Jonathan Harwell

Jonathan H. Harwell

Jonathan Harwell

Jonathan H. Harwell

ATWIAD #2 presentation

Spiritual / Global Journeys & Countercultural Resistance

"Around the World in a Day" as Cosmological Invitation

When Prince & the Revolution released “Around the World in a Day” as the opening title track of their 1985 album, they invited listeners into a sonic landscape that transcended the evolving Minneapolis sound of Prince’s earlier work. This presentation examines this pivotal moment in Prince’s artistry, where his thematic focus expanded from earlier personal, romantic, and political themes to embrace spiritual exploration and global consciousness while maintaining a powerful countercultural stance.

Focusing on the title track as a gateway to the album’s world, I explore how Prince interwove traditional African cosmological concepts—particularly the fluidity between material and spiritual realms—creating a musical experience that functioned simultaneously as artistic expression and resistance. “Around the World in a Day” marks a critical turning point that introduced spiritual pilgrimage themes that would become hallmarks of Prince’s later catalog.

Jonathan H. Harwell is Associate Director for Collection & Resource Services at Georgia College & State University’s Russell Library, and was previously a librarian at Rollins College, Georgia Southern University, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Berry College. He holds an MLIS from The University of Alabama, an MA in Social Science from Georgia Southern University, and a BA in English from the University of Southern Mississippi; and is currently working on an EdD in Educational Leadership from Georgia Southern University. In his former life, he was a teacher in Albania for two years. His passions include researching the cultural history of Quakers in the American South. He is co-editor of Theology and Prince (2020) and Theology and Protest Music (2023) from Lexington Books/Fortress Academic, and a DJ on WGUR-FM in Milledgeville, Georgia.

Bluesky Profile

Chris Johnson

Chris Johnson

Chris Johnson

Chris Johnson

ATWIAD #2 presentation

Ascending “The Ladder”

Prince’s Song Through Maslow’s Lens

In this presentation, I analyze Prince’s song “The Ladder” within the framework of psychologist Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, a theory that categorizes human motivation into a progression of stages: physiological, safety, love/belonging, esteem, self-actualization, and transcendence. Prince’s lyrics use rich spiritual imagery and universal metaphors to depict a journey of striving for fulfillment. Beginning with the foundational need for existential security and progressing toward community, personal growth, and spiritual awakening, “The Ladder” mirrors Maslow’s progression of needs. Ultimately, the song portrays transcendence as the apex of human aspiration, aligning deeply with Maslow’s later work. This analysis not only explores Prince’s artistic genius but also invites listeners to reflect on their own psychological and spiritual journeys.

Chris Johnson is an independent researcher from Le Center, Minnesota. He is also a podcaster, writer, and part-time tutor. Chris earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in French and English from Augustana University. As an undergrad, he was nominated by professors to Pi Delta Phi, The National French Honor Society, and to Sigma Tau Delta, The International English Honor Society.

His research interests lie in popular culture, the history of American music, French literature and culture, and advocacy for disability rights. He has been a fan of Minneapolis musician, Prince Rogers Nelson, from the age of three. Chris hosts a podcast, the Purple Knights Podcast, a round-table discussion on Prince and related artists and people; new episodes are posted online every few months.

PurpleKnights PodcastBluesky Profile

Adam Rudegair

Adam Rudegeair

Adam Rudegair

Adam Rudegeair

The Family Presentation

All the Flowers

Variations on Nothing Compares 2 U

The song “Nothing Compares 2 U” has undergone significant re-invention with each iteration. It was first released on the 1985 eponymous Family album in a sparse arrangement, which heavily featured the lush string orchestrations of Clare Fischer. 

This presentation will compare and contrast four significant versions of the iconic song (The Family 1985, Sinead O’Connor 1990, Prince and Rosie Gaines 1993 Live Version, and the original Prince demo), with a discussion of the effect of changes in instrumentation, chords, and key.

