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A Sense of Place w/ Professor Amber Wiley

A Sense of Place w/ Professor Amber Wiley

FromTangible Remnants


A Sense of Place w/ Professor Amber Wiley

FromTangible Remnants

ratings:
Length:
45 minutes
Released:
Nov 8, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

This episode features a conversation with Professor Amber Wiley.  She is an old friend who is an Assistant Professor in the Art History Department at Rutgers University and a scholar who has traveled the world studying culture.
Quote:
"The Civil Rights movement didn't begin in Montgomery and it didn't end in the 1960s.  It continues on to this very minute." - Julian Bond
 
Timestamps:
13:34 - Guatemala
17:36 - Africa (Ghana & Ethiopia)
20:20 - Being called a 'white person' in Africa
24:14 - India (Mumbai/Bombay, Goa, Delhi, Jaipur, Udaipur)
27:00 - Vietnam (Ho Chi Min City/Saigon)
32:00 - War Remnants Museum (Vietnam)
36:15 - Mexico (Tlatelolco)

Links:
Society of Architectural Historians: H. Allen Brooks Travelling Fellowship
Amber's blog post: An American in Saigon  
Da 5 Bloods & Black Vietnam Veterans article in Time Magazine
Tlatelolco, Mexico: Memorial 68 Museum
Vietnam: War Remnants Museum
Tangible Remnants on Instagram
Tangible Remnants on Facebook

Bio:
 Amber Wiley specializes in architecture, urbanism, and African American cultural studies. Her research interests are centered on the social aspects of design and how it affects urban communities - architecture as a literal and figurative structure of power. She focuses on the ways local and national bodies have made the claim for the dominating narrative and collective memory of cities and examines how preservation and public history contribute to the creation and maintenance of the identity and “sense of place” of a city.
Her teaching approach mirrors her dedication to critical thinking about the human condition in the built environment, and the creation, evolution, and maintenance of cities, neighborhoods, and communities. She strives to actively engage in discourses that are significant across academic fields. Her theoretical and analytic background was founded in art and architectural history methodology, as well as the interdisciplinary methods of American Studies. She combines analysis of aesthetics and socio-cultural influences on community building with questions about the meaning of culture, authority, and agency.
She is active in preservation policy as well as various professional organizations.  She has served on the National Park System Advisory Board Landmarks Committee, and on the boards of the Vernacular Architecture Forum, Latrobe Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians, and the Yale Black Alumni Association.

Find Amber on LinkedIn, Instagram, and Twitter.


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Released:
Nov 8, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (54)

Historic preservation and sustainability are not mutually exclusive. They are actually two sides of the same coin: both involve buildings and both are about our collective future. Such historic buildings are also created by people in a specific place in time and are subject to the cultural prejudices of race and gender. These buildings are the Tangible Remnants of people who shaped the world and can serve as temporal touchpoints for future generations. Join sustainable preservation architect, Nakita Reed, as she explores the interconnectedness of architecture, preservation, sustainability, race and gender. You’ll learn about people, buildings, and policies that made a historical impact and hear from women and BIPOC practitioners who are impacting the built environment today.