Difference between revisions of "Elizabeth K.Batiuk"

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(Created page with "In Guanabacoa, Cuba at the Wemileres Festival in 2008 Elizabeth K. Batiuk is an ethnomusicologist (University of Michigan, 2015) currently pu...")
 
 
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[[File:Wemelires 2009.jpg|thumb|In Guanabacoa, Cuba at the Wemileres Festival in 2008]]
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[[File:Wemileres 2009.jpg|thumbnail|In Guanabacoa, Cuba at the Wemileres Festival in 2008.]]
Elizabeth K. Batiuk is an ethnomusicologist (University of Michigan, 2015) currently pursuing a master's degree in information science (MSI) at the University of Michigan School of Information. She specializes in the music and dance of Cuba and Latin America and is interested in the ethics of information and digital technology. Before graduate school, Elizabeth worked in the non-profit sector on a humanitarian aid project that sent pianos and piano technicians to Cuba and as a tenant organizer in New York City. She also plays guitar and percussion.  
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Elizabeth K. Batiuk is an ethnomusicologist (University of Michigan, 2015) currently pursuing a master's degree in information science (MSI) at the University of Michigan School of Information. She specializes in the music and dance of Cuba and Latin America and ethnographic research methods. She is pivoting her career from teaching to work in the cultural heritage sector as an archivist. Elizabeth is interested in the ethics of information and how digital technology impacts public memory. She also plays guitar and percussion.
[[File:ekb_conga.jpg|thumb|After a percussion class with master drummer, Johnny Conga in South Florida, 2017]]
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Latest revision as of 16:34, 18 February 2021

In Guanabacoa, Cuba at the Wemileres Festival in 2008.

Elizabeth K. Batiuk is an ethnomusicologist (University of Michigan, 2015) currently pursuing a master's degree in information science (MSI) at the University of Michigan School of Information. She specializes in the music and dance of Cuba and Latin America and ethnographic research methods. She is pivoting her career from teaching to work in the cultural heritage sector as an archivist. Elizabeth is interested in the ethics of information and how digital technology impacts public memory. She also plays guitar and percussion.