Daily Archives: November 2, 2022

The Future of News


Nov 2, 2022

Fake news. Misinformation. Disinformation. The role of journalism in society has never been more important. So what’s the future of news in a country deeply suspicious of information? Veteran journalists Kevin Merida, Los Angeles Times executive editor, and Donna Britt, author and Washington Post syndicated columnist, talk about the state of news and information. The discussion is moderated by Point Loma Nazarene University journalism professor Dean Nelson.

This event is supported by the UC San Diego Helen Edison Lecture Series which offers free public lectures that advance humanitarian purposes and objectives. Recorded on 10/10/2022. [11/2022] [Show ID: 38462]

More from: Helen Edison Lecture Series (https://www.uctv.tv/helen-edison)

Celebrating Culture in the Midst of Food Apartheid Vivien Morris

Friedman School Nutrition Science & Policy– Oct 27, 2022

Celebrating Culture in the Midst of Food Apartheid

Abstract
Food is a central part of all human cultures. It helps us connect with family, friends, and cultural histories. Over time each culture finds locally grown foods that support health and bring joy with consumption. When people migrate or are sent as slaves to far off lands they still hold memories of enjoying those foods. Some of those foods are brought to the new land. Culinary skills may need modification or decline. The food may become less accessible and more costly. Competition for their food dollars rise from food producers in their new homeland. Sometimes those food items are looked down upon by the dominant population. All of this has an impact on health and well-being.

I grew up in the rural racially segregated south. I have lived in the racially segregated Mattapan neighborhood of Boston for many years. I will share food related experiences and projects that celebrate local cultures and encourage good health in the midst of inequity that I define as food apartheid. The Boston projects will include work with the Mattapan Food and Fitness Coalition, the Boston Organization of Nutritionists and Dietitians of Color, and the Edgewater Neighborhood Association.

Speaker Bio
Vivien received an undergraduate degree from Harvard University, a Master of Science degree in nutrition from Framingham State University, and a Master of Public Health degree from Boston University. She received an honorary Public Health Doctorate from Merrimack College in 2021. She is a registered dietitian and public health professional with extensive work in Boston’s communities. She is a founder and chair of the Mattapan Food and Fitness Coalition, an organization that she is most proud of. She is a founder of the Boston Organization of Nutritionists and Dietitians of Color (BOND of Color). BOND of Color is a professional organization devoted to increasing the number of African American and Afro Caribbean nutritionists and dietitians and providing nutrition education in the community. Vivien coordinates the Kennedy Community Garden and Edgewater Neighborhood Association, both utilizing the passions of local residents to make the Edgewater neighborhood a wonderful place to live. She serves on the steering committee of Massachusetts Food System Collaborative, a statewide effort working towards a sustainable and equitable food system. Vivien has been a community activist throughout her life and gets the greatest joy from seeing the coming together of community members of all ages to strengthen relationships and use collective power to improve our village.

See:

https://nutrition.tufts.edu/video/friedman-school-speaker-series-seminar-vivien-morris

Food-matters,

The Sovereign Map: Theoretical Approaches in Cartography throughout History: Christian Jacob, Edward H Dahl, Tom Conley

A novel work in the history of cartography, The Sovereign Map argues that maps are as much about thinking as seeing, as much about the art of persuasion as the science of geography. As a classicist, Christian Jacob brings a fresh eye to his subject—which includes maps from Greek Antiquity to the twentieth century—and provides a theoretical approach to investigating the power of maps to inform, persuade, and inspire the imagination.

Beginning with a historical overview of maps and their creation—from those traced in the dirt by primitive hands to the monumental Dutch atlases and ornate maps on Italian palace walls—Jacob goes on to consider the visual components of cartography: the decorative periphery, geometric grid, topographical lines, dots, details of iconographic figures, and many other aspects. Considering text on maps—titles, toponyms, legends, and keys—Jacob proposes that writing can both clarify and interfere with a map’s visual presentation. Finally Jacob examines the role of the viewer in decoding a map’s meaning and the role of society in defining the power of maps as authoritative depictions of space.

Innovative in its philosophical motivation and its interdisciplinary approach to looking at and writing about maps, The Sovereign Map is eagerly awaited by scholars from many different fields.

Review
“An encyclopedic book of striking erudition un which virtually every visible element in the nature and composition of maps is put under the microscope of [Jacob’s] informed intellect.” George Falconer Geomatica

“This is a very heavy and phiosophical work, but one of the most important to be published recently dealing with maps.” J.B. Post The Portolan

“A significant book that is likely . . . to have a major impact within the scholarly worlds it has both studied and extended.” Charles W. J. Withers Canadian Journal of History

“Important in that it contributes to a literature weak in theoretical analysis of early maps.” Choice Published On: 2007-11-01

“An important addition to the literature and one that will certainly shape Anglophone scholarship on the history of cartography.” Susan Schulten Isis

“Cartography plays a central role in knowledge integration in the twenty-first century, and this book provides a valuable historical building block for research on this important topic. . . . The Sovereign Map remains one of the most important contributions to an understanding of maps and mapping in recent years and should be required reading for all cartographers.” D.R. Fraser Taylor Cartographia

“The author and his translators have considerably expanded our ability to discuss what maps do and how they change.” Bruce Fetter Journal of Interdisciplinary History

“This is a wonderful book. I think it shows through a careful historical reading how cartography has not been a mad project to achieve the unachievable; rather it has always been both the product and the driver of the thinking in particular places and times where each map was made.” Danny Dorling H-Net Book Review

“This is a profound and important book. . . . In no way should it be seen as a history of cartography; it is rather a prolonged reflection on the philosophy of the map, how it is viewed by creator and user, how it achieves its purposes, how it communicates at every level of meaning, deliberately or unconsciously, how it displays or hides the various messages that it conveys.” P.D.A. Harvey IMCoS Journal

“The range of this volume remains extraordinary. . . . This gives Jacob an extraordinarily generous space for exploration. The result is a remarkable piece of scholarship.” A.H. Merrills American Historical Review

“It would be a great shame if this book were read only by cartographers. . . . The Sovereign Map is essentially a book about the construction of knowledge, the uses of power, and the geography of representations. As such it deserves a wide audience. . . . A book that is likely to be [a] significant point of reference and inspiration.” Stuart Elden Environment and Planning

About the Author

Christian Jacob is directeur de recherche at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique in Paris. Edward H. Dahl is the former early cartography specialist at the National Archives of Canada. Tom Conley is professor of Romance languages and literatures at Harvard University.

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ University of Chicago Press; 1st edition (October 15, 2006)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 464 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0226389537
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0226389530
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.3 x 9 inches

See related: