Skip to main content
Anacostia Community Museum Collections
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Donate
  • Sign Up
  • About Us
  • Education
  • Exhibitions
  • Events
  • Research
  • Collection
    • Search Our Collection
    • Access Our Resources
    • Moments of Resilience

Search

  • All
  • Art & Artifacts (1,667)
  • Photographs & Documents (12,272)
  • Audio & Video (223)
  • Archives (200)
  • Exhibitions (162)

Video

Pages

  • « first
  • ‹ previous
  • …
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • …
  • next ›
  • last »
  • Educating the Diaspora: Turning Diverse Realities into Pedagogy

    Uploaded
    2015-12-03T23:17:38.000Z
    See more by
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Views
    152
    Video Title
    Educating the Diaspora: Turning Diverse Realities into Pedagogy
    Description
    Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration, gentrification, education, museums, and community in the Washington D.C. metro area on September 19, 2014 EDUCATING THE DIASPORA: TURNING DIVERSE REALITIES INTO PEDAGOGY: a conversation about how we as professionals and educators turn scholarly notions of Afro-. Black, and Diasporic identity and belonging into public programs and educational tools for children and adults. Audience Q&A follows the panel. Panelists: • Dr. Tehani Collazo Senior Director, Schools & Community Engagement CASA de Maryland • Pedro A. Noguera Peter L. Agnew Professor of Education, New York University • Robert W. Simmons III, EdD Chief of Innovation & Research, District of Columbia Public Schools • Moderator: Nicole D. Shivers Education Specialist for Performing Arts and Cultural Programs, Smithsonian National Museum of African Art BACKGROUND BM20ACM.eventbrite.com The program references the museum’s 1994 landmark exhibition Black Mosaic, a multicultural, multilingual exhibition which examined race, nationality, and ethnicity of black immigrants in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. 20 years have passed since the Black Mosaic exhibition, and in that time both the local and national contexts have changed. Formerly predominately “Black” cities, like Washington, D.C., are changing in demographic composition. Immigration is a hotly debated national issue. Latinos have come to outnumber African-Americans as the largest minority in the United States. Native-born Black populations are declining while African immigrant populations have hit an all-time high. To address these important topics the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration, gentrification, education, museums, and community in the Washington D.C. metro area. Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium September 19, 2014 9:00am – 4:30pm Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center One Woodrow Wilson Plaza - 1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20004-3027 The Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium received financial support from: • Anacostia Community Museum • Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars • Latino Initiatives Pool, a federal fund administered by the Smithsonian Latino Center • National Museum of African American History and Culture • Smithsonian Consortium for Understanding the American Experience • Smithsonian Consortium for Valuing World Cultures
    Video Duration
    1 hr 6 min 49 sec
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Category
    Education
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Channel
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Type
    Conversations and talks
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_q_rCpCdJASc
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    152Educating the Diaspora: Turning Diverse Realities into PedagogyRevisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration, gen
  • Black-Brown Coalition Building - Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium

    Uploaded
    2015-11-23T22:37:36.000Z
    See more by
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Views
    146
    Video Title
    Black-Brown Coalition Building - Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium
    Description
    Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium: The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration, gentrification, education, museums, and community in the Washington D.C. metro area on September 19, 2014 BLACK-BROWN COALITION BUILDING: a conversation about the context for the successes and challenges of building coalitions (social, labor, political) between Blacks and Latinos in Washington, D.C. and other urban communities in the United States. Audience Q&A follows the panel. Panelists: • Allyson Criner Brown Associate Director, Teaching for Change • Marvin B. Figueroa Senate Legislative Advisor, U.S. Congress • Miriam J. Machado-Luces Filmmaker / Educator , TVA Productions, Ltd. / PGAAMCC Moderator: Bill Fletcher, Jr. Executive Assistant to National Vice-President, Augusta Thomas, American Federation of Government BACKGROUND BM20ACM.eventbrite.com The program references the museum’s 1994 landmark exhibition Black Mosaic, a multicultural, multilingual exhibition which examined race, nationality, and ethnicity of black immigrants in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. 20 years have passed since the Black Mosaic exhibition, and in that time both the local and national contexts have changed. Formerly predominately “Black” cities, like Washington, D.C., are changing in demographic composition. Immigration is a hotly debated national issue. Latinos have come to outnumber African-Americans as the largest minority in the United States. Native-born Black populations are declining while African immigrant populations have hit an all-time high. To address these important topics the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration, gentrification, education, museums, and community in the Washington D.C. metro area. Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium September 19, 2014 9:00am – 4:30pm Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center One Woodrow Wilson Plaza - 1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20004-3027 The Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium received financial support from: • Anacostia Community Museum • Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars • Latino Initiatives Pool, a federal fund administered by the Smithsonian Latino Center • National Museum of African American History and Culture • Smithsonian Consortium for Understanding the American Experience • Smithsonian Consortium for Valuing World Cultures
    Video Duration
    1 hr 9 min 37 sec
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Category
    Education
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Channel
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Type
    Conversations and talks
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_0YpDizbH_gY
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    146Black-Brown Coalition Building - Revisiting Our Black Mosaic SymposiumRevisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium: The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a ful
  • Anacostia Youth Conference, Part 2

