A State of Open Mind Magazine - Spring 2013 - Web
A State of Open Mind Magazine - Spring 2013 - Web
A State of Open Mind Magazine - Spring 2013 - Web
openMIND
A PUBLICATION OF CAL HUMANITIES
SPRING 2013
Searching for Democracy California Reads The Nancy Hatamiya Legacy Science is Not Enough: Bringing the Humanities to our V.A. Hospitals
in this issue:
p 47
Searching for Democracy California Reads
p8
Names can carry a lot of weight. A name communicates much more than the sum of its letters. The power of a name comes from its heritage, its associated experiences and expectations. Names define places, evoke memories, and stir emotions. Our previous name, California Council for the Humanities, has presented a few challenges for us over the years. Many felt that it sounded stuffy, elitist, bureaucraticand not particularly memorable. We want people to engage with the humanities and our work, to connect with meaningful cultural experiences on a personal level, and not to be put off by our name. We explored many options for a new name. Some led to ideas that resonated more strongly than others, but ultimately we agreed that superfluous and haughty language wouldnt have a place in our new name. Welcome to Cal Humanities, A State of Open Mind. We think this short, straightforward representation grounds and defines our purpose to promote a free-thinking state engaged in the humanities. Weve also chosen to represent this by using an iconic symbol that marks the start of a dialoguethe single open quotation mark. When people talk to each other, they learn new things and begin to see different points of view. As Cal Humanities, were working to start those conversations, those free exchanges of ideas and experiences that will lead to a state of open mind. Check out our new website at www.calhum.org and let us know what you think of this first issue of our brand new magazine!
p 1011
New Board Members
p 12
Science is Not Enough: Bringing the Humanities to our V.A. Hospitals
p 1315
New Story & Documentary Projects
Questions? Comments? Contact Regan Douglass, Editor, A State of Open Mind, at [email protected]
You can find the complete version of this essay on our website at www. calhum.org/news/blog.
Ralph Lewin
Cal Humanities President & CEO
Community Stories Giving expression to the extraordinary variety of histories and experiences of Californias places and people moves us closer to finding our commonalities, appreciating our differences, and learning something new about how to live well together.
FIND MORE We continue to award funding for story-based projects through this competitive grant program. Check the Grants section of our website for information on how to apply as well as examples of funded projectsand check the Events section of our site for free Community Stories-related events.
Public Conversations With Zcalo These days, its critically important for us to find spaces and ways to come together and talk about the issues that affect and divide us and the ideas that provoke and inspire us. We joined forces with Zcalo Public Square to bring community members and top public thinkers together to explore issues vital to our democracy in towns across California.
FIND MORE Explore such topics as Is Social Isolation a Threat to Democracy? with poet Philip Levine. Join policy analyst and speechwriter Eric Lius thought experiment about how and what citizenship would be if all of us had to actively earn it. Videos of all our conversations are available on the Experiences section of our website.
(above) Calisthenics at the Manzanar internment camp. Photo by Ansel Adams. A protest against the persecution of the Hollywood Ten. Photo courtesy of Labor Archives and Research Center, SFSU.
The humanities have helped us to find better ways to think, live, and govern together. What could be more essential?
The humanities are well positioned to respond to the gap of knowledge thats threatening the U.S. In order for the leaders of tomorrow to compete in a knowledge economy, they must be grounded in and elevated by the humanities. We believe that the humanities provide the best way to deeply
citizenship? Do our schools teach us that the system worksor what to do if it doesnt? Teaching Democracy, our endeavor with the California History-Social Science Project, brought together teachers with such top scholars as Stanfords Jack Rakove and Caroline Winterer to find new ways to engage students in history and civics, discussing questions such as Should America Have a King? and What did the Constitution Originally Mean?
FIND MORE Find the recorded presentations, plus resources for teachers, on the Programs/Teaching Democracy section of our website.
Wherever Theres a Fight Exhibition We know that we must understand our past in order to build a better future. Wherever Theres A Fight: A History of Civil Liberties tells about the stories of unsung heroes and heroines throughout California who stood up for their rightsand oursin the face of social hostility, physical violence, economic hardship, and political stonewalling.
