MFOS at 15 Years
A documentary of the Machen Florida Opportunity Scholars Program told through 60 oral history interviews.
A documentary of the Machen Florida Opportunity Scholars Program told through 60 oral history interviews.
The Samuel Proctor Oral History Program (SPOHP) is hosting its Spring 2022 Open House. We will be meeting in Pugh Hall with food, giveaways and information about our program.
The A. Quinn Jones Museum and Cultural Center is pleased to present the community book launch of African American Studies: 50 Years at the University of Florida, edited by Jacob U’Mofe Gordon and Paul Ortiz.
Faculty and student panelists will discuss how they are utilizing artificial intelligence to create instructional lesson plans from SPOHP’s UF’s Joel Buchanan African American Oral History Archive to make stories from the archive more accessible to scholars and K-12 students.
Please join the Samuel Proctor Oral History Program for a special webinar presentation on the history of voting rights struggles in Florida by Allison Mitchell, a University of Virginia PhD candidate in history.
Did you know that scholars can build attractive, informative websites with no prior experience in coding or website development? Janelle Lyons will share her process of creating a website with Omeka S, a tool provided by the Libraries’ UFLib Domains service.
The Samuel Proctor Oral History Program proudly supports Mr. Alonzo Felder's new book release, Discovering A.S.J. Allen. Join us on Monday, May 23 at 7 pm for Mr. Felder's book presentation hosted by the A. Quinn Jones Museum.
Dr. Kevin Tang: "In this talk, I will introduce the Reanimating African American Oral Histories of the Gulf South project started in 2021, supported by the National Endowment of the Humanities (NEH), educators and other community members. I will focus on reporting our computational efforts in making the voices and histories of African Americans who reside in the Gulf South accessible." View Recording of Live Stream
The symposium will bring together junior and senior scholars whose research reexamines the political and social events that impacted ethnic groups of the Ottoman Empire through a decolonial lens.
The symposium will bring together junior and senior scholars whose research reexamines the political and social events that impacted ethnic groups of the Ottoman Empire through a decolonial lens. Participants will present these events through the vantage point of the ethnic groups within the Ottoman Empire that influenced and impacted their fruition.