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This is the current revision of this page, as edited by LumaNatic (talk | contribs) at 09:00, 9 May 2024. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

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This user is a Johnian.
This user is a graduate of the University of Cambridge.
This user is a Cantabrigian.
HThis user attends or attended Harvard University.
CThis user attends or attended Columbia University.
This user is a participant in
WikiProject Countering systemic bias.


BIO

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A History PhD candidate at St John's College, Cambridge, I've served as a Center for Public Leadership Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School, the (first) Wikimedian-In-Residence, Wikipedia Fellow and Visiting Scholar (Columbia University Libraries & the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science's CGUI Lab) at Columbia, in NY, since August 2018, as I studied Oral History there, and Public Administration at Harvard. I was raised in a multi-generational military family in the Virginia Tidewater; Gloucester, and attended local schools until university.

I co-founded Disrupt Wikipedia with the Columbia University Libraries and WikiHBCU/DIO at the Washington National Cathedral in DC, where I serve as the inaugural Oral History Fellow. Priors include: social initiative #HackingRacism (incubated at Columbia Business School's IE@Columbia c/o '17) & producer/journalist (Vice, TriBeCa, Fox, NYT).

APPOINTMENTS

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  1. Fall 2018 - Summer 2020: Columbia University, where I'm an Oral History Masters candidate and Research Scholar at the School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS)'s Computer Graphics User Interface (CGUI) Lab
    1. Launched two new WikiProjects at WikiConference North America 2018 in Ohio at Ohio State University Libraries:
      1. Mapping Freedom (my Masters thesis): mapping all of the freedom colonies that resisted Western colonialism to create the original "Resistance" and the initial "safe spaces."
      2. WikiHBCU/DIO - an initiative to establish a Wiki presence at [H]istorically [B]lack [C]olleges, [U]niversities & [D]epartments [I]nstitutions & [O]rganizations throughout the planet to increase the equity, parity and inclusion rates of Wikimedia tools and platforms.
    2. WikiProject Columbia University
      1. Indigenous AmerIndian culture of what is now the New York City campus
        1. Lenape
      2. Columbia University African American and African Diaspora Studies, newly created end of Fall 2018
        1. Columbia University Institute for Research in African American Studies (IRAAS)
      3. Columbia University Senate
        1. Protests of 1968
          1. Columbia University protests of 1968
            1. university senate
      4. Racism on campus
        1. Fall 2018
        2. Antisemitism: Swastika vandalism of Holocaust scholar Dr. Elizabeth Midlarsky's Teacher's College office[2][3][4]
        3. White Supremacy: Sophomore Physics student Julian von Abele's on campus racist rant and physical assault of women of color[5]
      5. Racism scholars
        1. Barbara J. Fields, professor of American history, first African-American woman to receive tenure, co-author (with sister Karen E. Fields of Racecraft: The Soul of Inequality in American Life
        2. Hamid Dabashi, professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature
      6. Slavery
        1. Columbia and Slavery project[6][7][8]
        2. Eric Foner, Columbia History professor leading the project[9][10][11]
      7. Wikimedians In Residence
      8. Wikipedia Fellows
    3. WikiProject HBCU/DIO [12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][12][2][2][2][2][2][2][2][2][2][2][2][2][1]: WikiHBCU/DIO is the Wiki/Open Historical Black Colleges, Universities, Departments, Institutions and Organizations initiative and community of open knowledge & Wiki peers who's goal is to establish a safe space and Wikipedia presence (Fellowship, Residency, Visiting Scholar, etc position) at every "historically" 'black' college, university, department, institution, and organization to share the equitable knowledge and cultural information of these unique and diverse spaces with the world.
    4. WikiProject Data Science
    5. WikiProject Oral History[13]
    6. WikiProject Ivy League
  1. Fall 2018 - present: Columbia University, sponsored by the Wikipedia Education program
    1. Cofounded Columbia's Disrupt Wikipedia initiative: a "team of on-campus Wikimedians using the resources of the academies and its libraries to "disrupt," dismantle and eliminate the gaps in systemic and institutional bias inequality and representation on Wikimedia platforms like Wikipedia, and in other free-culture, open access, open content, open-source software and open-source-software movements."
  1. Fall 2018 - present: Dual appointments at Columbia University:
    1. Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science's Computer Graphics User Interface (CGUI) Lab
    2. Columbia University Libraries incubating
      1. WikiHBCU/DIO, the Wiki Historically Black Colleges & Universities / Departments, Institutions & Organizations initiative
      2. WikiHMCi, the Wiki Historically Marginalized Communities initiative

