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The National Endowment for the Humanities has
awarded the LEH a highly competitive $350,000
Digital Humanities Initiative Challenge Grant
to complete the installation of a
state-of-the-art Louisiana Humanities
Education Center and to integrate digital
technology into all phases of LEH programming.
"This challenge grant is a major endorsement of the LEH's efforts to expand its statewide programs through the most advanced digital, web-based technology available," said LEH president and executive director Michael Sartisky. "It will help the LEH build even greater partnerships across the state with colleges, libraries, museums, and with state and community cultural organizations. It also will be the foundation for a dazzling new web-based encyclopedia on Louisiana history and culture that will benefit everyone in Louisiana from school children to cultural tourism."
The new Louisiana Humanities Education Center
includes a multi-use auditorium and seminar
rooms equipped with the fastest Internet and
latest presentation and video-conferencing
technology. It will be used to conduct PRIME
TIME family literacy training sessions and
advanced teacher professional development
seminars. New computer hardware and software
also will support a web-based format for
LEH's quarterly magazine, the development of
a comprehensive grant and program database,
and LEH's newest venture, an on-line
Encyclopedia of Louisiana History and
Culture. Click
here for Center Rental
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Thanks to the Governor and a group of key
state legislators, the LEH will receive an
additional $200,000 from the state this
fiscal year to help the LEH create, among
other programs, an ambitious and
state-of-the-art, Internet-based Encyclopedia
of Louisiana Culture and History.
"The new Encyclopedia of Louisiana Culture
and History," said LEH President and
Executive Director Michael Sartisky, "will be
an amazing educational and cultural resource
for teachers, students, visitors to the state
and anyone else interested in Louisiana's
history and culture. In addition to being a
major educational resource, it will play a
prominent role in the state's cultural
tourism efforts." To create the encyclopedia,
now in the research and development phase,
the LEH will partner with archives,
universities and cultural organizations
throughout the state.
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Louisiana Cultural Vistas amassed six
awards - including three first-place honors
in the categories of feature writing, layout
and design, and photo story - at the 49th
Annual Press Club of New Orleans Awards
Ceremony held Saturday, July 14.
Free-lance writer John Magill won first place for his feature "Conspiracy of Complicity" (Fall 2006), an extensively-researched chronicle of the ill-fated and ill-advised development of New Orleans' low-lying 20th-century middle-class neighborhoods that were largely devastated by Hurricane Katrina. LCV designer Toan Nguyen also won first place for his layout and design of this story. Magill, a long-time contributor to the quarterly magazine of the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities, is employed as Historian for The Historic New Orleans Collection. Nguyen also placed second in the Layout and Design category with his layout of "Printmaking in New Orleans" (Winter 2006), an excerpt from a book of the same title. 2007 marks the second consecutive year Nguyen has won first place as a graphic designer.
Louisiana Cultural Vistas swept the
Photo Story category, winning all top three
awards. First place honors went to L.J.
Goldstein for "The Beat of the Street"
(Spring 2006), a portfolio of images depicting
second-line parades, Mardi Gras Indians, and
New Orleans' vibrant street culture. Second
place honors went to Frank Relle for "New
Orleans Nightscapes" (Summer 2006), a series
of artistically-lit nighttime
photographs of New Orleans' iconic
architecture, both in restoration and in
ruins. Photographer Nell Campbell won third
place for her documentation of Hurricane
Rita's aftermath in Southwest Louisiana in "A
Reckoning With Rita" (Spring 2006). Louisiana
Cultural Vistas has placed first in the Photo
Story category twelve times in the past
fifteen years. |
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Two LEH-sponsored projects recently received
prestigious American Association for State
and Local History Awards:
Reconstructing Creole A documentary film by Jennifer John Block. In the vivid memoir of a 19th century Creole matriarch, and the restoration of her old plantation home, a Louisiana legacy comes to life. Fire stripped the Laura Plantation manor in Vacherie, Louisiana naked to its beams, bricks and plaster. A young team of builders attempts to save the unusual timber-frame design - a blend of African, French and Native American building styles. As they begin a careful and eventual 2 year restoration, the memoir of Laura Locoul Gore opens up a world of slavery and society balls, of race mixing and family bonds, of cruelty, love and joie de vivre. Her home and her life exemplify how and why Louisiana culture is different from the rest of America. The film also won the Best Documentary Feature Award at the Hollywood HD/DV Festival in April 2007 and was chosen as an Official Selection of the Boston International Film Festival in June. www.getfreshmedia.com
Hurricane Digital Memory Bank |
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On June 20th, Dale Van Eck, Manager of
Education Partnerships at the Colonial
Williamsburg Foundation gave a half-day
on-line technology workshop to 53 New Orleans
area teachers attending the LEH's Teaching
American History summer institutes at Loyola
University. The topic of Van Eck's amazing
presentation was "Primary Sources in the
Digital Age: What Are They, Where Can They Be
Found and How They Can Be Used." The LEH
sponsored the workshop through a Teaching
American History (TAH) grant from the U.S.
