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Common Reading Talk Today on South African Music | WSU Insider | Washington State University


April 28, 2021
Melissa Parkhurst will present a Common Reading talk on “Song Gives Birth to Struggle: Music and the Anti-Apartheid Movement in South Africa” at today at noon.
Parkhurst, a faculty member in the WSU School of Music and the 2021 awardee of the WSU Faculty Diversity Award, will use examples from several South African music traditions to explore the ways in which music sheds light on the indigenous cultures and the process of colonialism and post colonialism. These examples will include early South African jazz (marabi), a cappella music performed by migrant workers (isicathamiya), and numerous genres that emerged during the anti-apartheid strugges, 1948-1994.

South-africa , South-african , Melissa-parkhurst , Trevor-noah , Apartheid-movement , School-of-music , Pullman-common-reading-program , Common-reading , Gives-birth , Anti-apartheid-movement , Diversity-award , Common-reading-program

May 3 book request deadline: Teaching Academy book club using new common reading | WSU Insider


April 28, 2021
The WSU President’s Teaching Academy will be joining the WSU Common Reading Program for the 2021-2022 academic year by supporting a book club for faculty to read
Tales of Two Americas: Stories of Inequality in a Divided Nation edited by John Freeman.
For faculty* interested in joining the book club, the Teaching Academy will provide your book copy (print or e-book) for summer reading. Club groups will meet two times synchronously during fall semester, with asynchronous discussions available between meetings.
Our goal is to consider how the text can be applied to our classrooms and used to encourage our students’ engagement with topics related to social equity. We invite faculty at all ranks on all campuses to join!

John-freeman , Teaching-academy , Common-reading-program , Reading-program , Two-americas , Divided-nation , Ashley-boyd , ஜான்-ஃப்ரீமேன் , கற்பித்தல்-கலைக்கழகம் , பொதுவானது-ரீடிஂக்-ப்ரோக்ர்யாம் , ரீடிஂக்-ப்ரோக்ர்யாம் , இரண்டு-அமெரிக்காக்கள்

Common Reading talk on the Role of Music in the Anti-Apartheid Movement | WSU Insider


April 27, 2021
Melissa Parkhurst will present a Common Reading talk on “Song Gives Birth to Struggle: Music and the Anti-Apartheid Movement in South Africa” at noon on Wednesday, April 28.
Parkhurst, a faculty member in the WSU School of Music and the 2021 awardee of the WSU Faculty Diversity Award, will use examples from several South African music traditions to explore the ways in which music sheds light on the indigenous cultures and the process of colonialism and post colonialism. These examples will include early South African jazz (marabi), a cappella music performed by migrant workers (isicathamiya), and numerous genres that emerged during the anti-apartheid struggles, 1948-1994.

South-africa , South-african , Melissa-parkhurst , Trevor-noah , Apartheid-movement , School-of-music , Pullman-common-reading-program , Common-reading , Gives-birth , Anti-apartheid-movement , Diversity-award , Common-reading-program

Teaching Academy hosts book club using new Common Reading book | WSU Insider


April 26, 2021
The WSU President’s Teaching Academy will be joining the WSU Common Reading Program for the 2021-2022 academic year by supporting a book club for faculty to read
Tales of Two Americas: Stories of Inequality in a Divided Nation edited by John Freeman.
For faculty* interested in joining the book club, the Teaching Academy will provide your book copy (print or e-book) for summer reading. Club groups will meet two times synchronously during fall semester, with asynchronous discussions available between meetings.
Our goal is to consider how the text can be applied to our classrooms and used to encourage our students’ engagement with topics related to social equity. We invite faculty at all ranks on all campuses to join! If interested, please complete this form by May 3rd and look for your book to be delivered. For questions, contact Ashley Boyd or Joy Egbert.