EVENTS

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Upcoming

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*stay tuned for the Spring 2020 academic year.

Past

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  1. #DisruptWikipedia #3 Transgender Awareness Week WikiThon, Thurs, Nov 14, 2019 (6:30 pm - 9:30 pm), a panel discussion and edit-a-thon at Barnard College's Milstein Center Digital Humanities Center in Milstein 103: "In honor of Trans Awareness Week, the Digital Humanities Center in collaboration with LGBTQ at Columbia" hosted a wikipedia edit-a-thon to "correct inequities and boost visibility of trans individuals, activists, and organizations on Wikipedia." Barnard's Wikimedian-In-Residence & Art and Architecture Librarian Meredith Wisner presented a demo on the ins and outs of editing Wikipedia at the start of the event.[16]
  2. #DisruptWikipedia #2 Indigenous peoples WikiThon, Wed, Oct 16 2019 (12p -2pm): a panel discussion and edit-a-thon at Columbia University School of Social Work: "Social Science and Social Work Research Support Librarian Sophie Leveque has collaborated with Columbia student Darold Cuba to found an initiative called #DisruptWikipedia. On October 16, the two took their campaign to the School of Social Work, where they led interested MSW students in an editing session to raise awareness of Wikipedia’s systemic biases. As it was two days after Indigenous Peoples’ Day, students were assigned the task of increasing the visibility of indigenous people on the site. They received instructions in how to create their own Wikipedia accounts and then added links to improve the Wikipedia page dedicated to Native American poet and United States Poet Laureate Joy Harjo. The School of Social Work session was one in a monthly series that will continue through the academic year. The series kicked off on September 16 with a panel discussion in Butler Library, featuring Alice Backer and Sherry Antoine of AfroCrowd, a Wikimedia affiliate that addresses the need to close the multicultural and gender gaps in Wikipedia, and Merrilee Proffitt, librarian and author of Leveraging Wikipedia: Connecting Communities of Knowledge. Next month’s session, to take place on Thursday, November 14, at Barnard College, will focus on Wikipedia entries for transgender people, in honor of Transgender Awareness Week."[17] Barnard's Wikimedian-In-Residence & Art and Architecture Librarian Meredith Wisner presented a demo on the ins and outs of editing Wikipedia.
