door to door

By Emilee Wirshing

you may have noticed something missing,
an inventory of your guest rooms will tell you
someone kept a souvenir
and while your kind,
no-questions-asked policy
of covering the shipping
on the bronze stamped diamond tags
is often an invitation to return them…
my grandfather had no intention
of giving back your keys;

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Christianna Shortridge
Of Meditation and Redemption—Two Poems

By Shaun T. Griffin

Floating the Yangtze Shallows, Still as Rice—

one oar tipping the water to shore,
and Wang Wei lays a reed across the bow
like the heron, quiet overhead.

No thing can stop such flight—the poet
in his boat—a single tremor
on the water.  This is how the smoke

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Christianna Shortridge
Welcoming a New Year Filled with Meaning, Joy, and an Abundance of Humanities Moments

By Christina Barr

When the members of the Nevada Humanities Board of Trustees and our staff gather together we often begin our meetings with a round robin of people sharing their most recent humanities moments. Everyone talks about humanities programs they have attended; books, movies, holidays, and celebrations laden with cultural significance; journeys they have taken to explore new cultures; family history projects; and much more.

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Christianna Shortridge
Between Earth & Sky

By Rossitza Todorova

Between Earth & Sky: Exploring the Great Basin Through the Eyes of Northern Nevada Artists is a vibrant group exhibition celebrating the unique high desert of Nevada’s Great Basin. Thirteen artists, including Galen Brown, Grace Davis, Gerald Lee Franzen, Ahren Hertel, Scott Hinton, Asa Kennedy, Kirsten Mashinter, Melissa Melero-Moose, Elaine Parks, Austin Pratt, Gail Rappa, Rachel Stiff, and Sidne Teske, employ diverse mediums such as painting, photography, sculpture, and mixed media to capture the landscape's expanse, fragmentation, and distinct vantage points.

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Christianna Shortridge
Burning Man: A Week-Long Demonstration of What We Can Accomplish as a Community, What Connects Us to Each Other and Our World

By Mckenzie Papa

“If you think we panicked, if you think the event was canceled, if you think we didn’t have fun, if you think we were unprepared, if you think we struggled, not only might it show that you don’t fully understand Burning Man, but it may also mean that you're not ready for it. While friends and family were understandably worried due to the media spreading misinformation, we proved to each other how much we can strive when we stick together.”

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Christianna Shortridge
The Avatar Art Project: A Playful Reflection of Our Heroic Selves

By Dr. Jennifer Verive

Finding new ways for college students to engage in metacognition – thinking about how and what one thinks – can be a challenge. This is especially so in my “Strategies for Academic Success” course. Often, this course does not gently invite contemplation, but instead demands self-reflection through a battery of psychological assessments, detailed time tracking, and relentless insistence on weekly To Do lists.

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Christianna Shortridge
From the Colorado to the Mekong River, In Pursuit of Some Very Big Fish

By Zeb Hogan and Stefan Lovgren

The collaboration that led to our book—Chasing Giants: In Search of the World’s Largest Freshwater Fish—goes back almost two decades. We first met in 2006 in Cambodia to start a National Geographic story series on The Megafishes Project, which was Zeb’s quest to find, study, and protect the largest freshwater fish species around the world.

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Christianna Shortridge
Poetry at Play

By Simon Hunt and Heather Lang-Cassera

Via the Humanities at Play virtual series, Nevada Humanities Program Manager Kathleen Kuo recently chatted with authors Simon Hunt and Heather Lang-Cassera about collaborative poetry. They explored the benefits and challenges of writing poems with other people. During the session, they compiled lines of verse from participants to create a collaborative poem!  

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Christianna Shortridge
Nevada's Trees Call Out to Us

By Valerie P. Cohen

Valerie Cohen created the cover art for the 2023 Nevada Humanities’ Nevada Day card.

The trees of the Great Basin speak to us, Juniper, Pinyon, Bristlecone, and Limber Pines. These trees hold within their forms a long history of fortitude in the face of change. How to celebrate their venerable forms? Scientists pay their own kinds of attention. I respond by reading their gestures, drawing many portraits, trying to catch their surprising expressions. One must spend a long time with these trees to hear what they have to say. We listen, as well as we can.

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Christianna Shortridge
Everything around it

By Stephanie Gibson

One of my earliest memories of artmaking was during a Grade 8 class assignment. The teacher placed a wooden rung chair on a table in the center of the room and instructed us *not* to draw it. Instead, he implored the class to draw “everything around it.”

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Christianna Shortridge
Mid-season

Fruit-heavy with pomegranate
hanging from a slender branch,
bending to the fig. A leaf-shadowed
mauve wall separates their oleander
and plum-lined yard from yours with
a string of party lights. When you squint,
they sparkle like a portal in a dune.

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Christianna Shortridge
This City of Visual Overload

By Sarah Calvo

Over the course of 10 years, my husband and I moved seven times around the country. In that time away, the sights were what we missed the most about Las Vegas. This is a city of spectacle and surprise wrapped in sparkling sequins. It has a reputation in every corner of the earth.

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Christianna Shortridge
Twilight

By Jane E. Olive

There is a softness in the twilight.|
Not the rude brilliance of sunlight
So piercing you cannot 
Face it as you drive.
There is an easing off the day’s effort,
A knowing that plans left undone
Wait for another day.

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Christianna Shortridge