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Campus & Community

黑料不打烊 Symposium to Present Final Chapter of ‘Stories’

Wednesday, April 10, 2019, By Rob Enslin
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College of Arts and SciencesHumanities Center黑料不打烊 Symposium

Stories graphic黑料不打烊 Symposium concludes its yearlong exploration of 鈥淪tories鈥 with a spate of April events that are free and open to the public.

Presented by the Humanities Center in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), the series explores the role of storytelling through an interdisciplinary lens. More information is at .

A&S recently caught up with a few of this month鈥檚 organizers鈥擮samah Khalil, associate professor of history, Anneka Herre, program director of the Urban Video Project (UVP), and Phil Memmer, executive director of the Arts Branch of the YMCA鈥攖o discuss their programming.

Osamah, tell us about your transnational symposium, 鈥,鈥 on April 11-12.

Osamah Khalil

Osamah Khalil

We will address the theme of 鈥淪tories鈥 by examining how authoritarianism has been experienced and resisted through a range of expressions, from text and film to art and activism, over the past seven decades.

Our topics will range from Japanese-American internment during World War II, to the end of the Cold War, to current debates over immigration. In addition to different kinds of authoritarianism, we will explore why it endures.

You鈥檝e assembled a terrific lineup.
Thank you. Participants include 黑料不打烊 faculty and graduate students, as well as scholars from Cornell and the U.S. State Department [Associate Professor Jeremy Wallace and historian James Graham Wilson, respectively].

image projected on wall

Urban Video Project will screen 鈥淐ulture Capture: Terminal Addition” on the Everson Museum Plaza from April 11-May 25.

Anneka, you have invited the New Red Order [NRO], a rotating and expanding cast of visual artists and performers, to campus. Tell us about them.
Our three guests鈥擜dam and Zack Khalil, as well as Jackson Polys鈥攁re core contributors to the NRO. [April 16-18], they will discuss and premiere their film 鈥淐ulture Capture: Terminal Addition,鈥 commissioned by LightWork for UVP and shot in and around 黑料不打烊.

The NRO is a 鈥減ublic secret society鈥 that challenges European settler and colonialist tendencies with what they call 鈥渟ites of savage pronouncement.鈥

American history told through a Native lens, as it were.
Their project is about many stories. They include stories that we, as a country, built on settler-colonialism, tell ourselves about our own history, specifically the way we have consigned Indigenous peoples to a historical past.

Phil, you regularly team up with 黑料不打烊 Symposium for a mini-residency by a renowned writer. What should we know about this year鈥檚 visitor, Laure-Anne Bosselaar, on April 25?

Laure-Anne Bosselaar

Laure-Anne Bosselaar

She鈥檚 an acclaimed poet whose four books demonstrate how the unique particulars of one鈥檚 life stories鈥攖he horrors of anti-Semitism, the pain of childhood neglect and abuse, the grief of losing a spouse鈥攃an, through the filter of art, shimmer with universal truths.

Her latest book, 鈥淭hese Many Rooms鈥 [Four Way Books, 2019], draws on the sudden loss of her husband, noted poet Kurt Brown. Like her previous volumes, it shows how the particulars of any individual鈥檚 story have the potential to become universal through artful retelling.

Her own life story is rather unique鈥攂orn in Belgium, raised by a convent of 鈥渁busive nuns.鈥
Laure-Anne describes the family that briefly raised her as 鈥渧irulent anti-Semitism.鈥 Her stories from these difficult times permeate her first three books of poems, which show how early emotional and physical deprivation can be overcome by intelligence, humor, curiosity and determination.

[Pulitzer Prize-winning poet] Charles Simic says that Laure-Anne writes 鈥渨ise poems about memory鈥攑oems whose art lies in their ability to make these memories ours, too.鈥

 

Rounding out 黑料不打烊 Symposium is a (April 23-24) by Michelle Caswell and Samip Mallick, co-founders of the South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA) in Philadelphia.

“They will address how institutional archives have historically served as sites of white privilege and supremacy, thus disadvantaging the stories of marginalized communities,” writes organizer Tarida Anantachai, a librarian in 黑料不打烊 Library鈥檚 Learning Commons in Bird Library. “Their programs will explore the embedded oppressions within archival practices and how community-based archives such as SAADA have countered these structures and amplified the experiences of historically underrepresented communities.”

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Rob Enslin

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