Department of Education. The LEH currently
has two $1 million TAH grants, one with
Orleans public schools and the other with the
public school system in Caddo Parish.
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The Summer 2007 edition, featuring a cover
painting of Shreveport's landmark Texas
Street Bridge, is now in circulation. Stories
in the summer issue:
The current issue and five previous back issues are also available on-line in their entirety in digital format at www.leh.org. Using innovative new technology, on-line readers are able in electronic form to view and read the magazine as usual while taking advantage of several dynamic, web-only features. Several facets of the on-line version of LCV enhance the reading experience. On the toolbar, browsers will find a Search button that allows browsers to enter keywords and find their location within the issue. The Table of Contents button allows readers to select and go straight to individual stories. The web-version of LCV functions as a nexus for our humanities community: every listing for a website in the print version is linked online to that site through the mere click of a button. See LCV in digital format. |
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LEH's award-winning family literacy program
continues to assist in the recovery of the
New Orleans area schools by bringing parents
together with their children and the schools
in a positive way. During the 2006-07 school
year, the LEH awarded and helped implement
three PRIME TIME programs at three different
schools in Orleans Parish: John Dibert
Elementary School (RSD), Medard Nelson UNO
Charter School (RSD Charter), and the
International School of Louisiana (BESE
Charter). Community support for all three
programs was outstanding. PRIME TIME is
thankful for the support of the GPOA and
Zemurray Foundations, as well as Whole Foods
Market and Herbsaint Restaurant. For the
upcoming 2007-08 school year, implementation
of PRIME TIME is confirmed for four Orleans
Parish schools: Benjamin Banneker Elementary
(RSD), John Dibert Elementary (RSD),
Esperanza Charter (RSD Charter), and
International School of LA (BESE Charter).
PRIME TIME FAMILY READING TIMEĀ® is set to host its second in-state Training Workshop in New Orleans on July 28 - 29, 2007 at LEH's state-of-the-art Humanities Education Center in Turner's Hall. PRIME TIME Training Workshops offer intense instruction and practice in program philosophy, methodology, and implementation for new scholars, storytellers, pre-school coordinators, and program coordinators. The PRIME TIME staff is pleased to welcome team members from 24 Louisiana sites, 2 Kansas sites, and 1 Georgia site with approximately 80 registered participants. For more information regarding the PRIME TIME Training Workshop, contact Shantrell Adams at adams@leh.org.
On June 24 in Washington, D.C., Prime Time
Director Faye Flanagan served as a panelist
at the American Library Association's 2007
Annual Conference. Flanagan and other
panelists discussed ways in which PRIME TIME
FAMILY READING TIMEĀ® is a successful model
outreach program. Approximately 100 ALA
members from the U.S. and Canada attended
this session. |
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A tentative schedule for the Summer/Fall
RELIC program is listed below. September will
be one of the busiest months for RELIC with
at least 13 programs to take place, including
programs in Houma (Becoming American: the
Literature of Immigration and Acculturation);
Covington, Abbeville, Morgan City, New
Orleans and Jennings (The Creole Identity and
Experience in Louisiana Literature and
History); Baldwin, Winnfield, Bastrop, Baton
Rouge and Vidalia (Battleground Louisiana:
Civil War Events and Experiences);
Natchitoches (Folktales and Stories of the
South and Louisiana); and, Gonzales (The
Louisiana Purchase: Impact and Legacy). A
final program schedule will appear in the
August issue.
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Throughout June and into July, the Louisiana
Endowment for the Humanities is sponsoring
institutes in United States history for
teachers in the Orleans and Caddo parish
regions. These programs are underwritten by
two $1 million grants the LEH received from
the U.S. Department of Education's Teaching
American History program in partnership with
the Orleans and Caddo public school systems.
New Orleans |
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Natchitoches - The 28th Annual
Natchitoches-NSU Folk Festival, July
20-21
Prather Coliseum at Northwestern State University (318) 357-4332 www.nsula.edu.folklife The Natchitoches-NSU Folk Festival provides a wonderful opportunity for people to learn about folk traditions and culture in Louisiana. Cultural traditions-be they Native American, Scots-Irish Protestant, African, among the many others-are being handed down to children and grandchildren, ensuring that our heritage is not lost. That's why this year's them is "Passing It On-the Next Generation" to highlight these next generation artists who are carrying on family and community traditions. |
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2007 Louisiana Association of Museums
Conference will hold its meeting September
10-11, 2007. Call for Papers
Deadline: Tuesday, July 17, 2007 More: http://www.leh.org/archives/CallforProposals2007.doc For additional information, contact Genny Nadler Thomas at genny@louisianamuseums.org |
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