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Frederick E. Berry Library and Learning Commons

IDEA Den

A guide for the Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Awareness Den on the 1st floor of the library - a place for contemplation & discovery

Great art attacks and protests oppression, exploitation and mediocrity

The attempt to divide art and politics is Bourgeois philosophy which says good poetry, art, cannot be political, but since everything is, by the nature of society, political, even an artist or work that claims not to have any politics is making a political statement by that act. Plus, the greatest artists, certainly poets and writers are intensely political but they are in the main anti-bourgeois (though not necessarily Marxists). To say that great US artists like Melville, Twain, Douglass, Dickinson, Whitman,  DuBois, W C Williams, Hughes, Margaret Walker, Baldwin, Tennessee Williams are not political is an extraordinary absurdity. Great art attacks and protests oppression, exploitation and mediocrity directly or indirectly. The Bourgeoisie, in any country, are guilty of all those, hence great art, almost by definition, attacks them. And they fight back. As Sartre said, if you say something’s wrong, but you don’t know what it is, that’s Art. If you say something’s wrong and you know and say exactly what it is, that’s not art that’s social protest!

Amiri Baraka, interviewed in The Argoist Online 

Bread and Roses -- The Radcliffe Pitches

Events

Center for Creative and Performing Arts and the IDEA DEN

Activism and the Arts

Bread and Puppet Theater: Art and Activism in Five Acts             
Exhibition: October 24 – November 18
Gallery Discussions – November 2 and November 9, 12:30-1:30 pm

Bread and Puppet Theater remains a visionary melding of art, activism, puppetry, and street theater. This exhibition features drawings, paintings and sculptures created by the collective.

Writers Series: Yao Xiao and Alexandria Peary
November 3, 7:30 pm
Recital Hall

Yao Xiao’s debut graphic novel “Everything is Beautiful, And I’m Not Afraid” explores the poetics of searching for connection, belonging, and identity through the fictional life of a young, queer immigrant. Inspired by the creator's own experiences as a queer, China-born illustrator living in the United States, this thought-provoking text reveals what it is like to navigate the complexities of seeking belonging.

Melding the Artist and the Activist: A conversation with professors Julie Kiernan and Ken Reker
November 7, 11:30 am – 12:30 pm
Room 214, Berry Library

Professors Kiernan and Reker discuss their creative work and its intersection with activism and social justice issues, including SSU’s annual Veterans Play Festival and the public art installations that are part of the university’s Earth Week celebrations.

Veterans Ten-Minute Play Festival
November 9- 11, 7:30 pm
Sophia Gordon Rehearsal Room

The goal of this festival is to cultivate a supportive environment for creative exploration in and around the varied experiences that surround the military. This festival uses theatre to begin a community conversation that builds bridges between the civilian and military worlds.

Movement Art and Social Concerns - A conversation with Katie Pustizzi ‘14
November 14, 1 – 2 pm
Room 214, Berry Library

Liquid Spine is a global dance series that explores the needs of our water systems through movement art. The first film of the larger series, "Liquid Spine, Cape Ann", highlights the abundance of trash and plastic in the waters and on the shores of Cape Ann, Massachusetts. 

Books at SSU Library

Videos at SSU Library

Poems of Protest, Resistance, and Empowerment

Poems of Protest, Resistance, and Empowerment
Why poetry is necessary and sought after during crises.
BY THE EDITORS, Poetry Foundation
 

Pithy and powerful, poetry is a popular art form at protests and rallies. From the civil rights and women’s liberation movements to Black Lives Matter, poetry is commanding enough to gather crowds in a city square and compact enough to demand attention on social media. Speaking truth to power remains a crucial role of the poet in the face of political and media rhetoric designed to obscure, manipulate, or worse. The selection of poems below call out and talk back to the inhumane forces that threaten from above. They expose grim truths, raise consciousness, and build united fronts. Some insist, as Langston Hughes writes, “That all these walls oppression builds / Will have to go!” Others seek ways to actively “make peace,” as Denise Levertov implores, suggesting that “each act of living” might cultivate collective resistance. All rail against complacency and demonstrate why poetry is necessary and sought after in moments of political crisis.

Illustration by CHema Skandal!

an orange fist holds a pencil against a a background of blue and red lines

Playlists for Protest and Activism

Amplifier Art

AMPLIFIER IS A NONPROFIT DESIGN LAB THAT BUILDS ART AND MEDIA EXPERIMENTS TO AMPLIFY THE MOST IMPORTANT MOVEMENTS OF OUR TIMES.

At Amplifier, the work we do building these symbols matters – but not as much as the work you do carrying them into the world. This art is a partnership with every living soul that encounters it. The way YOU hold it, and where you hang it determines what kind of tool it is. You are what makes this art powerful.

You are the amplifier.

Image: Ride to the Polls by Tracie Ching

People ride horses, cars, skateboards,  scooters with Ride to the Polls superimposed over the images

SEDITION! - A Randy Rainbow Parody

Political Attitude

The opinion that art should have nothing to do with politics is itself a political attitude.

George Orwell (2009). “Facing Unpleasant Facts: Narrative Essays”, p.228, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt