Geography at UT Arlington

Geography at UT Arlington The University of Texas-Arlington is a great place to study geography. This official page is for students, alumni, & supporters of UTA geography

Enroll in GEOG 4330 Understanding GIS for Fall Semester 2025.
02/21/2025

Enroll in GEOG 4330 Understanding GIS for Fall Semester 2025.

There is greater pressure every day to hire people skilled in the art of discovering what is happening where. AAG announces a new partnership with San Diego-based Bootcamp GIS to offer industry-based GIS skills and courses to our membership. Students learn at their....

"Britain’s prehistoric attitude to drugs isn’t working. Why not learn from Texas?" by Brian Jenkins. Boy-Howdy!
09/30/2024

"Britain’s prehistoric attitude to drugs isn’t working. Why not learn from Texas?" by Brian Jenkins. Boy-Howdy!

Cherrypicking what has worked from decriminalisation abroad is far preferable to building more prisons, says Guardian columnist Simon Jenkins

06/16/2024

Happy Bloomsday from Dublin!

The blast from my past....
01/16/2023

The blast from my past....

Season Of Fire by Charlie Travis, Singer Songwriter music from Grapevine, TX on ReverbNation

RIP Robbie Knievel.
01/14/2023

RIP Robbie Knievel.

HWY a song by Charlie Travis from the Georgia Peach Sessions, featuring Bobby May and Dave Stella on lead guitars, Mark Bilger on Bass, Chuck Caswell on Drum...

Think fans of "Outlander" might notice similarities and get a kick out of this "Pretty Young Rebel."
01/12/2023

Think fans of "Outlander" might notice similarities and get a kick out of this "Pretty Young Rebel."

Since her daring mission in 1746, Flora Macdonald has lived on in myth. A new biography by Flora Fraser attempts to sort fact from fiction.

For Planet Earth, This Might Be the Start of a New Age
12/18/2022

For Planet Earth, This Might Be the Start of a New Age

A panel of experts has spent more than a decade deliberating on how, and whether, to mark a momentous new epoch in geologic time: our own.

09/14/2022

Shifting Borderscapes: Larry McMurtry’s The Lonesome Dove Chronicles (2010) by Charles Travis Shifting Borderscapes: Larry McMurtry's The Lonesome Dove Chronicles (2010) by Charles Travis. Posted By: Fronteras Editor September 11, 2022 Shifting Borderscapes: Larry McMurtry’s The Lonesome Dove Ch...

Chapter 1 of the Routledge Handbook of the Digital Environmental Humanities
09/09/2022

Chapter 1 of the Routledge Handbook of the Digital Environmental Humanities

Concerns of the DEH include, firstly, how we come to know – with masses of information becoming increasingly available in diverse forms and platform – and secondly, how we work –in collaborative, “glocally” scaled endeavours that integrate physical

Black Dreaming and Black Dream GeographiesGuest Editor: Naya Jones, University of California Santa CruzSubmission Deadli...
07/14/2022

Black Dreaming and Black Dream Geographies
Guest Editor: Naya Jones, University of California Santa Cruz
Submission Deadline: September 12, 2022

Dreaming emerges again and again in Black expressive culture and social movements. Dreams surface in the biographies and testimonies of Black artists, medicine-makers, and visionaries. Dreams circulate in affirmations: I am my ancestors’ wildest dreams!1

This special issue of The Arrow Journal is inspired by the transformative possibilities of Black dreaming in many senses of the word. An expansive understanding of dreams, along with insights from the field of Black geographies, inspires this call for submissions – which attends to the connections between dreaming, liberation, and spiritual practice.2

This issue takes dream-inspired art, scholarship, and activism as its point of departure. The celebrated play A Raisin in the Sun (1958) by Lorraine Hansberry is thick with dreams in the shape of personal aspirations and dreams of freedom.3 Robin D.G. Kelley (2003) traces “freedom dreams,” or how Black artists and intellectuals have imagined freedom in art, manifestos, and movement.4 Cara Page (2010) writes how collective memories, dreams, and imagination can inspire “new models of healing and justice” within movements.5 adrienne marie brown references dreams in the title of her latest book, We Will Not Cancel Us: And Other Dreams of Transformative Justice; her call to reframe cancel culture is grounded in a Black, q***r, and feminist framework made possible through radical, collective dreaming.

In most of these examples, dream is synonymous with imagination or aspiration. Often, these dreams are invoked or co-created, while literally and figuratively awake. Still other modes of Black dreaming are less-charted, like dreams received while sleeping or prophetic dreams. We remember how Harriet Tubman, George Washington Carver, and other ancestors traced their dreams to God or the Divine. How Tubman mobilized her prophetic dreams to both map out and carry out the Underground Railroad is perhaps most well-known in Black/African-American context. Alexis Pauline Gumbs (2014) invites us to consider what remembering Tubman’s prophetic dreams means for how freedom, dreaming, and the relationship between them are understood.6 Attending to dreams sourced to the Divine, ancestors, or the metaphysical, opens up Black cosmologies or philosophies of the Universe, leading to other epistemologies or ways of knowing.

