Each year Oregon State University provides opportunities for our community to honor the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. by participating in impactful, inclusive, and engaging celebration.  This year the Office of Equity and Inclusion and the Office of the President are working with units across campus to offer more than 20 events from January 12th to 23rd.

For the full calendar of events, click here.

As part of this celebration, our SEJ group is organizing and hosting a ‘brown bag’ discussion:

Is This Kansas?

Wednesday, January 14

12-1 PM

303 Furman Hall

“Is This Kansas?” is an essay from Notes from No Man’s Land by Eula Biss. It focuses on the author’s time teaching at the University of Iowa. We invite you to participate in a discussion of the essay’s themes: pardoning students for behavior that wouldn’t be tolerated in any other subculture; university hierarchies of influence/power; White students’ failure to see racism or sexism in their community; media coverage of racially-charged events.

Copies of the book are available for loan in 104 Furman Hall. You may request a copy of just this essay by emailing stacey.lee@oregonstate.edu.

We also highly encourage you to participate in the MLK Jr. Day of Service on Saturday, January 17. Many of the service opportunities organized through OSU’s Center for Civic Engagement are family friendly.

OSU Associate Professor José-Antonio Orosco has a new article on TruthOut’s website: Portland Photo Distracts From the Real Problems of Race. It’s a short, important piece about why individual acts of kindness and outreach, no matter how genuine, are not enough to solve the issues exemplified by the Ferguson and Staten Island killings of unarmed Black men at the hands of now acquitted police officers.  As Orosco states, “What we need – more than a few feel good moments – is a serious discussion about ongoing white supremacy amid fears of economic scarcity, the devaluation of nonwhite lives, especially those of young Black men, the increasing accumulation of firepower of the state for use against its own citizens, and a political sphere increasingly dominated by discussions about how to divest itself from programs of social opportunity.”

In light of last night’s grand jury decision in Ferguson and the initial press coverage, I can’t help but be reminded of Eula Biss’s essay, “Is This Kansas” in her book Notes from No Man’s Land.  In this essay, she discusses her days at the University of Iowa, comparing students’ negative and incorrect assumptions about New York City with the denial of how dangerous their own drunken behavior was. Hurricane Katrina happened during that time, as did a tornado in Iowa City. She contrasts the media coverage of looting and violence in these two natural disasters. Here are three of my favorite quotes:

  • “When looting broke out in New Orleans, American suddenly became a moral nation..Now while people were waiting in the Superdome for the government to fulfill its most basic duty toward its citizens, everyone from the Associated Press to Fox News was interested in examining the ethics of stealing during a crisis.”
  • “Our willingness to imagine our own people as villains, as savages, is not a private problem of unclean thinking. It is an issue of public safety.”
  • “Unlike the reports of violence, many of the reports of looting in New Orleans were, in fact, substantiated…The facts of the reports may have been true, but the motives driving the reporting , and the motives behind the public fascination with the story, were based on old lies about who steals from whom in this country. And it was evident from the strange enthusiasm, the eagerness, with which those reports of looting were met that readers were not interested so much in the looting as they were in how well it supported their sickest suspicion of black people. Our willingness to believe the news is, in many cases, not entirely innocent.”

Stayed tuned about an event around No Man’s Land during winter term. Copies of the book are available for checkout in Furman 104.

Today, Ken Winograd invites us to participate in a small demonstration outside Furman, along 15th Street, in response to the recent events in Ferguson. Bring signs to hold for passing vehicles, protesting racism, urging justice, or whatever moves you. Poster paper and markers will be near and around the sitting area outside Room 102 Furman. Action is from around 11:45 to 12:30.

Dominque Austin of the Lonnie B. Harris Black Cultural Center and Intercultural Student Services shares that various campus departments are hosting an open-to-all, safe space for processing the shooting of Michael Brown and the current racial tensions in the USA and in our communities. This community dialogue will take place today, Tuesday November 25th, at 3pm in MU 208. As Austin states, “Our hope is to provide a space for student and community members to engage in dialogue about issues that are affecting our community and how we create climate of justice at OSU.”  A Facebook event page has been created to promote the dialogue.

OSU’s Office of Intercultural Student Services (ISS) is now recruiting participant for their annual social justice retreats. Racial Aikido and Examining White Identity in a Multicultural World retreats were created to promote a campus dialogue about race and racism at OSU and beyond. All students are welcome to participate. Both retreats engage in the active exploration of the concept of race and how race impacts our lived experiences and interactions. The retreats are co-funded and planned by various Student Affairs departments on campus and are provided free of charge to students. The application deadline is December 2. There is an informational session on Thursday November 20, 2014 at 12:00PM – 1:00PM in Memorial Union 208.

Christopher Joyce reported this morning about the United Nations Climate Report that came from a meeting in Copenhagen on Sunday: U.N. Report Warns of ‘Irreversible’ Damage to Earth’s Climate.

What are your ideas for teaching about the environment? You can find some starting places on the Kids.gov website. Want to do something locally? As reported in OSU Today, the Student Sustainability Initiative is accepting applications for Sustainability Project, Research and Professional Development Grants. Grants provide students opportunities to create a more sustainable institution and take an active role in promoting social change. Application materials are available at: http://sli.oregonstate.edu/ssi. The deadline for Project and Research Grants is December 14.