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To read the Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA) May 2025 Month Newsletter, click on the button below.


Director's Letter of the Month:

May 1, 2025

Dear 麻豆免费版下载Boulder Community & Supporters of the CHA,

It鈥檚 May Day 鈥 May 1. So many resonances with the date and the term "May Day."听 An听. A . A 听(mayday/尘鈥檃颈诲别锄). In the times we are living in, .听As a child, I remember making baskets out of construction paper and flowers out of tissue paper, then leaving them on my neighbors鈥 doorsteps.

It鈥檚 been a hard Spring semester 鈥 for reasons I likely don鈥檛 need to enumerate. I鈥檝e had to engage in a lot of mindful breathing, which is a good reminder that when in doubt, slowing down and paying attention to my breath helps to put into perspective that the crises and emergencies around me won鈥檛 be solved by me or others immediately鈥攖hat I need to breathe and figure out what I can do with my limited resources and power.

As director of the and听a scholar who works in critical race theory and Asian American studies, I believe鈥攁rdently鈥攖hat the arts and humanities give us tools to respond, cope, and engage with hard things. When we had our January book club to discuss Ta-Nehisi Coates鈥檚 The Message, we received so much feedback from people that they wished we could do it again. In the uncertainty of what was unfolding nationally, being together over a common reading gave people a sense of community and belonging.

Building on the overwhelmingly positive response from our Spring 2025 book club, we are excited to offer a Fall 2025 book club featuring Northwestern University 听Sarah Schulman鈥檚听(Penguin Random House 2025)鈥攈ere is an excerpt that describes Schulman鈥檚 book:

"For those who seek to combat injustice, solidarity with the oppressed is one of the highest ideals, yet it does not come without complication. In this searing yet uplifting book, award-winning writer and cultural critic Sarah Schulman delves into the intricate and often misunderstood concept of solidarity to provide a new vision for what it means to engage in this work鈥攁nd why it matters."


The first 150 people to sign up on 听visit the CHA office can receive a free copy of the book. Pickups are available May 13 鈥 June 13, Tuesdays 鈥 Fridays, 10am 鈥 4pm at 201 Macky Auditorium. Walk-ins are welcome 鈥 we will collect your information onsite.

NOTE: Macky Auditorium should be open鈥攖he only door that opens is the one to the far left with the wheelchair placard. Please contact us at cu-cha@colorado.edu听to听let us know when you鈥檒l pick up your book. If you can鈥檛 pick up the book between May 13-June 13, email us to request we hold a copy for you when our offices re-open in early August; book discussions will begin late August/early September.

This will be our last newsletter of 2024-25. There鈥檚 a lot of uncertainty in the world鈥攁nd the same is true at the CHA. So let me end by giving flowers (in the colloquial/urban dictionary sense) to those who make the CHA a hub on campus for supporting arts and humanities and a bridge into the community: the amazing CHA staff, and , along with our undergraduate student workers, 听and 鈥攁nd the 听and internal boards, particularly the 听who read multiple applications from students and faculty in support of their arts and humanities projects. I receive a lot of accolades as the director, but I could not be a steward of the CHA without a team of people whose passion for arts and humanities inspires them and me to do the work of the CHA during these times of stress and duress. Thank you for reading this newsletter 鈥 thank you for being artists and humanists, whether by formal training or your passion for these subjects.

I don鈥檛 know how we will navigate the future, but I know that it鈥檚 going to involve a 鈥渨e鈥 鈥 thank you for being part of that we.

Sincerely,

Jennifer Ho
Director, Center for Humanities & the Arts

PS. I just finished listening to the audio book of Michele Obama鈥檚 .听It was soothing to listen to Obama reading her book, though it was also a bit heartbreaking to consider what she and her husband tried to accomplish during the 8 years they were in the White House and what that space is now. I also re-read Ross Gay鈥檚 ,听 the book that closed out the Critical Race Theory grad seminar I taught this Spring. I highly recommend it鈥攂ecause joy is resistance or as Gay writes, 鈥淎nd though attending to what we hate in common is too often all the rage (and it happens also to be very big business), noticing what we love in common, and studying that, might help us survive. It鈥檚 why I think of joy, which gets us to love, as being a practice of survival鈥 (Gay 9-10).

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