Along with these works, this issue builds on a previously-published piece called “Prologue: On Black Dream Geographies” (https://www.academia.edu/60207324/Prologue_Black_dream_geographies) (2021) by the Guest Editor.7 As an expansive field of study, Black geographies offers vital assumptions for work with Black dreaming. Among these, oppressive legacies are spatial and Black space-making persists. Legacies of colonialism and white supremacy, among others, shape present-day power dynamics in ways that are profoundly spatialized, from uneven access to resources across neighborhoods, to mass incarceration, to the inordinate impact of intersecting crises like climate change, environmental injustice, and COVID-19 on Black communities worldwide. At the same time, Black space- and world-making has involved marronage and movements; expressive culture; social and cultural institutions; and more. These have been sites of resistance and thriving.8

At its heart, this Special Issue is about how dreaming has been integral to Black thriving. What is Black dreaming made of, and how does this dreaming matter now? For this peer-reviewed issue, we seek essays, including photo essays and descriptions of practices; scholarly articles; book reviews; and poetry. We welcome works that defy – or refuse! – genre. Activists, scholars, artists, practitioners, and those who blur the lines between these, we invite your contributions. The Guest Editor especially seeks pieces on less-charted Black dreaming, such as sleeping dreams, prophecy, dreams invoked by contemplative or spiritual practice, or how these relate to activism and movement work. And while the field of Black geographies inspires this call, we welcome work from across and beyond disciplines.

Furthermore, this Special Issue seeks to contribute to the collective archiving and analysis of Black dreaming, by centering the work of Black contributors. The Guest Editor especially invites Black, African, and Black diaspora contributors to submit their work, including but not limited to Black folks living outside of the Americas and contributors who identify as Afro-Latinx, Afro-Indigenous, Afro-Asian, and/or Afro-Arab.

Possible topics include but are not limited to:

Black dreaming and spiritual or contemplative practice
Landscapes of Black dreaming: literal, figurative, imaginative
Black dream rituals
Dreaming and movements, e.g. the global Black Lives Matter Movement, Tricia Hersey’s The Nap Ministry and Black rest, Healing Justice, Restorative Justice
Dreaming in Black Indigenous and African Traditional Religions
Rootwork, conjure, and Black dreaming
Nature and Black dreaming
Black feminism, womanism, and dreaming
Lives of dream-inspired activists, artists, scholars, cultural workers
Black herbalism and dreaming
Collective healing, recovery, and Black dreaming
Dreams in Afrofuturism, Black Sci-Fi, and/or Black Fantasy
Reflections on writing, teaching, and/or researching Black dreaming
Submissions are open via the Google Form below and will close on September 12, 2022 for review. For questions, please contact shah noor hussein (Managing Editor): shahnoor [at] arrow-journal.org.

Please read our Submission Guidelines (https://arrow-journal.org/submissions/) prior to submitting your manuscript. If you plan to submit a book review, please also review our guidelines for book reviews (https://arrow-journal.org/book-review-submissions/).

When you’re ready to submit your manuscript, please use this Submission Form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScuOBdCLNvpxsup-eRgcMVuLU3ngN0iHz8-9D1LEqcjnU-D_g/viewform?usp=sf_link

About the publication: The Arrow Journal explores the relationship among contemplative practice, politics, and activism. The Arrow welcomes the insights of multiple contemplative lineages for achieving a kinder, healthier, and more compassionate world. We encourage dialogue on wisdom and knowledge arising from methods of contemplative inquiry, ways of embodied knowing, and intellectual disciplines. In doing so, The Arrow provides a critical and much needed space for investigating the meeting point of contemplative wisdom and pressing social, political, and environmental challenges.

Thank you for choosing to submit to The Arrow Journal! The following form includes instructions and guidelines for submitting your manuscript. Please read through it carefully! A thoughtful submission will help provide our editorial team with everything we need for a smooth review and publication pr...

Online, open-source, interactive "Deep Chart" paper presented by Dr. Charles Travis to the Oceans Past IX conference, at...
06/24/2022

Online, open-source, interactive "Deep Chart" paper presented by Dr. Charles Travis to the Oceans Past IX conference, at the University of Washington, Seattle, WA on June 23, 2022.

The early modern “invention” of the Grand Banks in literary and cartographical documents contributed to facilitating a massive and unprecedent extraction of cod from the waters of the north Atlantic ...

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