  3. #DisruptWikipedia WikiThon series kickoff, Mon Sept 16, 2019: panel discussion moderated by Columbia University’s Wikipedian-in-Residence, Wikipedia Fellow and Visiting Scholar, Darold Cuba, with special guests Sherry Antoine of AfroCrowd and Merrilee Proffitt who wrote “Leveraging Wikipedia: Connection Communities of Knowledge." It was "a candid discussion of Wikipedia, its failures and its successes and the real problems of representation in the world of Wikipedia. Right now only 9% of Wikipedia editors are cis-women and only 1% are trans-women. The other 90% are men and though we don’t have the statistics on race, anecdotally, the situation isn’t great. Wikipedia doesn’t even track the races of its editors, which has its own baggage. Barnard's Wikipedian-in-Residence, Meredith Wisner, presented on Wikipedia and representation.There is an opportunity for us to make Wikipedia a source worth referencing, but to do that we need to edit. The problem of representation occurs when editing Wikipedia is put on a pedestal, something that only experts do. This isn’t true. Anyone can be a Wikipedia editor and everyone has something valuable to add, that’s the beauty of a platform as open as Wikipedia."[18]
  4. Staff & Wikipedia: How to Edit & Why We Care - A "meet-cute" for your brain. On Thursday, July 25th from 1-5, in Butler Library 203, Columbia & Barnard Wikimedians hosted a seminar to introduce Wikipedia to the university communities "for anyone who wants to learn more about Wikipedia editing, and why library staff are particularly well-suited for contributing."
    1. AGENDA:
      1. 1-2 pm: Introduction to Wikipedia presentation and conversation led by Darold Cuba (Wikipedia Fellow, Wikimedian in-Residence, Visiting Scholar), Kimberly Springer (Curator for Oral History, Rare Book & Manuscript Library) and Sophie Leveque (School of Social Work Research Librarian).
      2. 2-3 pm: Practice interacting with Wikipedia, create accounts, and add citations to subjects we are liaisons for or have knowledge and access to.
      3. 3-5 pm on: Create page as a group for Columbia University Institute for Research in African American Studies (IRAAS).”\
  5. WikiHBCU/DIO presents Weeksville Weekend's #WomensHistoryMonth panel roundtable and Wikipediathon[19][20]: Weeksville Weekend launches the [inaugural] #WikiHBCU/DIO (Historically Black Colleges, Universities, Departments, Institutions & Organizations) initiative for #WikiWomen’s #WomensHistoryMonth during Imani Shanklin Roberts’ I AM SHE exhibit.<http://www.weeksvillesociety.org/i-am-she-imani-shanklin-roberts-spring-2019>
  6. Western North Carolina's first ever Oral History Record-and-Edit-a-thon with the 121st anniversary of the Baird-Beard Reunion, University of North Carolina at Asheville, AfroCrowd, and the Asheville-Buncombe County African American Historical Society in Asheville, North Carolina
  7. First ever Wiki Oral Knowledge Record-A-Thon & Edit-A-Thon, with AfroCrowd, Wikitongues, Whose Knowledge?, Wikimedia New York City & LaGuardia Community College, in NY

