Swarthmore College

Are you publishing a new book or other significant work? 

The Aydelotte Foundation and Swarthmore College Libraries can help you fund a launch event.

We’ve updated our process and are longer accepting rolling applications. Applications are currently closed and will reopen in Fall 2024.

Swarthmore faculty and staff who have authored a published or forthcoming signature scholarly or artistic work (e.g. a book, an important paper, an artwork, etc.) in the last three years can gain our assistance in developing ideas for a launch event that disseminates and further enriches the important work you have completed. Formats can vary, and could include a discussion between you and a crucial interlocutor; a round table of responses from colleagues at other institutions; or other creative possibilities, including the generation of a teaching guide, a limited run podcast, or a gallery exhibition.

Offering up to $2,000 per project, this program can also work with your press (or other supporters) on an advertising plan to help get the word out on campus and beyond about your significant accomplishment.

We hope to help you connect with your existing scholarly community as well as expand the audience for your work to an adjacent discipline, the campus community, and/or the public, while also celebrating your accomplishments.

Please get in touch with Andy Hines (ahines1@swarthmore.edu) at the Aydelotte Foundation or with Maria Agahazarian (magahaza1@swarthmore.edu) at the Libraries for more information about the program.

 

Current Scholarly Promotion Projects

 

Sony Devabhaktuni Author Talk and Book Signing at Bleak House Books, Honeoye Falls, NY, 3pm, Saturday May 4th, 2024. Facebook LiveStream @Bleakhousebooks (https://www.facebook.com/bleakhousebooks/)

Curb-scale Hong Kong: Infrastructures of the street, Applied Research & Design Publishing. By Sony Devabhaktuni, Assistant Professor, Art Program in the Department of Art and Art History, Swarthmore College

In conversation with: Juan Du, Dean, John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design at the University of Toronto and Jenny Smith, historian and co-owner of Bleak House Books

Reception to follow

“The drawings and writing in Curb-scale Hong Kong put together an idea about the street as an infrastructure of infrastructures. This scale of infrastructures comes apart and is put together in a constant instantiation by people who clean, maintain and repair the street instructed by chains of command and pages-long .pdfs comprising drawing standards and guidance notes. The curb-scale of infrastructure not only conducts, channels, and prescribes the movement of information and energy that make the city possible, but also is part of a larger field of affective registers that constitute the city as an ambivalent site of attention.”

Roseann Liu in Conversation with Kendra Brooks
Wednesday, May 8 at 3pm
Penn Bookstore, 3601 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA
Free and open to the public

Please join Roseann Liu, faculty member in Educational Studies and Asian American Studies, as she is in conversation with Councilmember Kendra Brooks about Liu’s new book, Designed to Fail: Why Racial Equity in School Funding Is So Hard to Achieve. They will discuss the racially inequitable state of education funding in Philly and other underresourced school districts, how we got here, and pathways forward.

For more information on the book and upcoming events go to roseannliu.com

Betsy Bolton Book Launch Party
Wednesday, May 8 at 3pm
Scheuer Room, Kohlberg Hall

Come celebrate poetry and the Crum Woods! This event will feature readings by Betsy Bolton, author of Mouth Art of the Bald-faced Hornet, published by Finishing Line Press, and community members. Thanks to funding from the Aydelotte Foundation, books will be distributed free as long as supplies last. This event is also sponsored by English and Environmental Studies

 

Upcoming Scholarly Promotion Projects

 

Paloma Checa-Gismero. Biennial Boom: Making Contemporary Art Global, Duke University Press. Planned for Fall 2024.

Sunka Simon. German Crime Dramas: from Network TV to Netflix, Bloomsbury Publishing. Planned for Fall 2024.

Itzue Caviedes Solis. Planned for Fall 2024.

Nicolette Bragg. The Ruins of Solitude: Maternity at the Limits of Academic Discourse, Punctum Books. Planned for Fall 2024.

Andrea Lee. Lincoln Went Down To The Nile. Planned for Fall 2024.

Steve C. Wang. Are we in the sixth mass extinction? Planned for Fall 2024.

 

Past Scholarly Promotion Projects


Syon Bhanot.
 Behavioral Public Policy in a Global Context: Practical Lessons from Outside the Nudge Unit, Palgrave McMillan, Spring 2024. A panel discussion with Syon Bhanot, Shibeal O’Flaherty and Michael Sanders took place on Wednesday, May 1, 2024 in the Scheuer Room at Kohlberg Hall.

Alejandra Azuero-Quijano, The Strike as Theory: History of the Present and Uprising in Colombia, Herder Editorial. Book Launch and discussion with Sara Tufano. The event was hosted by Making Worlds Bookstore and Social Center and took place Friday, October 27th, 2023 from 6-8pm.

Lara Cohen, Going Underground: Race, Space, and the Subterranean in the Nineteenth-Century United States. A book launch and discussion with Daphne Brooks and S.S. Sandhu. The discussion was hosted by Making Worlds Bookstore and Social Center and took place on Thursday, September 14, 2023 from 6-8pm.

