Themes of social justice and intergenerational conflict make “Some Old Black Man” a fitting title for our times, when the reality of more togetherness unveils some of the tensions underlying even the closest of relationships. The live theater production airs at UMS Jan. 15-18.
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January 11, 2021
King’s ‘How long? Not long’ speech encourages change seekers to keep fighting
This year’s Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium keynote features two speakers, Gloria House, poet, essayist, educator and human rights activist, and Malik Yakini, co-founder and Executive Director of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network. The 2021 Keynote Memorial Lecture begins on Monday, Jan. 18 at 10 a.m.
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January 7, 2021
Jan. 12: Libraries, museums host community conversation on environmental justice
How do you think museums, libraries, and other cultural institutions should support local environmental justice movements?
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January 7, 2021
For those who love the built environment: anxiety of a Black urban planner
“The voices of Black and Brown planners and our allies will shape the future of this country’s neighborhoods and the world. I intend to be a part of this change, no matter how much my anxiety tells me the time isn’t right or you don’t have all of the “right words” to bring clarity yet.”
~ Jermaine Ruffin -
January 6, 2021
Students: Apply now for Semester in Detroit spring/summer and fall
The first Semester in Detroit took place in Winter 2009 with 14 participants, partnering with organizations such as Alternatives for Girls, Detroit Eastside Community Collaborative, and the Urban League of Southeastern Michigan.
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December 22, 2020
Michigan Minds: Pathways to civic engagement
In this episode of Michigan Minds, Danyelle Reynolds, assistant director for student learning and leadership at the Ginsberg Center, discusses six ways that members of the community can exercise power…
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December 21, 2020
Q&A: Darin Stockdill talks about the need for Detroit River curriculum in middle school
“The other thing we want students to learn, and this is central to the work of the historian Tiya Miles, is that slavery is a part of the history of Detroit and Ontario. It’s not just this terrible thing that happened in the U.S. South. Their stories of survival and resistance are important, and we can learn from them and be inspired today, on both sides of the river.”
~ Darin Stockdill -
December 18, 2020
LSA faculty share the television shows and films whose stories matter now
LSA faculty representing a wide range of disciplines and expertise shared some of their recommendations for films on race and racism that are worth adding to your list.
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December 17, 2020
New U-M mural, exhibition by Detroit artist celebrate labor of Black women in America
“Watch Me Work is a celebration of Black Women who get it done! From the event planning Zoom mommy to the USPS mail lady, we work. The world watches and we work. The world turns away, we work. Even those of us who sit around all day and manage to make it to the next day safely, it took work. Through the daily attacks on the pigmented people of the world, we work. We work. We work. I work.”
~ Sydney G. James