantly Black West Benham neighborhood. Historians and community members will explore experiences of segregation in Elkhart, discuss the city’s clearing of Benham West and share some of the remaining elders’ hopes for the future.
Join media pioneer Cathy Hughes as she shares insights about the importance of the Black community having a voice, especially amid a pandemic and social injustice.
Join Indianapolis-area artists as they discuss Afrofuturism and their efforts to create desired future states in the present by constantly reimagining the work and the way the community moves through the world.
Join Historic New Harmony for Entangled: Robert Owen Virtual Conversation!
When some nationally-recognized suffragists like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were known to condescend poor and working-class women of color during the suffrage movement, Hoosier suffragists redirected the...
Meet architect Demar Matthews, whose firm OffTop focuses on the intersection of architecture, Black art, culture and experience in order to improve the built environment in Black neighborhoods.
Join Indiana’s Historic Pathways for an online workshop about the Buffalo Trace. Geared toward teachers of grades 3–5, the workshop shares the history of this early route through southern Indiana and offers ideas on how to incorporate the information into the classroom via hands-on activities.
Attend a screening and discussion of the short movie Purple and envision what a healthy public debate on fault-line issues might look like.