Elevating Community Stories

This research investigates how exhibitions, oral histories, and arts practices can elevate marginalized voices, support the heritage of migrant and diasporic communities, and address erasure in the Charlotte metropolitan area. It focuses on the role of the arts in preserving cultural identity, adapting heritage practices, and engaging collective memories of trauma to promote resilience and community cohesion.

Guiding Questions

  • How can exhibitions, oral histories, and other documentary processes elevate and promote marginalized stories, told through community voices, to battle erasure of threatened communities and places?
  • How do migrant and diasporic communities retain and engage identity and tradition through arts practices?
  • How do diaspora communities transform, adapt, and engage tangible and intangible heritages while in transition or making homes in new places?
  • How can the arts investigate and serve as a vehicle for the heritage of diaspora and immigrant communities, particularly in the Charlotte metropolitan region?
  • How can exhibitions, oral histories, and other documentary processes engage collective memories of troubled history and sites of trauma?

Research Projects

BURYING FUTURES

Archeology of Graves to Be

Faculty: Carlos Alexis Cruz (Theatre), Sara Juengst (Anthropology), Eric Hoenes del Pinal (Anthropology), Charles Hutchinson (Africana Studies)

Partners: Nouveau Sud Circus Project (Charlotte)
CHARLOTTE ATLAS OF CLIMATE INEQUALITY AND COMMUNITY RESILIENCE 

Social Capital and Resilience to Climate Change in Environmentally and Economically Disadvantaged Communities

Faculty: Tina Shull (History), Michael Ewers (Geograph & Earth Sciences). Marek Ranis (Art & Art History), 
CONTAINER / CONTAINED

Design Strategies for Telling African American Stories: Phil Freelon
Faculty: Emily Makas (Architecture), Greg Snyder (Architecture)
Students: Tahlya Mock (MArch / MS Heritage), Faith Tootle (BA Architecture), 25 other ARCH undergraduate and graduate students since 2019
Partners: Florida A&M University (Tallahassee), North Carolina Museum of Art (Raleigh), Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American History and Culture (Charlotte)
INDIGENOUS DIGITAL NARRATIVES

Arts-Anchored, Multimodal Stories of Indigenous Scholars and Community Leaders

Faculty: Jason Black (Communication Studies)
white jigsaw puzzle pieces on brown marble table
INVSIBLE HISTORIES PROJECT

Oral Histories of Charlotte Black, Latinx, and LGBTQ+ Communities

Faculty: Wilfredo Flores (Writing, Rhetoric & Digital Studies)
IT HAPPENED HERE

The Legacy of Lynching in Mecklenburg County

Faculty: Emily Makas (Architecture), Marc Manack (Architecture)

Students: Tahlya Mock (MArch / MS Heritage)Partners: Charlotte Mecklenburg Community Remembrance Project Steering Committee (Charlotte), Levine Museum of the New South (Charlotte)
MAPPING MEMORIES IN MOSTAR 

Interpreting Endangered Heritage through AR and Mobile Apps

Faculty: Emily Makas (Architecture), Ming-Chun Lee (Architecture)

Students: Mars Grubbs (MA Public History / MS Heritage)Partners: Saeed Ahmadi Oloonabadi (CommunitAR, Charlotte), Senada Demirovic Habibija (IDEAA, Mostar)

LEADERSHIP

Cadre Leader

Tina Shull, Associate Professor of History / Director of Public History