By Staff of Nevada Humanities
As 2021 comes to a close, Nevada Humanities remains thankful for our virtual audiences who have engaged with our programming online. Our virtual programs and events will continue into 2021 as we look forward to offering some in-person programs and events.
By Shaun T. Griffin
In the fall of 2019 my wife and I volunteered at Al Otro Lado in Tijuana. This non-profit is run by a group of fiery Latina lawyers, and their purpose is to help asylum seekers navigate the almost impenetrable immigration process. While they work in the courts as advocates the volunteers work with the families who come to the agency seeking help.
By Jan Petersen
Did you know that Nevada has a museum devoted entirely to Western arts and culture? Located in historic downtown Elko, the Cowboy Arts & Gear Museum is housed on Commerce Street in the G.S. Garcia’s Saddle and Harness Shop building, which was recently nominated to the Nevada State Register of Historic Places.
By Staff of Nevada Humanities
Nevada Humanities is thrilled to share news that Humanities Heart to Heart, a virtual storytelling program of Nevada Humanities, has won the 2021 Helen and Martin Schwartz Prize for outstanding public humanities programming conducted or supported by a state humanities council in 2020.
By Caleb S. Cage
“There’s a term doctors use to describe what happens to COVID-19 patients when their immune systems go into overdrive,” Megan Messerly explained in a piece published on March 28, 2021. “It’s called a cytokine storm.” When one of these storms happens, Messerly wrote, the body responds aggressively, so aggressively in fact that it even attacks healthy organs.
By Flynn Dexter
I would like
To reach into the darkness
With my arms
And scoop it into my hands
(Amorphous jell-o)
By David Gamble Jr.
Although I am an attorney in my day job, one of my passions is stand-up comedy, which I have performed for the last seven years. In this role, I was once able to get a room full of law enforcement officers to agree with the premise that police violence falls disproportionately on African Americans.
By Bobbie Ann Howell
We hoped to get as many people as possible thinking about this question. What is it we love about Nevada, what is it that other people across the state love about Nevada? Does someone in Ely, or Elko, or Denio, or Cal-Nev-Ari love what I love?
By Antoinette Cavanaugh
The earthy scent upon the cool morning air silently announces northern Nevada’s perennial transition of seasonal change to fall. Fine, airy tendrils playfully tease at loose strands of hair playing them against my forehead as if tugging at seemingly ancient Shoshone memories embedded at the back of my mind, announcing, “It is time.”
By Jarret Keene
I love reading short fiction that takes my breath away. Stories that, one after the other, make my head spin with fantastic plots, and with burning questions like: Is the laconic hotel security officer about to witness an ugly fistfight or a make-out reunion between a mature couple on the casino floor? Can an on-the-run mother-daughter duo roaming the post-apocalyptic desert evade the flying sand whales that deafen with uncanny songs?
By Margaret Crowley
The Dalai Lama has it right - we need to talk. More accurately, we need to talk the right way: face to face, with openness and curiosity. In these unprecedented times when hundreds of Americans are dying, we should be connecting with one another, united in grief. Yet we remain polarized, finding it increasingly difficult to engage with those whose viewpoints differ from ours. How has it come to this?
By Joan Paulette Dudley
Write in the ink of the grandmothers: ash from a cold hearth,
tears that fall for no reason, and blood from a needle-pricked finger.
List your fears on a paper bag, pulled from under the sink.
By DeAnna Beachley
she emerges
sloughing bark and leaves
as snakes shed their skin
abandon the old
for the new
By Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Pilea plants can make even the blackest thumbs look positively green. Not just green, but lime, forest, Kelly, viridian, jade, jungle, shamrock, chartreuse, and even honeydew. At a time of so much stillness and uncertainty, the pilea gave me so much promise.
By Ellen Hopkins
I’m currently at a writing retreat, one I’ve done before, but not in a while. Climbing out of the COVID shell and emerging into the familiar. Sort of. I’ve spent the last week preparing for a move, our first in over 30 years. The bio I’ve used for at least a decade says I live with my extended family, and this pivotal moment in my history means uprooting them, too. We will go in different directions, and wind up 2,000 miles apart.
By Abbey L. Pike
Two hundred and thirty-four years ago to the day, the framers signed the Constitution of the United States. Arguably, the Constitution remains the greatest instrument for fair governance ever produced, promising human liberty and dignity to an extent that no country before had ever dared. The framers intended the Constitution to thrive as a lasting document, so they designed a solid basis for governance and individual liberty but wove in avenues for social and governmental change.
By Afsha Bawany
I threw away my Girl Scout badges. I kept them for oh so long that in my decluttering extravaganza, I thought these were items I would have to let go. I wasn’t in Girl Scouts for long. I did not earn a sash. I could let go of my Girl Scout badges, I reasoned, because I did not end up learning how to pitch a tent after all these years. I had not camped under the stars. I did not go backpacking.
By Natalie Van Hoozer
Right now, many people across the nation feel divided. As the bilingual Spanish/English reporter for KUNR Public Radio, I do see division first hand, right here in northern Nevada, where I was born and raised. At the same time, I’ve had community members tell me they want to understand each other better.
Where does one’s literacy journey begin? From birth through childhood, adolescence, adulthood, and beyond, the need for literacy dominates the way we move through the world and understand it. One way we can think of literacy is to think of it as the ability or capacity to communicate and interact with others and to make sense of the world around us. Literacy can also come in many different forms: musical, culinary, financial, digital, and more.
Read MoreBy Kathleen Kuo
I close my eyes, and I hear the ocean. The whispers of wind filtering through leaves of grass, small flies buzzing next to my ears and zipping in and out, the round notes of a bird call. I am peacefully laying in the middle of a mountain meadow on a hot summer day and losing myself in meditative listening. After being cooped up at home for more than a year, Nevada has never sounded more beautiful than in this moment.