Announcements
May 21, 2026
Matthew Delmont, Frank J. Guarini Associate Dean of International Studies and Interdisciplinary Studies and the Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor of History, and Kimberly Juanita Brown, Director of the Institute for Black Intellectual and Cultural Life and Associate Professor of English and Creative Writing, have had their open-access publications recognized as finalists by the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS).
Both were finalists in the category of multimodal works: Delmont for his project Black Quotidian: Everyday History in African American Newspapers and Brown for her project Mortevivum: Photography and the Politics of the Visual.
Projects are selected by distinguished panels of scholars, librarians, digital humanities experts, and accessibility specialists. Supported by Arcadia, these prizes recognize and reward the authors and publishers of exceptional, innovative, and open humanities books published from 2019 to 2024.
May 19, 2026
Professor Trica Keaton, Evans Family Distinguished Professor, has been selected as a winner of the 2026-27 Neukom Insitute CompX Faculty Grant for her project "Black Paris Narrative" along with colleague John Bell.
The Black Paris app leverages AI and locative technologies to enhance International Study Abroad (ISA) learning experiences. Combining Niantic's augmented reality platform with an on-device large language model, the mobile application uses GPS data and AI-driven visual analysis of student-captured photos to identify historically significant sites in real time.
The platform then introduces a novel "time-shifted" learning model, delivering curated cultural and historical content after site visits through delayed push notifications and Socratic-style AI chatbot conversations.
This approach encourages reflection and deeper engagement beyond the immediacy of the physical experience.Piloted during the Black Paris ISA program in summer 2027 with 20 undergraduate students, the project evaluates how AI-mediated, location-aware technologies can surface overlooked heritage narratives and meaningfully deepen student engagement.
A highly competitive grant program, the Grants Program is designed to support both the development of novel computational techniques and the application of computational methods to research initiatives across Dartmouth's campus and professional schools. Read more about the program and its list of 2026-27 recipients.
March 23, 2026
Jesse Weaver Shipley, John D. Willard Professor of African and African American Studies and Oratory will offer the talk "Routes of Rebellion: The Aesthetics of Revolution" as an invited research seminar in the Department of Social Anthropology at Stockholm University. The talk explores how sonic and embodied aesthetics shape political power.
Professor Nicole Maskiell Hosts Filmmakers
March 13, 2026
On March 5, Nicole Maskiell, Associate Professor, hosted Askew Pictures for a screening of In Search of Phillis Wheatley Peters. The new short documentary by Leslie Askew is grounded in archival research by historian Cornelia Dayton and that illuminates the final years of the first published Black American woman poet. The film traces her marriage to John Peters and her pursuit of family, dignity, and autonomy. Audience members, including students of AAAS 20.02 Race and Archival Silences, took part in a Q&A following a framing discussion between Maskiell and Askew.
Professor Nicole Maskiell takes part in a Q&A with filmmaker Leslie Askew
February 10, 2026
AAAS Associated Faculty member and Associate Professor of Geography Abby Neely has been named a fellow to the American Association of Geographers (AAG). AAG Honors are offered annually to recognize outstanding accomplishments by members in research and scholarship, teaching, education, service to the discipline, public service outside academe and for lifetime achievement. AAG fellows, in particular, is a recognition and service program that applauds geographers who have made significant contributions to advancing geography.