    Uploaded
    2014-03-27T15:25:42.000Z
    See more by
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Views
    11
    Video Title
    Anacostia Youth Conference, Part 2
    Description
    Anacostia Youth Conference, proposal and recommendations to city officials, part 2, 1970s Anacostia Community Museum Archives, Series AM History, ACMA AV003217
    Video Duration
    33 min 43 sec
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Category
    People & Blogs
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Channel
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Type
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_pfz7FL-Iqz0
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    11Anacostia Youth Conference, Part 2Anacostia Youth Conference, proposal and recommendations to city officials, part 2, 1970s Anacostia Community Museum Archives, Series AM History, ACMA AV00321733 min 43 sec
  • Chocolate City No More: Changing Demographics & Gentrification of Washington, D.C

    Uploaded
    2015-12-08T00:59:58.000Z
    See more by
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Views
    949
    Video Title
    Chocolate City No More: Changing Demographics & Gentrification of Washington, D.C
    Description
    Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration, gentrification, education, museums, and community in the Washington D.C. metro area on September 19, 2014. CHOCOLATE CITY NO MORE: CHANGING DEMOGRAPHICS AND GENTRIFICATION OF WASHINGTON, D.C. : a conversation of the changing racial and socio-economic profile of Washington, D.C. proper and the greater metro area over the past 20+ years. Audience Q&A follows the panel. Panelists: • Dr. Natalie Hopkinson Writer and Fellow, The Interactivity Foundation • Dr. Derek Hyra Associate Professor, American University • Dr. Sabiyha Prince Author/ Anthropologist, Independent Scholar • Moderator: Blair A. Ruble Vice President for Programs, Woodrow Wilson Center BACKGROUND BM20ACM.eventbrite.com The program references the museum’s 1994 landmark exhibition Black Mosaic, a multicultural, multilingual exhibition which examined race, nationality, and ethnicity of black immigrants in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. 20 years have passed since the Black Mosaic exhibition, and in that time both the local and national contexts have changed. Formerly predominately “Black” cities, like Washington, D.C., are changing in demographic composition. Immigration is a hotly debated national issue. Latinos have come to outnumber African-Americans as the largest minority in the United States. Native-born Black populations are declining while African immigrant populations have hit an all-time high. To address these important topics the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration,gentrification, education, museums, and community in the Washington D.C. metro area on September 19, 2014. Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium September 19, 2014 9:00am – 4:30pm Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center One Woodrow Wilson Plaza - 1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20004-3027 The Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium received financial support from: • Anacostia Community Museum • Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars • Latino Initiatives Pool, a federal fund administered by the Smithsonian Latino Center • National Museum of African American History and Culture • Smithsonian Consortium for Understanding the American Experience • Smithsonian Consortium for Valuing World Cultures
    Video Duration
    1 hr 25 min 37 sec
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Category
    Education
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Channel
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Type
    Conversations and talks
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_feGIOEoBaGc
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    949Chocolate City No More: Changing Demographics & Gentrification of Washington, D.CRevisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race
  • East of the Anacostia River Take-Out Tour

    Uploaded
    2018-06-13T15:45:38.000Z
    See more by
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Views
    125
    Video Title
    East of the Anacostia River Take-Out Tour
    Description
    A video tour of some of the neighborhood establishments that make up for the deficit of supermarkets in the Wards 7 & 8 neighborhoods of Washington, DC.
    Video Duration
    1 min 53 sec
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Category
    Education
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Channel
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Type
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_0n_VX5ninsU
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    125East of the Anacostia River Take-Out TourA video tour of some of the neighborhood establishments that make up for the deficit of supermarkets in the Wards 7 & 8 neighborhoods of Washington, DC.1 min 53 sec
  • Brookland in “A Right to the City” Exhibition at the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum

    Uploaded
    2018-06-13T16:34:12.000Z
    See more by
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Views
    180
    Video Title
    Brookland in “A Right to the City” Exhibition at the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum
    Description
    Excerpts from oral history interviews about the Brookland neighborhood of Washington, DC that appear in the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum’s exhibition, “A Right to the City” (April 21, 2018-April 20, 2020). In a moment of rapid population growth and mounting tensions over development, “A Right to the City” explores the history of neighborhood change and civic engagement in the nation’s capital by looking at the dynamic histories of six Washington, D.C., neighborhoods: Adams Morgan, Anacostia, Brookland, Chinatown, Shaw and Southwest. The exhibition tells the story of these communities through the eyes of the Washingtonians who have helped shape these neighborhoods in extraordinary ways. They have used their collective community power to fight for quality public education, healthy and green urban spaces, equitable development and transportation, and a truly democratic approach to city planning. MORE INFORMATION: http://www.anacostia.si.edu/Exhibitions/Details/A-Right-to-the-City-6222 Interviewees include: - John Feeley Jr., a longtime Brookland resident, neighborhood advocate, and ANC Commissioner - Susan Abbott, daughter of Sammie Abbott who was a major anti-freeway organizer and the co-founder of the Emergency Committee on the Transportation Crisis (ECTC)
    Video Duration
    5 min 47 sec
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Category
    Education
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Channel
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Type
    Interviews
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_gTH-OiP1rXw
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    180Brookland in “A Right to the City” Exhibition at the Smithsonian Anacostia Community MuseumExcerpts from oral history interviews about the Brookland neighborhood of Washington, DC that appear in the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum’s exhibition, “A Right to the City” (Ap
  • Ruth and Novell Sullivan, Fairlawn Neighborhood

    Uploaded
    2018-06-13T15:40:52.000Z
    See more by
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Views
    59
    Video Title
    Ruth and Novell Sullivan, Fairlawn Neighborhood
    Description
    An interview with Fairlawn residents Ruth and Novell Sullivan.
    Video Duration
    3 min 35 sec
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Category
    Education
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Channel
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Type
    Interviews
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_Kin7TvfgvnM
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    59Ruth and Novell Sullivan, Fairlawn NeighborhoodAn interview with Fairlawn residents Ruth and Novell Sullivan.3 min 35 sec
  • Interview: John Dale Part 1

    Uploaded
    2014-03-27T13:40:39.000Z
    See more by
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Views
    102
    Video Title
    Interview: John Dale [Part 1]
    Description
    Anacostia Neighborhood [Community] Museum oral history interview with longtime Anacostia resident John Dale. Part 1 of 3. Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Dale, Jr. provided some historic notes of Turn of the 20th Century Anacostia, Washington DC. Hillcrest Heights, MD. 23 February 1973. See also: http://siris-archives.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?&profile=all&source=~!siarchives&uri=full=3100001~!355373~!0#focus Courtesy of the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum. Series: Anacostia Museum History, AV000794
    Video Duration
    1 hr 4 min 52 sec
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Category
    People & Blogs
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research
    YouTube Channel
    Anacostia_Community_Museums
    Type
    Interviews
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_ZOVCpWSFZwM
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    102Interview: John Dale [Part 1]Anacostia Neighborhood [Community] Museum oral history interview with longtime Anacostia resident John Dale. Part 1 of 3. Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Dale, Jr. provided some historic notes of Turn of the 20th Century Anacostia, Washington DC.
  • Take Time Thursday: The Art of Couponing 5 20 21

    Uploaded
    2021-06-25T19:28:30.000Z
    See more by
    SmithsonianAnacostia
    Views
    2
    Video Title
    Take Time Thursday: The Art of Couponing 5 20 21
    Description
    Thursday, May 20 | 2:30 – 3pm Have you ever cut out coupons and then left them behind when going to the store? What about pulling out coupons at the register only to see that they are expired? This practical and fun session will help you play the “game” of couponing so that you can tighten the purse strings in your household. Join avid couponer, Willette Matthews, as she shares her secrets on how to successfully coupon and add to your family’s savings. Ms. Matthews is currently a contractor for project management at the Anacostia Community Museum. Married and a mother of two children, Willette started couponing so that she could spend less on healthy food for her daughter with autism and husband with heart disease. She has been saving her family money for over 20 years. Her couponing has caught the attention of her coworkers, friends, and members of her family.
    Video Duration
    30 min 7 sec
    YouTube Keywords
    "Anacostia Community Museum"
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museum
    YouTube Category
    Entertainment
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museum
    YouTube Channel
    SmithsonianAnacostia
    Type
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_KUxN-Gc95ig
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    2Take Time Thursday: The Art of Couponing 5 20 21Thursday, May 20 | 2:30 – 3pm Have you ever cut out coupons and then left them behind when going to the store? What about pulling out coupons at the register only to see that they are expired?
  • TTT 4 29 21 Soil Science and Justice with Dr Akilah Martin