FIND MORE Presented in partnership with Exhibit Envoy and based on the Heyday book by Elaine Elinson and Stan Yogi, you can find this traveling exhibition in a town near you by visiting the Events section of our website.
For more information about the initiative, visit the Searching for Democracy section of our website or contact Vanessa Whang, Director of Programs, at [email protected].
CALIFORNIA READS
authors weigh in on the state of our democracy
Sally Parry (above) Daniel Alarcn
In an effort to bring people together around great books and powerful ideas, weve been providing funding, assistance, resources, and guidance to libraries across the state through our California Reads program. See pages 5 and 15 for more information on California Reads, the selected books, and free, related resources. Here, we asked the participating California Reads authors and scholars to share their thoughts on democracy and more.
Richard Beeman
ch: the books ask, in different ways, who are we the people? who is really american?
RICHARD BEEMAN: In the late eighteenth century, the phrase We the People in the preamble to the Constitution did not include all Americans. But over the course of the more than two hundred years since the framing of the Constitution, the definition of We the People has expanded to include an ever-growing number of Americans. JEANNE WAKATSUKI HOUSTON: Being American is not a question of race, tribe, or physical attributes. It is a non-physical identitya state of mind that values freedom and governance by the people for the people. It values individuality, and hopefully will extend to cultural diversity, making the tapestry of varied cultures in American society a truly American value. Our differences are our strength and our power.
understand the underlying meaning of the documents on which our nation was founded is ever more pressingeven essential. Although we Americans still have many miles to travel before we fulfill completely the Declarations promise of equality and of the protection of certain unalienable rights, the language and logic of Thomas Jeffersons document can continue to inspire us to attempt to meet the challenge.
ch: why is it important for americans to read and discuss our core documents?
RICHARD BEEMAN: As the political debate in our nation has become more acrimonious, as one group denounces another for being un-American or for undermining the Constitution, the need for Americans to come together and
Visit our website, www.calhum.org, to watch video interviews with all the California Reads authors and scholars and to find discussion guides and other resources related to the books. For more information about this program, please contact our Senior Program Officer, Felicia Kelley, who leads our California Reads work, at [email protected]. Stay tuned for our next California Reads program!
Did you know that last year, our work with libraries, veterans hospitals, media makers, and others reached over a million people in communities throughout California, from the mountains to the coast and points north to south? Weve brought new insights, perspectives, and histories to light as we shared our stories and learned more about how to connect with each other. But we cant do it alone. Your generous gift, coupled with the support of foundations, corporations, and other donors, makes our work possible. Your gift allows us to continue: California Reads: Supporting library programs designed to foster dialogue in communities throughout the state Literature & Medicine: Improving the quality of care to our veterans through work with their health providers Now Were Talking: Training librarians to create spaces for reflection and discussion of issues affecting their communities Community Stories: Sharing the history and experiences of Californias places and peoples The California Documentary Project: Supporting film, radio, and new media productions designed to inspire lively conversation, quiet reflection, and surprising epiphanies We need your help to keep these conversations going. Your generosity will allow us to provide innovative, high-quality, and thoughtful programs now and into the future. Please send your gift today and become part of our journey to create a state of open mind.
Your support makes our work possible. Thank you to our major funders:
BayTree Fund California State Library National Endowment for the Humanities Seedlings Foundation The Whitman Institute
Luis Herrera
As Cal Humanities embarks upon this new and exciting chapter of growth, our board of directors has added SEVEN NEW MEMBERS to its governing body. Along with an enthusiasm for the humanities, these new members provide further geographic representation to our statewide board of professionals and bring additional experience and expertise in business, arts, academia, and philanthropy to our ranks.