John-freeman , Teaching-academy , Common-reading-program , Reading-program , Two-americas , Divided-nation , Ashley-boyd , ஜான்-ஃப்ரீமேன் , கற்பித்தல்-கலைக்கழகம் , பொதுவானது-ரீடிஂக்-ப்ரோக்ர்யாம் , ரீடிஂக்-ப்ரோக்ர்யாம் , இரண்டு-அமெரிக்காக்கள்

Common Reading talk on the role of music in the Anti-Apartheid Movement | WSU Insider

Common Reading talk on the role of music in the Anti-Apartheid Movement | WSU Insider
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South-africa , South-african , Melissa-parkhurst , Trevor-noah , Apartheid-movement , School-of-music , Pullman-common-reading-program , Common-reading , Gives-birth , Anti-apartheid-movement , Diversity-award , Common-reading-program

WSU's next common reading is Tales of Two Americas: Stories of Inequality in a Divided Nation | WSU Insider


April 12, 2021
The WSU Common Reading Program has announced the 2021-22 book to be used by first-year and other students in classes and beyond is Tales of Two Americas: Stories of Inequality in a Divided Nation, edited by John Freeman.
By Beverly Makhani
Division of Academic Engagement and Student Achievement (DAESA)
The Washington State University Common Reading Program has announced the 2021-22 book to be used by first-year and other students in classes and beyond is
Tales of Two Americas: Stories of Inequality in a Divided Nation, edited by John Freeman.
Electronic desk copies will be made available soon to faculty who might wish to incorporate topics from the book into their courses.

New-york , United-states , New-school , California , New-york-university , Vancouver , British-columbia , Canada , America , Beverly-makhani , Hope-jahren , Elizabeth-chilton

Poet and Guggenheim Fellow Major Jackson to read at WSU March 1. | WSU Insider


Best American Poetry. Jackson serves as poetry editor of the
Harvard Review.
A Philadelphia native, Jackson pursued accounting at Temple University. After college he took a job as finance director at Philadelphia’s Painted Bride Art Center, where he developed a taste for art and activism. He turned to a brief career as a literary critic and journalist of the hip-hop scene before heading off to the University of Oregon to earn his Master of Fine Arts in poetry. He spent 18 years as a professor of English at The University of Vermont.
Jackson recently told an interviewer at Vanderbilt that art “can be an immense tool for community-gathering. We are less alone when we hear the human condition articulated in a poem or essay.”

New-york , United-states , Temple-university , Pennsylvania , Paris , France-general , France , Philadelphia , Vermont , Vancouver , British-columbia , Canada

Jan. 26: WSU Tri-Cities seminar to discuss exclusion and segregation in the mid-Columbia region | WSU Insider


January 22, 2021
By Maegan Murray, WSU Tri‑Cities
Washington State University Tri‑Cities will host a free seminar discussion on exclusion and segregation in the mid-Columbia region on Tuesday, Jan. 26, as part of the WSU Common Reading Program.
This event, which takes place from 4–5:30 p.m. online, coincides with the launch of the third book in the “Hanford Histories” series that documents historical accounts and realities of the Hanford Site and surrounding regional area.
Both the book and event parallel themes in this year’s WSU Common Reading book, “Born A Crime” by Trevor Noah, who lived in racially-segregated areas in South Africa.

China , South-africa , Japan , United-states , Japanese , Chinese , American , Maegan-murray , Tracey-hanshew , Laura-arata , Robert-franklin , Trevor-noah

More than 30 events planned in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday | WSU Insider


January 14, 2021
By Steve Nakata, Division of Student Affairs
Campuses across the Washington State University system have planned more than 30 events in recognition of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday. The events will span several months and feature authors, songwriters, rappers, visual artists and films.
The full list of events can be viewed at the MLK Program website.
The celebration kicks-off with Virtual Bingo for Student Groups on Wednesday, Jan. 20 and concludes with Tongan Visual Artist Robin Fifita on Friday, April 30. Scheduled in between are a wide variety of events including several keynote addresses, beginning with Bree Newsome Bass on Thursday, Jan. 21, at 6 p.m.

New-york , United-states , Charleston , South-carolina , Japan , Japanese , American , Martin-luther-king-jr , Steve-nakata , Anthony-jack , Aisha-fukushima , Lisa-guerrero