Adam Rudegeair is a prolific composer, performer, filmmaker, and educator based in Melbourne, Australia. His music is rooted in jazz and funk, with significant influences from the sounds of New Orleans and Minneapolis. His current projects as a leader include Lake MinnetonkaThe Bowie Project, and Retconned Bond.

In 2021 Adam completed his Masters studies at Box Hill Institute with the thesis, ‘Strange Changes: Re-imagining Jazz Structures for Improvisation Utilising the Compositions of David Bowie’.

Since 2008 Adam has presented the weekly jazz radio program Black Wax on PBS 106.7FM.

https://adamrudegeair.bandcamp.com/album/argyle-redux

Karen Turman

Karen Turman

Karen Turman

Karen Turman

ATWIAD #1 Presentation

Something About the Clouds

Exploring the Iconography of Clouds in the Prince Universe

A year after his famous white “cloud” guitar appeared in Purple Rain (1984), Prince wore a bespoke sky-blue silk suit hand-painted with clouds for the “Raspberry Beret” music video. The clouds continued onto the set of the video shoot as well as the album cover for Around the World in a Day, both of which depict a colorful, diverse, and inclusive utopic world with a psychedelic dreamlike atmosphere. The motif of clouds would appear throughout his life in his clothing, instruments, lyrics, studio space, films, and videos. In his memoirs, Prince explains his fascination with clouds as a young boy: “I loved 2 play outside and felt completely free with no ceiling. Clouds seemed like home 2 me” (The Beautiful Ones 117). This idea of freedom, or living with no ceiling, was one of his key philosophies and he would continue to reject any societally imposed limitations on his artistic expression throughout his life. Grounded in a close analysis of the iconic suit worn in the “Raspberry Beret” video, this talk will explore the significance of clouds as an expression of freedom for Prince.

Karen Turman is a Preceptor of French in the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures at Harvard University. She earned her B.A. (2001) at the University of Minnesota, and her M.A. (2008) and Ph.D. (2013) in French Literature with an emphasis in Applied Linguistics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her interdisciplinary research interests include 19th-century Bohemian Paris, music, and dance during the Jazz Age, fashion and popular culture studies, community engagement scholarship, indigenous artists and activists in the Francophone Pacific, and topics of social justice and sustainability in the language classroom. Dr. Turman’s publications on Prince include an essay on Josephine Baker, Claude McKay, and Prince entitled “Banana Skirts and Cherry Moons: Utopic French Myths in Prince’s Under the Cherry Moon,” and “Prettyman in the Mirror: Dandyism in Prince’s Minneapolis.” She is currently working on a monograph on Prince and fashion.

Harvard Faculty Profile

Michael Dean

Michael Dean

Michael Dean

Michael Dean

What Did Prince Do This Week?

Michael Dean started his journey in the arts back in 1988 as an up-and-coming rapper in the Seattle hip-hop scene. The release of his independent single “The Master,” lead to a mention in the Source magazine. Michael lent his talents on keyboard and vocals touring the midwest with The Evil Tambourines (SubPop), opening for Sir Mix-O-Lot in 1999. From there Michael joined the business side of the music business and operated a CD/DVD replication business for 15 years.

In 1995 Michael started to blog about Prince on the internet. Michael, along with a few others, was invited to a private online chat with Prince to discuss his involvement in creating a website for the musical icon. (Love4oneanother) Michael respectfully declined but was so honored to be considered that he was inspired to start a new website called ‘FreedomTrainOnline’ which would morph into The Prince Podcast. For over 15 years, The Prince Podcast, now called Podcast On Prince, has done in-depth interviews with band members and associates. Featured in the Huffington Press and Forbes. Michael recently moderated the event ‘Prince: From Minneapolis to the World’ for the Minnesota Historical Society.

Michael came back to his musical roots in 2010 and has since released 3 albums: Stroke The Mind B4 The Behind, Rainydayjams Vol.1, and Lake Minnetonka AKA What I Learned From Prince.