ADA LVAREZ Ms. lvarez is an award-winning journalist, a successful investment banker, and a former member of President Clintons Cabinet. Ms. lvarez currently serves on the boards of Wal-Mart, Union Bank, and Progress Financial Corporation. She also chairs the Latino Community Foundation, serves on the Board of the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, DC, and is a trustee emeritus of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Appointed by President Clinton to head the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), Ms. lvarez was the first Hispanic woman to serve in a presidential cabinet. During her tenure, she presided over record activity of $61.5 billion in guaranteed loans and venture capital financing over a four-year period, with marked increases in lending to women and minorities. She also expanded SBAs international role by establishing an SBA office in Cairo, Egypt, and led U.S. small business trade missions to Mexico, Canada, Ireland, and Egypt. A Harvard graduate, Ms. lvarez also holds honorary doctorates from Bethany College, Iona College, Mercy College, and the Inter-American University of Puerto Rico. DAMON HOROWITZ Mr. Horowitz is a professor of philosophy and a serial entrepreneur. His work explores what is possible at the boundaries of technology and the humanities. Horowitz currently serves as In-House Philosopher and director of engineering at Google, where he leads initiatives involving personalization and privacy. Mr. Horowitz is a successful entrepreneur and helped build several companies around applications of intelligent language processing, including Aardvark (acquired by Google), Perspecta (acquired by Excite), Novation Biosciences (acquired by Agilent), and NewsDB (now Daylife). Mr. Horowitzs academic work pursues myriad approaches to the topic of meaning in language, with a focus on questions of truth and normativity. He has taught philosophy and cognitive science at Columbia, Stanford, NYU, University of Pennsylvania, and San Quentin State Prison; and particularly enjoys teaching his freshman seminar, The Life and Limits of Reason. He earned his BA from Columbia, MS from the MIT Media Lab, and PhD from Stanford.
JOHN KRASZNEKEWICZ Mr. Krasznekewicz is the founder and managing partner of Rustic Partners, Inc., a financial consulting and investment firm that assists its client organizations with financial, structural, operating, and investment alternatives. A graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Business School, he also has held senior management positions at Goldman Sachs and Montgomery Securities and serves on the IXI board. JOHN LESCROART Mr. Lescroart is a New York Times Bestselling author of twenty-three novels, including most recently The Hunter (January 2012), his latest novel in the San Francisco-based Wyatt Hunt series. Libraries Unlimited has included Mr. Lescroart in its publication The 100 Most Popular Thriller and Suspense Authors, his short stories appear in many anthologies, and his books have been translated into twenty different languages in more than seventy-five countries. Outside of the book world, Mr. Lescroart loves to cook and his original recipes have appeared in Gourmet Magazine and in the cookbook A Taste of Murder. He also wrote the forward to Francine Brevettis The Fabulous Fior: 100 Years in an Italian Kitchen, a paean to the famous San Francisco eatery Fior dItalia. NATALIA MOLINA Ms. Molina is the associate dean for faculty equity, Division of Arts and Humanities and associate professor in the Department of History and Urban Studies Program at the University of California, San Diego. Her first book, Fit to be Citizens? Public Health and Race in Los Angeles, 1879-1939, received the Norris and Carol Hundley Award from the American Historical Association in 2007. Her current book project, Immigration as a Process of Racial Formation: Mexican Immigration to the United States, 1924-1942, uses an array of archival sources and a comparative approach to examine a different set of institutions and practices to deepen our understanding of race in the United States. Ms. Molina is on the managing editorial board for the American Quarterly, a council member of the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association, and a speaker for the Organization of American Historians Distinguished Lectureship Program.
JUDY SALTER Ms. Salter is the former president and CEO of Turtle Bay Exploration Park, a $70 million educational and cultural complex along the Sacramento River in Redding, California. A graduate of George Washington University with a degree in Political Science, Ms. Salter has a professional background in business, government, and non-profit management. She previously served on the Washington staffs of Congressman Graham Purcell, Senator Lloyd Bentsen, and the Jimmy Carter Presidential Campaign. She was first administrative director of Fort Mason Center in San Francisco and subsequently served as the director of corporate and government relations for two major natural resource based companies. Ms. Salter has also served widely on numerous arts, literacy, social policy, and environmental boards and continues to consult with community organizations on fundraising, board development and strategic planning. She and her husband, Lee, share four children and five grandchildren. SANDRA SERRANO Ms. Serrano is chancellor of Kern Community College District, the largest geographic community college service area in California. Her district includes the states Southern San Joaquin Valley and the eastern Sierra Mountains from Mammoth to Tehachapi. She is the former president of Bakersfield College, and her previous educational experience includes serving as the director of Student Affirmative Action at California State University, Bakersfield. Ms. Serrano is national president of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities and a member of the Advisory Council to the California Community College Collaborative, a policy center established jointly by the University of California Office of the President and the Chancellors Office of the California Community Colleges. She holds a bachelors degree in political science from University of California, Berkeley and a juris doctorate from Hastings College of the Law.