CREATIONS

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  1. PROJECTS
    1. WikiProject Data Science
    2. WikiProject Oral History
    3. WikiProject HBCU/DIO
    4. WikiProject Ivy League
    5. WikiProject White Supremacy
    6. WikiProject Slavery
    7. WikiProject Freedom Colonies
  2. ARTICLES
    1. Movies about class
    2. Apoorv Om
    3. JoAnn Haysbert
    4. Hampton University Museum
    5. William R. Harvey
    6. Columbia University African American and African Diaspora Studies
    7. Columbia University Institute for Research in African American Studies (IRAAS)
  3. CATEGORIES
    1. Category:African-American university presidents
    2. Category:African-American professors
    3. Category:Ivy League presidents
    4. Category:Women heads of universities and colleges
    5. Category:African-American university administrators
    6. Category:African-American football quarterbacks
    7. Category:African-American Ivy League academics
    8. Category:African-American Ivy League alumni
  1. DRAFTS
    1. Freedom Colonies
    2. Shankle and McBride family

Interests

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  1. Race/ism[21][22][23]
    1. Racialization[24][25]
      1. freedom colonies: communities founded by people the world over rejecting Western colonialism’s white supremacy race/ism by escaping and creating “colonies of freedom."
        1. maroon colonies
        2. freedom towns/freedom settlements,
        3. freedmen towns/freedmen settlements/black towns
        4. Category:Freedom Colonies
      2. AfroCROWD's Oral Knowledge initiative
        1. Western North Carolina's first ever Oral History Record-and-Edit-a-thon with the 121st anniversary of the Baird-Beard Reunion, University of North Carolina at Asheville, AfroCrowd, and the Asheville-Buncombe County African American Historical Society in Asheville, North Carolina
        2. First ever Wiki Oral Knowedge Record-A-Thon & Edit-A-Thon, with AfroCrowd, Wikitongues, Whose Knowledge?, Wikimedia New York City & LaGuardia Community College, in NYCsystemic and institutional bias of the narrative, lens and perspective
      3. Category:White supremacists[26]
        1. Category:White supremacy by country
          1. Category:American white supremacists
            1. Category:White supremacy in North America
              1. Jeffery Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst
                1. Amherst College
                2. Amherst, Massachusetts
                3. Amherst, New York
                  1. Category:White supremacy in the United States
                    1. Category:American slave owners
                      1. Slavery in the Northern United States
                        1. List of slave owners
                          1. North Carolina
                            1. Zebulon Baird Vance
                          2. New York
                            1. Long Island
                              1. Sylvester family
                                1. Sylvester Manor[27][28]
                          3. Alabama
                            1. Klepper/Clepper (Clipper) family[29]
                            2. Huson/Huston/Houston family[30]
          2. Category:French White Supremacists
            1. Arthur de Gobineau
      4. Category:Populated places established by African Americans
        1. Shankleville, Tx
          1. Shankle-McBride Family
          2. Odom Family
          3. Strahan Family
          4. Perkins Family
        2. Blackdom, NM
          1. Boyer Family
          2. Clipper/Clepper Family
        3. Vado, NM
        4. Boley, Ok
        5. Rock Hill (Asheville), NC[31]
        6. Petersburg (Asheville), NC
        7. Brooklyn (Asheville), NC
        8. Old Shiloh (Asheville), NC[32][33]
        9. [New] Shiloh (Asheville), NC[34]
      5. "Black" family reunions
        1. Baird Reunion, est. 1897 (Asheville, North Carolina)
        2. Flack-Council-Coleman Reunion, est. 1917 (Asheville, North Carolina)
      6. ”Black” Appalachia/Highlanders
        1. Buncombe County, North Carolina
          1. Asheville[35]
            1. Edward W. Pearson Sr.
          2. Weaverville[36]
      7. Slavery in Appalachia[37]
        1. Buncombe County, North Carolina[38]
          1. Asheville[39]
            1. Vance family[40]
            2. Baird (Beard) family
            3. Weaver family
            4. Swain family
            5. Davidson family
            6. Patton family
            7. Woodfin family
      8. The “black” history of Biltmore Estate[41]
      9. "Black" agricultural traditions (black farms)
        1. East Texas
        2. Deep East Texas
        3. Western North Carolina
      10. "Black" confederate pensioners
  2. WikiEarth - documenting the history of every plot of land on earth

