The Intimacy of Brevity: Praise for the Short Poem

By Angela M. Brommel
Brevity is a kind of intimacy. The short poem exists in the spark of a passing moment. It works because it has good emotional shorthand. The writer gives you a glimpse into another world, and you are invested in its story and images because you feel something even if you don’t have or understand all of the details.

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Too Much Information

By Scott Dickensheets
Pity the historical novelist of the 2070s, ready to embark on a tale set in our times. The very plenitude of meaning-rich incident that tingles her storytelling antennae — a pandemic and a contested election and nationwide protests and an attempted insurrection and climate change events and Ted Cruz’s quarantine beard — will also pose a daunting challenge, as noted by many frazzled 2020 posts on the socials: If this was fiction, it would NOT be believable. There’s too much good stuff demanding inclusion, and we haven’t even gotten to the Cat Lawyer.

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The Voice of the Turtle, and of My Life

By Michael Green
“Lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and gone, the flowers appear on the earth, the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land.” If those words look familiar, they are from Song of Solomon. They also are how Ernie Harwell began the first Detroit Tigers spring training broadcast for four decades. They meant spring had arrived, and so had baseball.

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Delegation + Design

By Mark Salinas
Representation in the arts has shifted dramatically over the years from a traditional means of marketing–through established gallery or talent agency representation–to more expedited manners, which connects the artist and audience directly. For most artists, methods of remote self-representation—thanks to the internet—were commonplace before the pandemic. Lesser equipped with such physical flexibility are the traditional arts and culture brick-and-mortars whose artists, audience, and income rely heavily upon in-person experiences.

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A Conversation with Isabel Wilkerson on Caste, Community, and Injustice in America

By Staff of Nevada Humanities
Today Nevada Humanities, in collaboration with Core Humanities in the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Nevada, Reno, The Humanities Center at Great Basin College, and with the Department of Interdisciplinary, Gender, and Ethnic Studies at UNLV, welcomes author and historian Isabel Wilkerson to a keynote talk about race, Black migration throughout the western United States, and her new book Caste: The Origins of our Discontents, a comprehensive analysis of the United States as a hierarchical society.

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Kathleen Kuo
A Breath of Fresh Air

By Staff of Nevada Humanities
Can you remember the last time you picked up a rock to study it, smelled a flower, listened to the birds in the trees, or lay on your back to watch the clouds go by? When was the last time you stepped outside and stopped to appreciate your surroundings? In these socially distant times, nurturing our relationships with one another has become of paramount importance, but it is worth considering how we can also find solace, comfort, and inspiration in our relationship with the natural world.

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Vegas Folk

By Sean C. Jones
Several years ago, I tasked myself with doing what I’ve required my public-school art class kids to do for over 20 years – a “Daily Drawing.” I bet myself I could do 365 drawings daily, even on weekends, and post them on social media. It was fun, occasionally stressful, but I just drew whatever I wanted to.

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FASHION CENS-US

By Mary Bennett
As a lifelong thespian, I have a tendency to approach my life/work/creative opportunities as roles that should be costumed and researched, whether they are related to theatre or not. Because I am a freelance thespian, I am also a renaissance minded person, creating and unearthing varieties of occupations to support my thespianism. Through my quest for filling in work voids, I have adapted the styles of the time to dress for my miscellany of occupational roles.

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Moving to Music

By MJ Ubando
People always look skeptical when I tell them I’ve crowd-surfed. I don’t necessarily blame them. These days, and for most of my life, I’ve always been a bit of a grandma. At 32 years old, I love acrylic sweaters, a cup of warm tea, and will spout out Golden Girls quotes at any given opportunity.

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Nevada P.S. I Love You

By Bobbie Ann Howell
What now seems like a thousand years ago I flew up to Reno from Las Vegas to meet two friends, artists Candace Garlock, Fine Arts Professor, Truckee Meadows Community College, Reno, and Cindy Whitaker, Cinderella Studio Photography, Winnemucca. We were meeting to talk about an idea we had for a cultural exchange project to connect people from urban communities to people in rural communities.

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What Futures Will We Build Together?

By Wendy Kveck
The impetus for curating New Monuments for a Future Las Vegas for the Nevada Humanities Exhibition Series, which is currently on view at the Nevada Humanities Program Gallery and online at nevadahumanities.org, was my experience teaching the inaugural Las Vegas Seminar, Finding America in Las Vegas, last spring in the Department of Art at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. A lofty premise! but I stand behind it.

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Together, We Can Make Nevada a Better Place

By Staff of Nevada Humanities
At Nevada Humanities, we create and fund programs that use the humanities to illuminate our diverse histories and chart a path forward in a dramatically changing world. We know the critical role that the humanities play in nurturing just and healthy communities, in connecting people, providing space for diverse perspectives, and strengthening our community bonds with deeper intellectual and cultural engagement.

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A Year of Losing… and Gaining

By Michael Green
The obituary stood out to me: Frederick Hesse Stitt, Jr. It noted that he was 62, well liked, and overcame addiction. I knew all that. I met him at the gym, and he gave me a greater gift than he realized. That I would recognize a name in the obituary column probably is unsurprising. I write and teach about Las Vegas history, and I’m likely to know some names that others would miss.

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Straight from the Heart

By Kathleen Kuo
I have been working remotely from my home in Las Vegas since April 1, my first day of employment at Nevada Humanities. It feels strange to be homebound, leaving only for essential errands, and I feel this lack of human connection even more so because of Nevada Humanities’ emphasis on producing and forging meaningful human connections and programs.

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What the Humanities Mean to Me

An Interview with Antoinette Cavanaugh—New Board Chair of Nevada Humanities
Humanities, from my viewpoint, is the individual and unique artistic expression of our perceptions, feelings, and passions about the world around us. Our individual gifts of expression provide others the opportunity to interpret that which is expressed. These creative interactions then encourage growth and understanding of and between all of us.

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Gear Up to Give on GivingTuesday

By Staff of Nevada Humanities
GivingTuesday, a global day of giving that harnesses the collective power of individuals, communities, and organizations to encourage philanthropy and to celebrate generosity worldwide is coming and you can be part of the movement to fund our work.

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