10
11
Dr. Denise Henderson, MD shared with us how the Literature & Medicine program has impacted her practice. Q: what type of work do you do with veterans?
A: I supervise providers on PTSD teams [in California V.A. hospitals]. I help patients with evaluations and educate them on treatment options. I founded and facilitate the Military Minority Matters group. It helps veterans who have suffered cultural disparities in the military. A: In The Enduring Chill, by Flannery OConnor, Blacks were called Negroes [and] their role in the story was reflective of a time that some people try to forget. I saw parallels to todays society. I tried twice to get a discussion going about how some Blacks feel marginalized and dismissed today [] and the topic was quickly dismissed. I realized I was experiencing what some of the minorities I treat experience, and that talking about the role of Negroes is something I should share with those who can barely stand the mentioning of our racial history as relevant today. She looks in my direction. Her eyes are calm and milky. She cant see a thing. I should have guessed. I should have remembered her eyes were getting worse; I would have, if Id half a brain left myself. This impacted me. No one thing, including love, is enough to understand each other. Great love was shared between these two women. We have to keep shifting our thinking to be more aware of who we care for. Science is not enough by itself; love is not enough by itself. We must practice mindfulness in our daily affairs, should we want to see the reality of our circumstances. As clinicians, loved ones, or caregivers, we are liable to miss something important, until we try something new. Since 2009, Cal Humanities has been working with V.A. hospitalsnow including Fresno, Palo Alto, and Sacramento. Our involvement in Literature & Medicine: Humanities at the Heart of Health Care is part of a national effort initiated by the Maine Humanities Council.
Q: what are some of the challenges faced by healthcare professionals working with veterans?
A: Realizing how brave they are for seeking treatment and how much they have given to deserve it. I pay attention to the losses they have experienced that are not readily detected. For recovery, they need more than a pill or procedure.
Q: have you called upon what you learned in the lit & med program?
A: I recently joined the group. [So far], it has had a positive impact on my awareness. In my approach to treatment before, I thought my colleagues were aware of their interactions with minorities and consciously chose how to treat some patients based on race, sex, or sexual identity. Now I know that many are simply uncomfortable with the reality of certain relationships stemming from our collective American history. It is difficult to grow fruit where the sun does not shine. It is difficult if not impossible to develop cultural competency without open discussion.
It is difficult to grow fruit where the sun does not shine. It is difficult if not impossible to develop cultural competency without open discussion.
Q: would you share an excerpt from a lit & med reading that impacted you?
A: There was a passage in What Remains by Emma Donoghue about two famous octogenarian sculptors who worked and lived together. They took a day trip to see ones sculpture. I reach over to take her hand. But she has her head down again; she seems to be examining an egg stain on her lapel. A dreadful thought occurs to me. I let go of her hand and wave my fingers in front of her face. She doesnt flinch. Queenie?
Q: was there a passage in the literature provided which shifted your understanding of your patients or the care you provide?
To watch a video about Literature & Medicine, including interviews with participants, visit www.calhum.org/experiences. To read the complete version of this interview, go to www.calhum.org/ news/blog. For more information, please contact our Senior Program Officer, Felicia Kelley, who leads our Literature & Medicine work, at [email protected].