Michael also added author to his list of talents. His first science fiction novel Truths Destiny (The Destiny Saga) (Volume 1) was released in 2014.

PODCAST ON PRINCE ON PODCASTJUICE.NET
PODCASTJUICE.NET
Support Podcast on Prince on Patreon

Miles Marshall Lewis

Miles Marshall Lewis

Miles Marshall Lewis

Miles Marshall Lewis

ATWIAD Roundtable

Miles Marshall Lewis is the Cultural Historian of The Hip Hop Museum, a pop-culture critic, essayist and fiction writer based in Harlem. A former editor at Vibe, XXL, Ebony.com, and BET.com, his essays and arts journalism have appeared in GQ, The New York Times, Rolling Stone, Essence, Ebony, and many other publications. His infamous 2015 interview with Prince has been anthologized in Prince on Prince: Interviews and Encounters.  He’s also the author of Promise That You Will Sing About Me: The Power and Poetry of Kendrick Lamar, and is currently penning another cultural biography, The Lunatic’s Manifesto: Dave Chappelle in Black & White, for 2026. 

Promise That You Will Sing About Me: The Power and Poetry of Kendrick Lamar

Zach Hoskins

Zachary Hoskins

Zach Hoskins

Zachary Hoskins

ATWIAD Presentation

The Influence Wasn’t the Beatles

Around the World in a Day, “Classic Rock,” and the Politics of Musical Legacy

When Prince released Around the World in a Day as the left-field followup to his transmedia blockbuster Purple Rain in April 1985, music critics widely drew connections between the artist’s new sound and 1960s psychedelic rock–in particular, the Beatles’ epochal 1967 “concept album” Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. So pervasive were these comparisons, in fact, that Prince would single them out for dismissal in his oft-cited September 1985 interview with Neal Karlen for Rolling Stone, stating, “The influence wasn’t the Beatles. They were great for what they did, but I don’t know how that would hang today.” As ever with Prince, however, the reality was a little more complex; and reading between the lines of various statements from the artist and his collaborators–as well as many of the artistic choices he made before, during, and after his mid-’80s psychedelic era–reveals a nuanced and dialectical relationship between Prince as a self-conscious standard-bearer for the Black musical tradition, and the Beatles as exemplars of the predominantly White “classic rock” canon being actively shaped through critical and commercial discourses in the 1980s.

Zachary Hoskins is the author of Dance / Music / Sex / Romance, a song-by-song blog examining the music of Prince in chronological order. His essay, “Rude Boy: Prince as Black New Waver,” was published in a special issue of Spectrum, A Journal on Black Men (2020), and his presentation from the Prince #1plus1plus1is3 virtual symposium (2021), “I Wish We All Were Nude: Prince’s Controversy ‘Shower Poster’ as Aesthetic Linchpin and Artifact,” was published in the Journal of Popular Music Studies. His presentation from the #EroticCity40 symposium (2024), “No One Wants to Talk about Apollonia 6,” will also appear in a forthcoming issue of JPMS. Zach has presented and appeared on roundtables at other @polishedsolid symposia, #Come30 (2024), #TripleThreat40 (2023), #SexyMF30 (2022), and #DM40GB30 (2020), as well as the University of Minnesota’s Prince from Minneapolis symposium (2018). He holds an M.A. in Media Arts from the University of Arizona and B.A.’s in Film & Video Studies and Creative Writing & Literature from the University of Michigan.

Dance / Music / Sex / Romance
Bluesky

Zaheer Ali

Zaheer Ali

Zaheer Ali

Zaheer Ali

ATWIAD Roundtable

ATWIAD Presentation

Teacher, Why Won't Jimmy Pledge Allegiance?

