Keynote Speaker

In partnership with Jazz Heritage Wales, the University of Wales Trinity Saint David (UWTSD) will host the fourth Documenting Jazz Conference from 9 to 12 November in Swansea, supported by the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama (RWCMD) and Brecon Jazz. 

The conference will be held at the Dylan Thomas Centre, Swansea, and will focus on the theme of diversity and aims to create an interdisciplinary forum which is both inclusive and wide-ranging for sharpening awareness, sharing studies and experiences, and focusing the debate on distinct aspects of diversity in jazz today. http://documentingjazz.com

Joan Cartwright will present on Thursday, November 10 @ 11 a.m. EST

Keynote: Who gives voice to diversity in jazz?

Dr Joan Cartwright is a renowned veteran of the Jazz and Blues stage for 40+ years. She is a vocalist, composer, and author of several books, including her memoir with touring and teaching experiences, and was honored as the first Lady Jazz Master by Black Women in Jazz Awards in Atlanta, GA, in 2014. Her titles include Amazing MusicwomenSo You Want To Be A Singer? and A History of African American Jazz and Blues with interviews of Quincy Jones, Dewey Redman, Lester Bowie, among other jazz musicians and aficionados. Books are available at http://lulu.com/spotlight/divajc

In 2007, she founded Women in Jazz South Florida, Inc., a non-profit organization to promote women musicians. In 2022, the organization released its 8th CD of women composers. Dr Cartwright hosts MUSICWOMAN Radio, featuring women who compose and perform their own music at BlogTalkRadio, has two personal CDs Feelin’ Good and In Pursuit of a Melody, and featured as an actor in Last Man and The Siblings, two sitcoms produced by MJTV Network. In June 2022, she decide to incorporate Musicwoman Archive and Cultural Center in North Carolina to preserve the music of women composers and instrumentalists.

Cartwright is the editor of Musicwoman Magazine and Musicman Magazine.

Francesco Martinelli

(Re)examining diversity throughout the jazz historiography

Francesco Martinelli is a jazz promoter, journalist, lecturer, translator and author. He is the author of magazine articles and monographs about Evan Parker, Joëlle Léandre and Mario Schiano. Since 1999 he has taught the history of jazz and related subjects at the Siena Jazz Foundation courses and in other conservatories in Italy. Martinelli has lectured at NYU, Wesleyan and Columbia Universities in the USA, at Bilgi and ITU in Istanbul, at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris, and many other institutions. His primary research interests include the history of jazz in Italy, jazz relationships with visual arts, traditional musics from the Near East, discography, and the preservation and restoration of sound carriers.

Martinelli is currently a consultant for the Izmir European Jazz Festival and Director of the Arrigo Polillo Center for Jazz Studies in Siena, Italy’s most important jazz archive. He has translated over 10 reference jazz books into Italian and is a contributor to Rough Guide to Turkish Music and recently edited The History of European Jazz The Music, Musicians and Audience in Context (Equinox, 2018).

Panelist at ASALH 2022

A Special Place In Time And Space – A View of Black Health and History from the African American Far South featuring members of ASALH SOUTH FLORIDA

ParticipantsEdit Participants
(Commentator) Valerie Lyles Patterson, patterso@fiu.edu; Florida International University
(Chair) Gene S Tinnie, dinizulu7@gmail.com; Dos Amigos/Fair Rosamond Slave Ship Project
(Commentator) Kisha King, kking@broward.edu;
I Reminisce Over You – Valerie Patterson Title (Abstract)   I Reminisce Over You – Valerie Patterson Edit Title Author Edit Author(Presenter) Valerie Lyles Patterson, patterso@fiu.edu; Florida International University Abstract Edit Abstract   This paper will explore the impact of several university and community collaborative activities designed to document race, risk, and resilience in a Bahamian community in South Florida. The paper will compare oral history transcripts over time to identify common themes and threads related to health, wellness, and resilience, and the ways in which collective memories reinforce themes of Black health and wellness. Individual Presentation   Abstract
Black Health and Wellness in the era of Jim Crow Title (Abstract)   Black Health and Wellness in the era of Jim Crow Edit Title Author Edit Author(Presenter) Kisha King, kking@broward.edu;AbstractEdit Abstract   This paper will offer a comparative history of two hospitals in South Florida that met the needs of Black people who were not allowed access to treatment in other area hospitals. Christian Hospital and Provident Hospital both treated Black people in South Florida. Service delivery in both facilities will be explored. Individual Presentation   Abstract
South Florida: Epicenter of Middle Passage Awareness and Remembrance Title (Abstract)   South Florida: Epicenter of Middle Passage Awareness and Remembrance Edit Title Author Edit Author (Presenter) Gene S Tinnie, dinizulu7@gmail.com; Dos Amigos/Fair Rosamond Slave Ship Project Abstract Edit Abstract   As part of the Panel Presentation by the South Florida Branch, Prof. Dinizulu Gene Tinnie, will offer insights on the significance of South Florida in remembering the Middle Passage. From multiple connections to that history and heritage in Key West, southernmost point of the continental United States, therefore closest to the predominant “slaver trading” routes, to Miami’s prominent and pioneering role in launching an Annual Sunrise Ancestral Remembrance of the Middle Passage, and as the birthplace of the Dos Amigos/Fair Rosamond Middle Passage Ship Replica Project, the southern tip of the Florida peninsula has hosted numerous programs, exhibitions, and other activities, including annual observances of the International Days of Remembrance (March 25 and August 23, declared by the UN General Assembly and UNESCO respectively). Prof. Tinnie’s presentation will focus on the local history of such slave ships as the Henrietta Marie, wrecked in 1700, the Guerrero of 1827, and the captured ships in 1860, as well as related local landmarks like the Key West African Cemetery. It will also focus on the aftermath of the Middle Passage in Florida, including the peninsula’s role as “Freedom Land” for displaced First Nations peoples and self-liberators from slavery, where Seminole Maroon settlements were established along with Underground railroad escape routes from slavery, as well as present-day ongoing consequences of this human trafficking. Individual Presentation   Abstract

Valerie L. Patterson, Ph.D., Director

African and African Diaspora Studies

Clinical Professor, Public Policy, and Administration

Steven J. Green School of International and Public Affairs

Florida International University
11200 S.W. 8th Street, PCA 367-A, Miami, FL 33199

Telephone: 305-348-0425 * Fax: 305-348-5848