Faculty Projects

 

Tropics of Meta: a history blog published since 2010, edited by Dr. Alex Sayf Cummings, Dr. Romeo Guzman (Fresno State), and Joel Suarez (Princeton), which has featured contributions by numerous Georgia State faculty and students.

MindPop: a history podcast hosted by Dr. David Sehat.

Atlanta Studies: a digital publication of the Atlanta Studies NetworkAtlanta Studies features innovative scholarship that takes advantage of the Internet’s capabilities to deliver audio, video, images, text, and data to facilitate new ways of organizing and presenting research. Atlanta Studies archives all of its publication materials within Emory’s Libraries and Information Technology Services (LITS) and is committed to providing a stable digital presence for content.  Dr. Marni Davis is on the editorial board.

Black MoneyBlack Money: World Currencies Featuring African, African-American, and African Diasporic History and Cultures is a traveling museum exhibition created and directed by Dr. Harcourt Fuller, a Fulbright Global Scholar, and Associate Professor of History at Georgia State University (GSU) in Atlanta. Dr. Fuller is a scholar of African and African Diasporic History. His research interests include the representation of Black History on money. The Black Money Traveling Exhibition will open from November 4, 2018 – January 6, 2019, at the Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American Culture and History (AARL), in Atlanta. The opening of Black Money at the AARL will be part of the local tours planned for the attendees of the 61st Annual Conference of the African Studies Association (ASA), which will be held in Atlanta from November 29 – December 1, 2018. Dr. Fuller is one of the Local Area Committee Co-Chairs of the 2018 ASA Conference. The exhibition will travel to museums and other venues in cities and states across the U.S. over the next several years.

Global Cities of the New World: a joint initiative by Drs. Julia Gaffield and John T. Way.

Doomed to Repeat: a history podcast hosted by Dr. Cummings and PhD student Nicolas Hoffmann.

Videri: a free, fully editable, and open database on historiography, launched by PhD students at Columbia University in 2004 and featuring many entries by GSU students.