Prince as Citizen

On August 23, 1984, at the Republican National Convention nominating Ronald Reagan for re-election to his second term as President, Ray Charles closed out the ceremonies with his soulful rendition of “America the Beautiful,” a version that he had made popular through his 1972 release A Message from the People. The original song, long celebrated as a popular alternative to the American national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner,” celebrates American greatness, prosperity, and Providential favor—all themes Reagan effectively exploited during his presidency. Less than a year later, Prince released the album Around the World in a Day, featuring the song “America,” which borrowed both a musical and lyrical phrase from “America the Beautiful”’s chorus: “America, America, God shed His grace on thee.” However, in Prince’s “America,” the soaring chorus was transgressively rendered with a growling lead guitar, verses warned of the perils of inequality, and the chorus includes both a prayer and a warning: “Keep your children free.” In an almost Hendrixian way, Prince’s interpolation of “America the Beautiful” had turned a patriot’s anthem into a citizen’s jeremiad against the perils of Reagan-era policies, with a call to government and society to live up to its democratic ideals, or suffer a divine and political chastisement. To date, “America” was Prince’s most explicit, but not only, critique of state power. Beginning with a close examination of “America,” this presentation seeks to draw out Prince’s often overlooked political concerns during the first decade of his career, and challenges us to appreciate Prince’s early artistic voice as citizen.

Zaheer Ali is a historian and scholar of 20th-century United States and African-American history. He is currently the inaugural executive director of the Lawrenceville School’s Hutchins Institute for Social Justice. As an adjunct lecturer at New York University, he taught a Spring 2017 course titled, “Prince: Sign of the Times,” an examination of Prince’s life and legacy in American history and culture. He’s presented his scholarship on Prince at conferences at Yale, Salford University in Manchester, England, and the University of Minnesota; and is currently developing the Prince Syllabus, exploring the life and work of Prince as a catalyst for social change.

zaheerali.com
princesyllabus.org

Elliott Powell

Elliott H. Powell

Elliott Powell

Elliott H. Powell

ATWIAD Roundtable

Elliott H. Powell, Ph.D., is the Beverly and Richard Fink Professor in Liberal Arts and Associate Professor of American Studies at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of Sounds from the Other Side: Afro-South Asian Collaborations in Black Popular Music, which received the Woody Guthrie Book Award from the International Association for the Study of Popular Music, as well as the Philip Brett Book Award from the American Musicological Society. He’s currently at work on a new book titled Prince, Porn, and Public Space, which examines the intertwined worlds of music and sex in Minneapolis during the 1980s.

Sounds Other Sides: Afro South asian Collaborations in black popular music
University of Minnesota Faculty Profile

Edgar Kruize

Edgar Kruize

Edgar Kruize

Edgar Kruize

ATWIAD #1 Presentation

Love Is The Color This Place Imparts

There are very few Prince albums that tell a cohesive overall story and even less of which the album cover is an integral part of that story. In many ways the Around The World In A Day concept is reflected in the album’s artwork. Brought to life by Doug Henders, but fully directed by Prince, the artwork for Around The World In A Day invites you to places within your mind. This presentation shows not only the importance of the artwork for the album, but also its echoes throughout Prince’s career.

Edgar Kruize is a freelance author, journalist and content creator based in the Netherlands. He is co-owner of communications agency buro33. He is specialized in music in general and specifically the entertainment industry. Kruize has been working for various (trade) magazines, concert and tour promoters, festival organizers and record companies for over two decades. He has written nine books on various musical subjects.

All it took was a cough in the Raspberry Beret video to have the young Edgar notice the artist he’d later found out to be Prince. Prince’s impressive body of work has been an inspiration in life and work. Kruize is the author of the books Prince: The Dutch Experience (2017) and Prince: The Ultimate Dutch Experience (2025), in which all of Prince’s steps in the Netherlands are retraced. Also, he co-hosts the Dutch Prince-blog PurplePicks.net, wrote the liner notes for the 2019 Sign “O” The Times deluxe DVD/Blu-ray set (along with appearing in the documentary about the making of that movie), and (co)hosted multiple Prince-themed lectures and live interviews. This weekend he’ll be doing two sold out Prince themed theatre shows in the Netherlands.  

buro33.nl
edgarkruize.nl
purplepicks.net