    Uploaded
    2021-06-16T21:24:30.000Z
    See more by
    SmithsonianAnacostia
    Views
    1
    Video Title
    TTT 4 29 21 Soil Science and Justice with Dr Akilah Martin
    Description
    Thursday, April 29 | 2:30 – 3pm It’s more than just dirt! Without soil there is no food. It’s often unappreciated, but there are galaxies of life within each tablespoon of soil. It is truly a magical world beneath our feet. Join us as Dr. Akilah Martin helps us to connect more deeply with our soil and its relationship to food, ecosystems, and social justice. Dr. Martin is an expert in her field but is first and foremost in partnership with soil and water. This month our Take Time Thursdays will be about food in conjunction with ACM’s year-long theme, “Our Food Our Future.” This year long examination of food history, culture, and justice includes the exhibit, “Food for the People: Eating and Activism in Greater Washington” and related programs designed to educate and encourage audiences to take action to create a more equitable future. Akilah earned her BS degree in Soil Science from Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University and her Doctorate from Purdue University in the area of Agricultural and Biological Engineering. Her professional interests include enhancing relationships of individuals and communities to environmental and natural resources. Her teaching and scholarly/research interests are centered in soil and water quality in urban communities. Current projects include installing rain gardens to create a “sponge town,” and building container gardens for “growing your own groceries.” Akilah is abundantly living life through two core values: Freedom and Joy. Cultivate joy by learning more about our soil together!
    Video Duration
    38 min 42 sec
    YouTube Keywords
    "Anacostia Community Museum"
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museum
    YouTube Category
    Entertainment
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museum
    YouTube Channel
    SmithsonianAnacostia
    Type
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_Hs3TEkLqC2o
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    1TTT 4 29 21 Soil Science and Justice with Dr Akilah MartinThursday, April 29 | 2:30 – 3pm It’s more than just dirt! Without soil there is no food. It’s often unappreciated, but there are galaxies of life within each tablespoon of soil.
  • #TakeTimeThursday 4-8-21 Meditation and Food Justice with Dr Kara Young

    Uploaded
    2021-06-16T20:31:01.000Z
    See more by
    SmithsonianAnacostia
    Views
    3
    Video Title
    #TakeTimeThursday 4-8-21 Meditation and Food Justice with Dr Kara Young
    Description
    Thursday, April 8 | 2:30 – 3pm This month our Take Time Thursdays will be about food in conjunction with ACM’s year long theme, “Our Food Our Future.” This year long examination of food history, culture, and justice includes the exhibit, “Food for the People: Eating and Activism in Greater Washington” and related programs designed to educate and encourage audiences to take action to create a more equitable future. Join Dr. Kara Young as she leads us through a meditation around food justice, self-healing, and community liberation. Dr. Young has a decade of experience writing, organizing, teaching, and public speaking on food disparities, racial justice, and healing. You don’t want to miss this important holistic pause! Dr. Young is a food justice researcher and healer based in Oakland, California. As a consultant, she provides racial justice expertise, short- and long-term project coordination, qualitative evaluation assistance, and curriculum development to organizations. She regularly gives lectures to groups around the country on anti-black racism as well as inequalities in the food system. She also runs a healing practice called Moon Rhymes Healing through which she does energy work and guided meditation with people around the world. #Take Time Thursdays with the Anacostia Community Museum gives participants a chance to take time for wellness, health, and creativity with artists, thought leaders, performers, wellness practitioners and others. Take a 30-minute break with us from 2:30 - 3:00 p.m. each Thursday and boost your mind, body and spirit.
    Video Duration
    33 min 1 sec
    YouTube Keywords
    "Anacostia Community Museum"
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museum
    YouTube Category
    Entertainment
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museum
    YouTube Channel
    SmithsonianAnacostia
    Type
    Lectures
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_i_fsVBJ5GoU
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    3#TakeTimeThursday 4-8-21 Meditation and Food Justice with Dr Kara YoungThursday, April 8 | 2:30 – 3pm This month our Take Time Thursdays will be about food in conjunction with ACM’s year long theme, “Our Food Our Future.” This year long examination of food history, culture, and
  • #TakeTimeThursday 4-1-21 Foodways of the African Diaspora with Dr Sage Anderson Brown

