The University of Arkansas β Fort Smith will host a kickoff event for the 2019 NEA Big Read: Fort Smith, from 1-3 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 16, in the Reynolds Room of the Smith-Pendergraft Campus Center, located at 800 N. 49th St.
The kickoff will feature a celebration of the NEA Big Read: Fort Smith season of events, numerous games and activities for all ages, and a meet-and-greet opportunity with the community leaders and educators who will be participating in the spring programming. An βOld Tech Museumβ will also be set up in the Reynolds Room, featuring a range of devices from rotary phones to some of the first home computers.
All ages are welcome to this free public event.
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ received the National Endowment for the Artsβ Big Read grant for βStation Eleven,β the best-selling novel by Emily St. John Mandel which was nominated for the National Book Award in 2014. The grant has enabled ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ to book numerous literary events this spring, which will culminate in an author reading and book signing with St. John Mandel on March 26 at the ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Stubblefield Center.
Set 20 years after a flu pandemic destroys most of civilization, βStation Elevenβ tells the story of a woman who moves between the settlements of a devastated world with a small troupe of actors and musicians until they encounter a violent prophet who threatens the existence of the group. The novel received mass acclaim when it was published in 2014, winning the Arthur C. Clarke award and receiving nominations for the PEN/Faulkner Award and the National Book Award.
Mandel has speculated that the rise in post-apocalyptic literature in recent times may be linked to our lack of new frontiers, an idea first presented to her by a bookseller. βItβs no longer possible to set out as a pioneer and stake a claim and start a new life. Now that thatβs all mapped and charted out and there are no more frontiers β thatβs left us with a certain restlessness,β she said.
βOur interest in Mandelβs novel is uniquely linked to our local region,β noted Dr. Cammie Sublette, ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ English, Rhetoric and Writing department head. βWhen there are no new frontiers, sometimes we look to a futuristic world, and sometimes we revisit the past. Fort Smith is engaged in both enterprises, and Mandelβs novel speaks directly to this desire to preserve the past while forging new frontiers.β
The NEA Big Read: Fort Smith (formerly known as the ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Read This! program) supports national trends in higher education in which students and their communities experience a shared text as a basis for cross-disciplinary communication and conversation.
βWe have been a small but dynamic program for many years [as Read This!], but we are thrilled with the chance of being able to showcase our talented faculty as well as the wonderful human and historical resources in the community on a more national scale,β said Dr. Ann-Gee Lee, co-chair of ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Big Read and ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Read This!
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ was selected as one of only 79 organizations nationwide and the only Arkansas institution to receive the NEA Big Read Grant.
βThe selection process for this particular governmental grant is incredibly rigorous,β said Dr. Christian Gerard, assistant professor of English and co-chair of ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Big Read. βThis honor doesnβt just reflect the work happening on the ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ campus, but demonstrates the NEAβs desire to invest in Fort Smith and the NEAβs commitment to further strengthen the bond between ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ and the region through events and enrichment activities focused on literacy and the literary arts.β
The full slate of events is listed below. For more information on the ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Big Read program, contact Lee at Ann-Gee.LeeFREEuafs or Gerard at Christian.GerardFREEuafs
Book Launch and Old Tech Museum [Family friendly]
February 16, 2019 β’ 1-3 p.m.
Reynolds Room, Smith-Pendergraft Campus Center
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Sustainable Living Talk
February 18, 2019 β’ 2-3 p.m.
Garden House by RAWC
525 N 51st Street
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Pandemic Preparedness Talk: Dr. David McClellan
February 19, 2019 β’ 6-8 p.m.
Latture Conference Center, Business Institute/ Flanders Building
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Trading Tales throughout History & Lions Trading Post Talk: Dr. Tom Wing
February 21, 2019 β’ 6-8 p.m.
Smith-Pendergraft Campus Center, Room 129
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Spoken Word/Slam Poetry Performance and Reading: Dr. Christian Gerard and Students
February 26, 2019 β’ 6-8:30 p.m.
Bookish 115 N. 10th, Downtown Fort Smith
Station Eleven Faculty and Student Read Aloud
February 27, 2019 β’ 11am-1 p.m.
Smith-Pendergraft Campus Center, Fireplace
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Instrument Building Presentation and Discussion: Dr. Dennis Siler
March 1, 2019 β’ 2 p.m.-3 p.m.
Latture Conference Center, Business Institute/Flanders Building
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Station Eleven Book Discussion
March 2, 2019 β’ 4-5 p.m.
Bookish 115 N. 10th, Fort Smith
Comic Book Design Art Contest Winners Exhibition
March 4, 2019- March 8, 2019
Don Lee Student Art Gallery - Windgate Art and Design Building, Second Floor
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Station Eleven Book Discussion
March 7, 2019 β’ 6-7 p.m.
Bookish 115 N. 10th, Fort Smith
Music and National Trauma Talk: Dr. Elizabeth Momand and Students
March 11, 2019 β’ 5-6 p.m.
Breedlove Building, Room 105
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
How to Survive a Zombie Apocalypse Talk: Dr. Nicki Reamer
March 11, 2019 β’ 6:30-8 p.m.
Boreham Library, Room 122
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Recycled Art Contest Exhibition
March 11-15, 2019
Don Lee Student Art Gallery - Windgate Art and Design Building, Second Floor
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ Campus
Self-Defense Workshop [Family friendly]
March 13, 2019 β’ 7-8 p.m.
Thompson Defense Academy
Author Talk and Book Signing with Emily St. John Mandel
March 26, 2019 β’ 7-8 p.m.
Stubblefield Center, ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ campus