On Tuesday, Oct. 3, Cowell College’s Eloise Pickard Smith Gallery launched a two-month exhibition entitled “Never Again is Now: Japanese American Women Activists and the Legacy of the Mass Incarceration.” The exhibit on display through Dec. 2 features artwork and historical renderings of women’s memories surrounding this time period, including challenges to racial and gender stereotypes, promotions of intergenerational ties, and developed coalitions of years past.
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Courtesy Eleanor Lenoe October 25, 2020
Eleanor Lenoe entered UR determined not to study history. “I come from three generations of history professors, so I actually started in bio[logy].”
Four years later, Lenoe is graduating with a degree in History (and a second one in Japanese) after auditing HIST 189, a course titled “Wives, Witches, and Wenches” taught by Brianna Theobald. “I was so excited during the class that Prof[essor] Theobald took me aside […] urged me to take the class [for credit] she inspired me to eventually switch to history!” she wrote in an email to the