Lei Ouyang, Music as Mao’s Weapon: Remembering the Cultural Revolution. A book launch and discussion with Marié Abe ’01, Shalini Ayyagari ’00, and Lei Ouyang in conversation with Steven Hopkins and Deborah Wong. The discussion took place at the Inn at Swarthmore on Friday, September 8th, 2023 from 4:30-6pm, and a reception followed. Sponsored by the Aydelotte Foundation & co-sponsored by Asian Studies, Global Studies, Music, Sociology and Anthropology, and the Advancement Office at Swarthmore College.

Michael Wehar, AlgoArt Exhibition @ Swarthmore College, An exhibition of visual artworks generated using the AlgoArt platform, curated by Michael Wehar at the McCabe Library at Swarthmore College. The exhibition featured work by Xingyu Dong, Xinxin Li, Maya-Newman Toker, Alyssa Zhang with additional works by John Mancini and students from UMass Boston. AlgoArt is a digital platform that brings together Artists and Technologists to create algorithmically generated visual designs and artworks. Opening Reception, Thursday, April 27th, 6:30pm. Supported by the Aydelotte Foundation, Swarthmore College Libraries, Swarthmore College Research Fund, Academic Division Research Fund, and Frances Velay Fellowship.

James V. Fenelon, DeColonizing American Colonial/Environmental/Imperial Racisms and Racialized Capitalism, A launch and discussion of Indian, Black and Irish: Indigenous Nations, African Peoples and European Invasions, 1492 – 1790 (Routledge, 2023). The panel featured Manley Begay, Barbara Thelamour, Michael Wilson Becerrill, and Seth Jeter ’25. Friday, April 28th, 2023, 2:30pm.

Sibelan Forrester, Translation of Volodymyr Rafeyenko’s novel, The Length of DaysHarvard University Press. Sibelan Forrester presented her new translation of a novel by Ukrainian writer and literature specialist Volodymyr Rafeyenko, THE LENGTH OF DAYS, opening with a subtitled video of Rafeyenko himself. Complimentary copies of the novel, published last month by the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute and on sale at the Swarthmore Campus and Community Store, were available and light refreshments were served. Saturday, April 8th, 2023, 2:00 pm.

Nia King, Queer & Trans Artists of Color, Volume Three Book Launch
A night of art and interviews that featured the following artists: Anthony James Williams, Joamette Gil, Kamal Al-Solaylee, Osa Atoe, Venus Kii Thomas, andQwo-Li Driskill. Nia King and Maliha Ahmed were the co-hosts of this event and the co-editors of Queer & Trans Artists of Color, Volume 3. ASL Interpretation was provided by the Libraries at Swarthmore College. Thursday March 23rd, 6-8pm

Megan Brown, The Seventh Member State: Algeria, France, and the European Community, Harvard University Press. “Transnational Solidarities, Diplomatic Endeavors, and International History: A Roundtable on Researching and Writing Histories that Cross Borders,” a roundtable discussion event with Kesewa John and Cindy Ewing, moderated by Angela Zimmerman. Thursday, February 9th, 2023.

Daniel Laurison, Producing Politics: Inside the Exclusive Campaign World Where the Privileged Few Shape Politics for All of Us, Beacon Press. “Is Politics for Everyone? A Forum on Making our Democracy More Inclusive”. As Daniel Laurison suggests in Producing Politics, political campaigns in the United States are largely run by a set of professionals with virtually the same backgrounds and credentials. Beyond generating repetitive political strategies, how and why does that homogeneity limit political participation more broadly? Laurison discussed the impact of these matters on American democracy with the esteemed journalist Sasha Issenberg and Philadelphia City Councilmember At-Large Kendra Brooks on Thursday, September 8 at the Friends Center in Philadelphia. Professor Edwin Mayorga moderated the conversation.

Tia Newhall and Kevin Webb, Dive into Systems: A Gentle Introduction to Computer Systems, Computer Organization, and Parallel Computing, No Starch Press, By Suzanne Matthews, Tia Newhall, and Kevin Webb. “How do you write an open-access textbook and why should you do it?” was a panel discussion featuring Carmelo Galati, Tia Newhall, and Donald Wargo. It explored the benefits, challenges, and development practices of open-access textbooks across a range of disciplines. By bringing together experts from the sciences, social sciences, and the humanities, the panel engaged wider issues surrounding institutional support for faculty developing these books, incorporating these works into courses, and examining how open-access works uniquely connect faculty working across institutions. Suzanne Matthews moderated the conversation.

Donna Jo Napoli, In a Flash, Wendy Lamb Books. Commissioned Education Guide for Teachers.

Katie Price, Pataphysics Unrolled, Penn State University Press, Edited by Katie Price and Michael R. Taylor. Book launch event hosted by co-editors Katie L. Price and Michael R. Taylor at Slought.

Edwin Mayorga, What’s Race Got to Do with It?: How Current School Reform Policy Maintains Racial and Economic Inequality, Second Edition, Peter Lang, Edited by Edwin Mayorga, Ujju Aggarwal, and Bree Picower. An interactive webinar conversation with Ujju Aggarwal, Wayne Au, Bill Ayers, Amy Brown, Brian Jones, Edwin Mayorga, Bree Picower, David Stovall, and Terrenda White.

Andy Hines, Outside Literary Studies: Black Criticism and the University, University of Chicago Press. Webinar conversation with Roderick Ferguson, Jared Loggins, and Andrew J. Douglas.

Chinelo Okparanta, Harry Sylvester Bird, HarperCollins Publishers. Reading and Q&A Event.

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