CHERRÍE MORAGA
"The Last Exhale of Our Mother’s Breath" — The ‘Work' of the First Generation Writer Thursday, October 13, 2016 - 6:00 PM Crater Lake Room Erb Memorial Union (EMU) 1222 E. 13th Ave.
Activist Methods Workshop Friday, October 14, 2016 - 10:00 AM-Noon Many Nations Longhouse 1630 Columbia St. Space is limited; RSVP required (to csws@uoregon.edu)
CSWS is honored and thrilled to announce that esteemed and iconic Chicana writer, feminist activist, poet, essayist, and playwright Cherríe Moraga will deliver our keynote Lorwin Lecture on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties at 6 p.m. on Thursday, October 13 at the Erb Memorial Union on the UO campus. She will lead an activist methods workshop [see below for description] for faculty and graduate students from 10 a.m. to noon on Friday, October 14 at the Many Nations Longhouse. RSVP to csws@uoregon.edu for limited workshop spaces.Maestra Moraga has been an artist-in-residence at the Stanford University Department of Theater and Performance Studies and in Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity for nearly twenty years. A poet, playwright-director, writer-essayist, educator, and cultural activist, she is also the co-editor of the seminal anthology This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color, which won the Before Columbus American Book Award in 1986. Her most recent work, A Xicana Codex of Changing Consciousness: Writings 2000 - 2010, was published by Duke University Press in 2011.
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She is the recipient of the United States Artist Rockefeller Fellowship for Literature, the American Studies Association Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Lambda Foundation’s “Pioneer” award, among many other honors.
About the Activist Methods Workshop
“There is no ‘method’ to being an Activist. There is only, courage, consciencia and commitment.There is the rigor required in recognizing what we do not know and the willingness to learn on the spot. There is the process of coming to understand the difference between the too-often ease of political rhetoric vs. the true complexity of direct action.” — Cherríe MoragaIn this two-hour workshop Maestra Moraga will field questions from participants about activist organizing strategies and obstacles. She will discuss the relationship between cultural/art production and direct action; on-line activism and direct action; educational institutions and direct action; and more. She will also engage participants in a theater exercise (or two) to approach embodied understanding of power relations and our response to them.
Hosted this year by the Center for the Study of Women in Society, the Lorwin Lectureship on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties is funded by a gift from Val and Madge Lorwin to the University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences and School of Law. This year’s lecture is also being cosponsored by the the UO Office of the Provost and Academic Affairs; CSWS Women of Color Project; Departments of Anthropology, Ethnic Studies, Philosophy, Romance Languages, and Theatre Arts; Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics; Oregon Humanities Center; HUM Program; UO Libraries; Center for Latino/a and Latin American Studies; Clark Honors College; Latin American Studies Program; ASUO Women’s Center; and School of Journalism and Communication.