麻豆视频

First Rural Humanities showcase spotlights Cornell-community projects

Poetry and performance 鈥 as well as more traditional presentations 鈥 comprised the first Rural Humanities Showcase, held Sept. 6 in the A.D. White House. The nine projects represented Cornell faculty engagement, teaching, and research around 鈥渞ural humanities,鈥 which uses the tools of the humanities to both address the rural-urban divide and the realities of rural America, particularly in Central-Western New York.

In addition to supporting new projects, the four-year Andrew W. Mellon Foundation-funded in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频 also aims to enhance the already existing projects at Cornell, such as those presented at the Sept. 6 showcase, and form them into a visible program

The Rural Humanities is 鈥渁n experiment in expanding the reach of the humanities at Cornell,鈥 Paul Fleming, co-director of the initiative, professor of German Studies and comparative literature as well as the Taylor Family Director of the Society for the Humanities, said in his introduction. 鈥淲e want to encourage public and engaged projects, work which ranges from public-facing scholarship to directly collaborating with community partners in the co-creation of research and teaching agendas,鈥 such as the History Center, local libraries, community colleges, and indigenous communities.

The initiative offers a spring seminar and a summer practicum for graduate students and advanced undergraduates as well as support for faculty outreach in generating new scholarship, noted Rural Humanities co-director Gerard Aching, professor of Africana and Romance studies.

, associate professor of anthropology and Director of the Cornell Institute of Archaeology and Materials Studies, described his decades-long on Haudenosaunee sites on which he collaborates with Indigenous communities and institutions. His methods have been developed to respect those communities. 鈥淣ative people have been victimized by traditional forms of western scholarship rather extensively over time,鈥 he said, adding that his work is an explicit attempt to try and change the social and political dynamics of archaeology to address these colonialist tendencies.

, Goldwin Smith Professor of Classical Archaeology and director of the Cornell Tree Ring Laboratory, is also transforming our understanding of the history of Indigenous peoples through his . Using tree-ring and radiocarbon analysis, he has raised questions about the timing and nature of early interactions between indigenous people and Europeans in North America. The Dendochronology Lab, particularly Senior Research Associate Carol Griggs, has also worked with sites across New York State to determine the age and origin of wooden structures.

Historian , professor of development sociology in the College of Agriculture and Life 麻豆视频, presented his work on land-grant universities, cooperative extension, and democracy.  He said he views land-grant universities like Cornell as development agencies, 鈥渂ecause they have institutionalized connections and relationships with communities and businesses in work aimed at civic and cultural as well as economic change."

Participants were then treated to a dramatic reading of a scene from 鈥淭he Next Storm: A Community-Based Play about the Impact of Climate Change on the Finger Lakes.鈥 The project, a collaboration with , is led by , Stephen H. Weiss Junior Fellow and associate professor of performing and media arts and senior lecturer, both in the Department of Performing and Media Arts; and , associate professor of earth and atmospheric sciences in the College of Engineering. The actors included Cornell students and Ithaca community members.

Community narratives were also 鈥檚 focus. 鈥 is the sharing of stories, both intimate and strategic, between different stakeholders to address pressing issues within communities,鈥 explained McKenzie, professor of the practice in the Department of English. He described projects his students have done to engage local communities and his work on developing a 鈥渃ivic story kit,鈥 using multimedia approaches to tell 鈥渞eal stories about real issues for real audiences.鈥 McKenzie is partnering with , extension associate for the New York State Rural Schools Program, and deputy executive director for the Rural Schools Association of New York State, to form collaborations with rural schools.

Debra Castillo presenting to audience

Debra Castillo; credit Jason Koski, Cornell Brand Communications

The Latinx community is the focus for , Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow and Emerson Hinchliff Professor of Hispanic Studies in the Department of Comparative Literature and director of the Latina/o Studies Program. For more than ten years she has been teaching Cultures and Communities, a course designed to bring students together with Latinx communities in our region. The students engage in 鈥 that are responding to needs and issues that community members and community organizations identify,鈥 said Castillo.

As director of the , works closely with farmworkers and their families to improve their living and working conditions. The 53-year-old Farmworker Program also 鈥渟eeks recognition for farm workers contributions to society and their acceptance and full participation in local communities,鈥 said Dudley. She discussed how Cornell faculty and students from Mexico, Guatemala, Central America and the Caribbean to address social, linguistic and geographic challenges associated with living in rural areas.

Poet , associate professor of English, shared poetry by artists , where her current work is centered. The poems themselves, she said, give 鈥渁 better perspective than if I tell you, hey, if you're treating somebody who's Southern, or somebody who is rural, like they鈥檙e an idiot because they have an approach that is a completely different approach than the approach that you're used to, then that's a problem.鈥 Poetry, she said, 鈥渉as the potential to make a breakthrough in a way that other things maybe don't.鈥

The final presentation was about a community college collaboration headed by , Cornell鈥檚 David and Kathleen Ryan Professor of Humanities and chair of English, and by English professors Anndrea Mathers, Tompkins Cortland Community College, and Christian Sisack, Onondaga Community College. The project will connect Cornell graduate students with local community colleges, providing mentoring opportunities for the graduate students and for the community college faculty as well as opportunities for intellectual engagement.

The event concluded with the Society for the Humanities鈥 annual welcome reception.

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