    Uploaded
    2021-06-16T20:08:55.000Z
    See more by
    SmithsonianAnacostia
    Views
    1
    Video Title
    #TakeTimeThursday 4-1-21 Foodways of the African Diaspora with Dr Sage Anderson Brown
    Description
    Thursday, April 1 | 2:30 – 3pm This month our Take Time Thursdays will be about food in conjunction with ACM’s year long theme, “Our Food Our Future.” This year long examination of food history, culture, and justice includes the exhibit, “Food for the People: Eating and Activism in Greater Washington” and related programs designed to educate and encourage audiences to take action to create a more equitable future. Come explore ways to honor your body and ancestral foodways by eating well! Learn about African Diasporic food cultures through plant-based wellness and cuisine with chef and scholar Dr. Sade Anderson-Brown. Dr. Anderson-Brown is a mother, birth worker, food and racial justice organizer, consultant, and founder of Ujima Consulting Collective. Dr. Anderson-Brown’s food justice work in Wards 7 & 8 of the nation’s capital culminated in her doctoral dissertation entitled Black Food Matters: Surviving Anti-Blackness and Food Insecurity in Washington, D.C. As a member of Black Dirt Farm Collective, Sade helps to promote Afroecology, a methodology that assists in reconnecting Black communities to land, food, and healing. Sade has ample experience building connections across identities through gardening, cooking, political education, dialogue, and facilitation. #Take Time Thursdays with the Anacostia Community Museum gives participants a chance to take time for wellness, health, and creativity with artists, thought leaders, performers, wellness practitioners and others. Take a 30-minute break with us from 2:30 - 3:00 p.m. each Thursday and boost your mind, body and spirit.
    Video Duration
    38 min 38 sec
    YouTube Keywords
    "Anacostia Community Museum"
    Creator
    Anacostia Community Museum
    YouTube Category
    Entertainment
    Topic
    African Americans
    Data Source
    Anacostia Community Museum
    YouTube Channel
    SmithsonianAnacostia
    Type
    YouTube Videos
    Record ID
    yt_Fz5Ff5SUkRI
    Usage
    Usage conditions apply
    1#TakeTimeThursday 4-1-21 Foodways of the African Diaspora with Dr Sage Anderson BrownThursday, April 1 | 2:30 – 3pm This month our Take Time Thursdays will be about food in conjunction with ACM’s year long theme, “Our Food Our Future.” This year long examination of food history,

Pages

  • « first
  • ‹ previous
  • …
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • …
  • next ›
  • last »
  • Media Type
    • Sound recordings 96
    • Video recordings 127
  • Type
    • Video recordings 140
    • Interviews 100
    • Archival materials 96
    • Sound recordings 96
    • Oral histories (document genres) 81
    • Conversations & talks 14
    • Lectures 4
    • Speeches (documents) 4
  • Topic
    • Neighborhoods 74
    • Nonprofits & Activism 43
    • Education 33
    • People & Blogs 32
    • Emigration and immigration 19
    • Gentrification 18
    • Latin Americans 14
    • Amusements 13
    • Communities 13
    • Art 9
    • Music 9
    • Clam industry 7
    • Housing 7
    • Oyster industry 7
    • Activism 5
    • Housing policy 5
    • Howto & Style 5
    • Artists 3
    • Church buildings 3
    • Educators 3
  • Date
    • 75
    • 1980s 1
    • 1990s 7
    • 2000s 3
    • 2010s 110
    • 2020s 27
  • Culture
    • African Americans 141
    • Hispanic Americans 13
    • Latino Americans 13
    • Chinese Americans 9
    • Asian Americans 1
    • Jews 1
  • Place
    • United States 21
    • Adams Morgan (Washington, D.C.) 20
    • Washington (D.C.) 20
    • Chinatown (Washington, D.C.) 16
    • Shaw (Washington, D.C.) 16
    • Anacostia (Washington, D.C.) 15
    • Baltimore (Md.) 13
    • Charlotte (N.C.) 13
    • Raleigh (N.C.) 13
    • Southwest (Washington, D.C.) 10
    • Maryland 7
    • Barry Farms (Washington, D.C.) 4
    • Brookland (Washington, D.C.) 4
    • Columbia Heights (Washington, D.C.) 4
    • Mount Pleasant (Washington, D.C.) 4
    • Smithsonian Institution (Washington (D.C.) 2
    • Capitol Hill (Washington, D.C.) 1
    • Chinatown (New York, N.Y.) 1
    • Deanwood (northeast Washington, D.C.) 1
    • El Salvador 1
  • Metadata Usage
    • Usage conditions apply 127
    • CC0 96
  • Media Usage
    • Usage conditions apply 127
  • About Us
  • Education
  • Exhibitions
  • Events
  • Research
  • Collection

Link to homepage

Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
Back to Top