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A Visual Journey of Family: Book of Life Scrapbook-Making Workshop

Event Type
Conference/Workshop
Sponsor
Spurlock Museum
Location
Spurlock Museum, 600 S. Gregory St., Urbana, IL
Date
Oct 26, 2024   10:00 am - 4:00 pm  
Contact
Monica M. Scott
E-Mail
monicams@illinois.edu

The PBS series “Finding Your Roots” traces the genealogy of celebrity guests. Following their revealing family history interview with host and Harvard University historian Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., guests are presented a Book of Life (BOLs) as a keepsake. BOLs are handcrafted scrapbooks created by the show’s production team as a gift for each guest. The pages follow the genealogical lines of guests’ paternal and maternal ancestry in fascinating detail.

The hit series has also helped ignite interest in genealogy for everyday people. Although the show recently offered a few lucky non-celebrities the chance to have details of their histories uncovered, most people spend years searching for information about their ancestry.

Are you interested in beginning research around your genealogy? Would you like to create a scrapbook inspired by the Book of Life keepsake from Finding Your Roots?

The goal of this first ever community-based Book of Life (BOL) scrapbook-making workshop is to offer fans of the popular show an inside look into the process used to create BOLs for guests on the show. Using pre-selected family photos, vital records, and/or ephemera, workshop participants create their very own BOL. With the support of local volunteers, the workshop will be led by one of the series’ Associate Producers, Mai Perkins.

This workshop is free and open to the public. All scrapbooking supplies will be provided!

To prepare for the workshop, download the Preparatory Checklist (PDF). This checklist provides details about what participants will need for their BOLs.

Disclaimer: This workshop is not associated with Finding Your Roots, McGee Media, or PBS. Use of the likeness of these entities is strictly prohibited.

About the Facilitator

Mai Perkins is a Brooklyn-based freelance writer and content producer with a knack for editorial storytelling. Since 2021, she's worked on the Emmy-nominated historical genealogy series Finding Your Roots and is currently an Associate Producer. She also worked as an Archival Researcher on Making Black America: Through the Grapevine. Both PBS docuseries are produced by McGee Media and are hosted by Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. In 2022, she worked as an Associate Archival Producer on the Showtime Sports Emmy-Nominated documentary NYC Point Gods. As a freelancer, she has contributed to sociocultural digital platforms such as The ProgressThe New ContextPop MagazineBlack-Owned Brooklyn, and Shoppe Black. She has also written for HuffPostRelevant, and Bust magazines. As an alum of VONA/Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation, the only multi-genre workshop for writers of color, her work has been featured in the anthology Dismantle.

Mai began in the field of documentary research a few years ago, sourcing archival research assets for independent filmmakers, and she's also worked on film production crews in Los Angeles and New York. In 2014, she spent two months in Hong Kong documenting pro-democracy protests and sustainable housing in the New Territories with a team of grad students. In 2020, she became social media manager for Ujima Entertainment Coalition, a collaborative space for post-production professionals of the African diaspora to revel in their passion for a spectrum of black stories while advancing their careers.

Completing an MFA in Creative Writing from Sarah Lawrence College, Mai has taught writing courses at City University of New York's College of Staten Island and Kingsborough Community College. In addition to studying writing at Sarah Lawrence, she also completed her BFA at Howard University after graduating from Crenshaw High School's Gifted Magnet. In 2015, she received her MA in International Affairs with a concentration in Media & Culture from The New School's Julien J. Studley Graduate Program. In 2018, Perkins published The Walking Nerve-Ending, 1st Ed. a collection of poems and essays. Mai grew up in Los Angeles, minutes from the Crenshaw District's Leimert Park, and has been a resident of New York City for two decades.

All participants are welcome. To request disability-related accommodations for this event, please contact Brian Cudiamat at  or (217) 244-5586.

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