CBH Talks: What Signs Say, Part Two: Nostalgia and Activism on the Streets

Thu, Mar 25 2021
2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
Virtual

Black History Month BPL Presents Center for Brooklyn History conversations Virtual Programming


The second of this two-part series, moderated by Untapped New York founder Michelle Young, looks at how our streetscapes carry us forward and backwards, through activism and nostalgia. Young leads this discussion with linguist Shonna Trinch and cultural anthropologist Edward Snajdr, who co-authored the book What the Signs Say: Language, Gentrification, and Place-Making in Brooklyn; artist Hank Willis Thomas whose work touches upon themes of identity, history, and popular culture; Jeremiah Moss, author of Vanishing New York: How a Great City Lost Its Soul; and artist Neil Goldberg whose videos, photography, mixed media, and performance work reflect embodiment mortality, and the everyday. Together they will look at streetscapes, signage and public art, as they speak to messages of class and race, the power of words shown publicly, and marketing to upward mobility.

Also sign up for part one of this series, on February 23. This program is presented in partnership with John Jay College, CUNY.

Add to My Calendar 03/25/2021 02:30 pm 03/25/2021 04:00 pm America/New_York CBH Talks: What Signs Say, Part Two: Nostalgia and Activism on the Streets

The second of this two-part series, moderated by Untapped New York founder Michelle Young, looks at how our streetscapes carry us forward and backwards, through activism and nostalgia. Young leads this discussion with linguist Shonna Trinch and cultural anthropologist Edward Snajdr, who co-authored the book What the Signs Say: Language, Gentrification, and Place-Making in Brooklyn; artist Hank Willis Thomas whose work touches upon themes of identity, history, and popular culture; Jeremiah Moss, author of Vanishing New York: How a Great City Lost Its Soul; and artist Neil Goldberg whose videos, photography, mixed media, and performance work reflect embodiment mortality, and the everyday. Together they will look at streetscapes, signage and public art, as they speak to messages of class and race, the power of words shown publicly, and marketing to upward mobility.

Also sign up for part one of this series, on February 23. This program is presented in partnership with John Jay College, CUNY.

Brooklyn Public Library - Virtual MM/DD/YYYY 60