12
california reads
GRANT AWARDS
What if the whole state were reading the same slate of inspiring, thought-provoking books, and gathering in their communities to talk with their neighbors about critical issues that affect us all? This vision inspired our statewide reading and discussion program, California Reads, developed in partnership with the California Center for the Book and the California State Library. Through California Reads, we awarded over $400,000 to 53 library systems to create and offer inventive public programmingincluding dozens of author events that drew thousands of participants around these five book selections: The Penguin Guide to the United States Constitution: A Fully Annotated Declaration of Independence, U.S. Constitution and Amendments, and Selections from The Federalist Papers by Richard Beeman Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston and James D. Houston A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster by Rebecca Solnit It Cant Happen Here, by Sinclair Lewis represented for California Reads by scholar Sally Parry, executive director of the Sinclair Lewis society Lost City Radio by Daniel Alarcn For 2012, California Reads was part of our Searching for Democracy initiative. Library programming encompassed a wide variety of activities, many planned with local schools and civic or cultural organizations, including: autobiographical presentations by Japanese American seniors who were interned during WWII; disaster and emergency preparedness workshops; pre-election forums; musical performances; voter registration; community discussions about civil rights; internment camp tours; photographic exhibitions; film screenings; disaster chef cooking workshops; presentations on Constitutional law; art and videomaking contests for youth; poetry readings; author visits; and more.
For complete descriptions of projects, please visit the Programs/Community Stories section of our website. Sign up for our e-newsletter at www. calhum.org to receive information about how and when to apply for a grant.
The latest Community Stories projects encompass a range of subjects, including: (top) students involved in the DREAM movement; (second photo, inset courtesy C.R. Snyder) Beat artist Bernice Bing; (third photo) the Watts Riots/ Rebellion; (fourth photo - courtesy Andrew Page) Cambodian communities and celebrations in California; and (fifth photo) Sacramentos foodscape.
14
15
SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE 312 Sutter Street, Suite 601 San Francisco, CA 94108 415/391.1474
LOS ANGELES OFFICE 1000 North Alameda Street, Suite 240 Los Angeles, CA 90012 213/346.3234
BOARD
Board Chair LUIS HERRERA City Librarian San Francisco Public Library Board Vice Chair ROBERT FEYER Partner, Public Finance Orrick, Herrington and Sutcliffe LLP San Francisco Board Chair Emeritus CURTIS F. SHEPARD Director of Children, Youth and Family Services L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center Los Angeles CHRIS ABANI Novelist and Professor of Creative Writing UC Riverside AIDA ALVAREZ Former Administrator U.S. Small Business Administration KENYA DAVIS-HAYES Assistant Professor of American History California Baptist University Riverside BILL DEVERELL Professor of History University of Southern California, Los Angeles MARK L. FRIEDMAN Founder and President Fulcrum Property Sacramento MARSHA HIRANONAKANISHI Assistant Vice Chancellor Academic Research and Resources Office of the Chancellor California State University, Long Beach ALICE Y. HOM Queer Justice Fund Director Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy Los Angeles DAMON HOROWITZ In-House Philosopher Director of Engineering Google Mountain View BENJAMIN T. JEALOUS President and CEO NAACP Baltimore, MD BROOKE KANTER Public Art Advocate Beverly Hills BERNARD KINSEY Philanthropist and Entrepreneur Los Angeles JOHN KRASZNEKEWICZ Principal Rustic Partners, Inc. Carmel JOHN LESCROART Author Davis NATALIA MOLINA Associate Professor of History and Urban Studies UC San Diego CORNELIUS MOORE Co-Director California Newsreel San Francisco JUDY SALTER President and CEO Emerita of Turtle Bay Exploration Park Redding SANDRA SERRANO Chancellor Kern Community College District Bakersfield MARGARET SHELLEDA Executive Director Emerita California Federation of Teachers Oakland RODNEY WILLIAMS Senior Vice President Hennessy for Mot Hennessy USA New York City, NY CYNTHIA J. WORNHAM Vice President Marketing & Communications Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County BRENDA WRIGHT SVP Community Relations Manager West Region Wells Fargo San Francisco
STAFF
SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE RALPH LEWIN President and CEO KAREN RODRIGUEZ Chief Financial Officer VANESSA WHANG Director of Programs REGAN DOUGLASS Communications Officer JOHN LIGHTFOOT Program Officer LUCY LE NGUYEN Grants & Contracts Manager JULIA MARYANSKA Media Consultant JODY SAHOTA External Affairs Coordinator JESSICA SANCHEZ Executive Assistant CARLOS TORRES Operations Coordinator ANN YOSHINAGA Development Officer LOS ANGELES OFFICE TONYA JONES Program Associate FELICIA KELLEY Senior Program Officer