This interactive experience follows the movement for Japanese American redress and reparations in Chicago in the 1970s and ’80s, and the lessons it holds for communities seeking justice and healing today.
This web and audio story chronicles Japanese American resettlement to Chicago from the World War II incarceration camps, and how a government assimilation program discouraged the formation of a long-term ethnic enclave in the city.
This story follows Chicago historian Sherry Williams’ efforts to preserve the memory of Nancy Green as Quaker Oats retires the Aunt Jemima name from its products.
This photo essay captures the final night of a popular summer market in Uptown on Chicago’s North Side, and includes reflections from attendees on the changing neighborhood.
This photo essay includes reflections from Japanese American demonstrators on why they decided to protest outside of the jail, and how they’re connecting current events to their own history of mass incarceration.
This piece uses archival images, maps, and news clippings to detail the long-brewing racial tensions in Chicago that led to the 1919 race riots — an event that contributed to a century of segregation in the city.
In this interactive experience, put yourself in the shoes of a homeless person in Chicago navigating the challenges of daily life during the winter months.
This digital zine explores the mysteries of Chicago's rodents through a “rat safari,” interviews with experts and crowdsourced stories from Chicagoans about their wildest rat encounters. Print copies of the zine were distributed to Chicago Public Libraries.
This interactive experience traces poet and writer Carl Sandburg’s life in the Chicago area and highlights the people and places that helped shape his writing and launch his literary career.
This interactive documentary follows Fair Trade bananas from the fields to the supermarkets, and interviews the people behind a movement to change the banana industry.