8 research outputs found

    Conversion Calls for Confrontation: Facing the Old to Become New in the Work of James Baldwin

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    Book Summary: The recognition and study of African American (AA) artists and public intellectuals often include Martin Luther King, Jr., and occasionally Booker T. Washington, W.E.B.DuBois, and Malcolm X. The literary canon also adds Ralph Ellison, Richard White, Langston Hughes, and others such as female writers Zora Neale Hurston, MayaAngelou, and Alice Walker. Yet, the acknowledgement of AA artists and public intellectuals tends to skew the voices and works of those included toward normalized portrayals that fit well within foundational aspects of the American myths reflected in and perpetuated by traditional schooling. Further, while many AA artists and public intellectuals are distorted by mainstream media, public and political characterizations, and the curriculum, several powerful AA voices are simply omitted, ignored, including James Baldwin. This edited volume gathers a collection of essays from a wide range of perspectives that confront Baldwin’s impressive and challenging canon as well as his role as a public intellectual. Contributors also explore Baldwin as a confrontational voice during his life and as an enduring call for justice. [From the Publisher] Chapter Summary: This discussion examines Baldwin\u27s novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain (1953), and his essay collection, No Name in the Street (1972). Baldwin revisits the traditional biblical conversion narrative by challenging how the converted must learn to reconcile with their past, rather than simply turning away from it

    In Solidarity

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    This edition of Next Page is a departure from our usual question and answer format with a featured campus reader. Instead, we asked speakers who participated in the College’s recent Student Solidarity Rally (March 1, 2017) to recommend readings that might further our understanding of the topics on which they spoke

    I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer Men

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    James Baldwin writes within and against the testimonial tradition emerging from the Black Church, challenging the institution’s refusal to acknowledge the voices and experiences of black queer men. Baldwin’s autobiographical novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, creates a space for Baldwin’s testimony to be expressed, and also lays the foundation for a tradition of black queer artists to follow. In the contemporary moment, poet Danez Smith inhabits Baldwin’s legacy, offering continuing critiques of the rigidity of conservative Christian ideologies, while publishing and performing poetry that gives voice to their own experiences, and those of the black queer community at large. These testimonies ultimately function as a means of rhetorical resistance, which not only articulates black queer lives and identities, but affirms them

    Poetic Justice: Black Poets and the Movement for Black Lives

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    The Office of Alumni Relations sponsored a program with English Prof. McKinley Melton, Poetic Justice: Black Poets and the Movement for Black Lives. Prof. Melton discusses the work of Black Poets in response to structural racism and historical and contemporary struggles for social justice

    Development and regeneration of the vertebrate brain

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    The vertebrate brain is hierarchically assembled about orthogonal axes using organizing centers that control cascades of signaling events. The reiterative generation of these centers at defined times, and in precise spatial locations, leads to the conversion of a contiguous and homogenous epithelial sheet into the most complex biological tissue in the animal kingdom. The critical events orchestrating the construction of a "typical" vertebrate brain are described. Attention is focused on specification of major brain regions common across the vertebrate phylogeny, rather than on the differentiation of constituent cell types and specific cytoarchitectures. By uncloaking the complex spatial interactions that unfold temporally during the build of the vertebrate brain, it becomes clear why regeneration of this tissue following injury is such a challenging task. And yet, while mammalian brains fail to regenerate, the brains of non-mammalian vertebrates, such as teleosts, reptiles and amphibians, can successfully reconstitute brain tissue following traumatic injury. Understanding the molecular and cellular bases of this remarkable regenerative capacity is revealing the importance of developmental programs, as well as exposing unexpected roles for extraneous processes such as inflammation. Recent discoveries are now fuelling hope for future therapeutic approaches that will ameliorate the debilitating consequences of brain injury in humans
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