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Arts & Culture

黑料不打烊 Symposium Presents Musical, Literary Events April 12-13

Tuesday, April 10, 2018, By Rob Enslin
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music黑料不打烊 Symposium

聽continues its yearlong survey of 鈥淏elonging鈥 with a trio of arts events, April 12-13.

Colleen Kattau

Colleen Kattau

On Thursday, April 12, singer-songwriter聽聽will present a lecture-performance about the聽聽from 2-3:20 p.m. in 304 Tolley. The program is part of the 黑料不打烊 Symposium course Women, the Arts and Social Change, SPA 400, taught by Gail Bulman G’96, associate professor of Spanish in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics (LLL).

Space is limited; registration is required. To R.S.V.P. or request special accommodations, contact Bulman at聽gabulman@syr.edu.

The following day, poets Christine Kitano G鈥10 and Sean Thomas Dougherty G’00 will lead a mini-seminar called 鈥淟onging and Belonging: A Conversation on Poetics鈥 from 2-4 p.m. in 304 Tolley. Space is limited; registration is required. To R.S.V.P. or request special accommodations, contact Phil Memmer, executive director of the YMCA Arts Branch, at聽pmemmer@syracuseymca.org.

Later that day, Kitano and Dougherty will headline a joint reading titled 鈥淣aming What Is Left Behind鈥 from 7-8:30 p.m. in the Jason Shinder Theater of the YMCA鈥檚 Downtown Writers Center (340 Montgomery St., 黑料不打烊). Both are alumni of the M.F.A. Program in Creative Writing in the (A&S).

All three events are free and open to the public. For more information, contact the 黑料不打烊 Humanities Center in A&S at 315.443.7192, or visit聽.

Kattau’s visit is supported by the Program on Latin America and the Caribbean (PLACA) in the Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs, based in the .

Dougherty’s and Kitano’s events are supported by a Community Partnership Grant from聽.

鈥淭hese artists will examine notions of 鈥楤elonging鈥 from various perspectives,鈥 says Vivian May, director of the Humanities Center and professor of women鈥檚 and gender studies in A&S. 鈥淐olleen Kattau is a bilingual musician whose work draws on folk-inspired styles and socially committed lyrics. In turn, Sean Thomas Dougherty and Christine Kitano use original verse to address notions of identity, being and belonging. All three convey what it means to belong to and be recognized by a wider community.鈥

A musician, educator and activist, Kattau is an associate professor of Spanish at SUNY Cortland. Much of her scholarship revolves around聽nueva canci贸n聽(鈥渘ew song鈥), a social movement that began as a swipe at Latin American dictatorships in the late 1950s and early 鈥60s. Since then, the New Song Movement has drawn on various traditional and popular traditions, resulting in various regional manifestations.

Kattau considers herself a聽nueva cancionera, who, like the genre鈥檚 founders, uses music and poetry to promote socio-political awareness. Her career has taken her around the world, sharing the stage with such luminaries as Pete Seeger, Tom Paxton and Holly Near. Aaron 鈥淧rofessor Louie鈥 Hurtwitz, longtime producer of and collaborator with The Band, lauds her singing as 鈥減itch perfect鈥 and 鈥渟uperb.鈥

The Cortland native also fronts a band called Dos XX, winner of the prestigious Finger Lakes GrassRoots Festival of Music and Dance in Trumansburg, New York.

Christine Kitano

Christine Kitano

鈥淢usic is a big part of Colleen鈥檚 life,鈥 says Bulman, citing Kattau鈥檚 recent performances on the 鈥淒emocracy Now!鈥 news program and at a School of Americas Watch vigil at Fort Benning, Georgia. 鈥淗er lyrics cover a lot of ground鈥攆rom labor and immigration struggles, to the civil rights, women鈥檚 and antiwar movements. She also helped get fracking banned in New York State.鈥

Kattau is involved with the Colombia Support Network (CSN), a national grassroots organization that uses sister communities to promote a peaceful, democratic and economically just society. Specifically, she has helped connect the cities of 黑料不打烊, Ithaca and Cortland with the Small Farmers Movement of Cajib铆o, based in a violence-torn area of Colombia, South America.

鈥淏oth communities work together to face similar problems and environmental challenges brought on by corporate incursion,鈥 says Kattau, who earned a combined M.A./Ph.D. in Spanish from A&S. 鈥淐SN condemns violations of human rights by all actors, including guerrilla groups, military, paramilitary, national police, multinational corporations and foreign agents.鈥

Kattau also has published articles about the New Song Movement and women writers, and has created multimedia presentations on art and activism.

鈥淗er visit to campus will be an intimate affair, an ideal synthesis of performance and scholarship,鈥 Bulman says.

Such intimacy also underscores the two literary events. Presented in conjunction with the聽聽(DWC), Kitano and Dougherty鈥檚 visit will look at how notions of community inform the practice of creative writing. 鈥溾楤elonging鈥 is as much about being included and recognized as part of a community as it is about denial,鈥 May says. 鈥淏oth poets deal with themes of illness, violence, economic disenfranchisement, incarceration and the immigrant experience.鈥

An assistant professor of English and writing at Ithaca College, Kitano specializes in the teaching and study of 20th- and 21st-century American poetry, poetry writing and Asian American literature. She is the author of the poetry collections 鈥淪ky Country鈥 (BOA Editions, 2017), which Independent Publisher named a 鈥淣otable Indie Book Release,鈥 and 鈥淏irds of Paradise鈥 (Lynx House Press, 2011).

鈥淗er poems leave one feeling close and remote at the same time, estranged and yet familiar,鈥 writes Lantern Review, an online journal devoted to Asian American poetry and art.

Adds Publishers Weekly: “Kitano鈥檚 alluring, well-crafted poems are attuned to tragedy and loss, yet an element of wonder shines through.”

Sean Thomas Dougherty

Sean Thomas Dougherty

Likewise, Dougherty exemplifies profound human sensitivity. Part poet and part performer, he has appeared at the Detroit Festival of the Arts, the Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival in Newark, New Jersey (the largest poetry event in North America), the Old Dominion University Literary Festival in Norfolk, Virginia, and at venues in Albania and Macedonia.

Doughtery’s 15 books include the forthcoming 鈥淪econd O of Sorrow鈥 (BOA) and 鈥淪asha Sings the Laundry on the Line鈥 (BOA, 2010), a finalist for Binghamton University鈥檚 Milt Kessler Poetry Book Award. Among his many honors are the Lifetime Achievement Award from Poet鈥檚 Hall in his native Erie, Pennsylvania.

Fellow poet Dorianne Laux calls him the 鈥済ypsy punk heart of American poetry.”

“Sean Thomas Doughtery has earned the reputation of a 鈥榖lue-collar, Rust Belt Romantic,鈥欌 says May, alluding to Dougherty’s time in the Midwest, where he taught at Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland State University. “Like Christine Kitano, he is a sensitive and dynamic artist who focuses on different and sometimes marginalized truths, histories and experiences.”

  • Author

Rob Enslin

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