References

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  1. ^ "Darold Cuba, MA Candidate in Oral History". gsas.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
  2. ^ Gold, Michael (2018-11-29). "Jewish Professor Finds Swastikas Spray-Painted in Office at Columbia". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  3. ^ "Holocaust scholar's office defaced with swastikas at Columbia University". The Daily Dot. 2018-11-29. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  4. ^ Stanley-Becker, Isaac (Nov 29, 2018). "'They got me. I'm afraid.': Swastikas spray-painted on a Jewish professor's office at Columbia". The Washington Post. Retrieved Dec 28, 2018.
  5. ^ Gold, Michael (2018-12-11). "'I Just Love White Men': White Man Aims Racist Rant at Columbia Students of Color". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  6. ^ "Columbia University and Slavery". columbiaandslavery.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  7. ^ https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2017/01/24/columbia-university-explores-historical-ties-to-the-slave-trade/?utm_term=.cea0b3f03144
  8. ^ https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/23/arts/columbia-unearths-its-ties-to-slavery.html
  9. ^ https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/23/arts/columbia-unearths-its-ties-to-slavery.html
  10. ^ https://www.npr.org/2017/01/24/511468436/columbia-university-releases-report-on-its-historical-ties-to-slavery
  11. ^ "How closely was Columbia University tied to the slave trade?". Christian Science Monitor. 2017-01-25. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 2019-01-03.
  12. ^ "Submissions:2018/WikiHBCU - WikiConference North America". wikiconference.org. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  13. ^ "Wikimedia to the Rescue? How Wikipedia's Crowdsourcing Model Could Catalyze the Field of Oral History". Oral History Master of Arts. Retrieved 2019-02-10.
  14. ^ "GSAS Student News: November 2018". gsas.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2018-12-23.
  15. ^ "Wikipedian in Residence - Outreach Wiki". outreach.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 2019-02-10.
  16. ^ "Barnard College Library, Milstein Center for Teaching & Learning, 3009 Broadway, New York, NY (2020)". www.glunis.com. Retrieved 2020-01-12.
  17. ^ "MSW Students Join in Campaign to Make Wikipedia More Inclusive". The Columbia School of Social Work. 2019-10-31. Retrieved 2020-01-12.
  18. ^ "DHC Weekly 9/18- Asking more of Wikipedia – Diving into the Digital Age". Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  19. ^ "Weeksville Weekend Women's History Month Wikipedia-thon". Weeksville Heritage Center. Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  20. ^ Susan, De Vries (Mar 7, 2019). "Celebrate Women's History Month With a Wikipedia-Thon at Weeksville". Brownstoner. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  21. ^ Changing of the Gods (2016-09-10), The Invention of Whiteness with john a. powell, retrieved 2018-11-25
  22. ^ "Racecraft: The Soul of Inequality in American Life". Journal of American History. 102 (4): 1150–1151. 2016-02-22. doi:10.1093/jahist/jav733. ISSN 0021-8723.
  23. ^ "Making America White Again". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2018-11-25.
  24. ^ Morrison, Toni (November 21, 2016). "Making America White Again". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2018-11-18.
  25. ^ "Racecraft: The Soul of Inequality in American Life". Princeton African American Studies. 2018-07-09. Retrieved 2018-11-25.
  26. ^ UnderstandingRace (2009-07-13), The Story of Race: A History, retrieved 2018-11-25
  27. ^ Ciabattari, Jane (2013-07-16). "The House that Slavery Built". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  28. ^ Griswold, Mac (2013-07-02). The Manor: Three Centuries at a Slave Plantation on Long Island (1st Edition edition ed.). Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9780374266295. {{cite book}}: |edition= has extra text (help)
  29. ^ "History of Clepper family discussed - The Andalusia Star-News". The Andalusia Star-News. 2008-08-15. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  30. ^ Wood, Margarette Hall (1990). The history of John Huson from North Carolina to Alabama, his Huson/Huston/Houston descendants, and the allied pioneer families of Clepper, Robinson, Deen and Gilmore. Baltimore: Gateway Press.
  31. ^ "History". Shiloh Community Association. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  32. ^ "History". Shiloh Community Association. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  33. ^ "More Than Biltmore | endeavors". endeavors.unc.edu. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  34. ^ "History of Cemetery". South Asheville Cemetery Association. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  35. ^ "Carolina Digital Repository - Life Beneath The Veneer: The Black Community in Asheville, North Carolina from 1793 to 1900". cdr.lib.unc.edu. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  36. ^ "Learning about the African American Community in Asheville". MelibeeGlobal. 2014-10-29. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  37. ^ "New conference examines African-American history in WNC". Mountain Xpress. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  38. ^ "Retrospective I: A Primer on the Sad Truths of Slavery in Asheville, Buncombe County and Western North Carolina". Asheville Junction: A Blog by David E. Whisnant. 2015-08-29. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  39. ^ "Carolina Digital Repository - Life Beneath The Veneer: The Black Community in Asheville, North Carolina from 1793 to 1900". cdr.lib.unc.edu. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  40. ^ "Vance Monument and the honoring of African American history". thereadonwnc.ning.com. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  41. ^ Long, Liz (2012-09-13). "The History Channel Club Makes Note of Biltmore Estate". BlueRidgeCountry.com. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
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WikiProject X.