
Author, Colson Whitehead, signs copies of his books following a guest-speaking event at ÍćĹź˝ă˝ă
Crack Open a Book with 'Read This!'
The love of reading is taught to many of us at an early age. Getting lost in a world of fiction or reading about real-life events inspires, transforms, and educates with every passing word.
At the University of Arkansas â Fort Smith, the love of books extends beyond the classroom and the university. The âRead This!â program was established in 2009 under the direction of Dr. Keith Fudge and the ÍćĹź˝ă˝ă English Department. The program is a multidisciplinary literacy program to educate participants on important social issues.
Program coordinator Dr. Ann-Gee Lee, a professor of English, rhetoric, and writing, says âRead This!â is ânot just a program for people who love to read, but for people who love to learn.â
âWe try to do more than just read (the book); the author comes, and you try to hype them up,â Lee explained.
So, what else does âRead This!â provide?
Beginning with students taking Composition II courses, the campus big read consists of a book launch, a read-aloud, and other activities.
However, Lee said, âJust reading the book and talking about it in class only gets you so far.â
âWhen we collaborate with other classes, departments, or offices across campus and beyond, we expand the learning outside of our classrooms and expand the perspectives with which to examine the book, which makes for a more interesting and deeper-level reading,â she explained.
The community is invited to participate in a lecture series, discussions, and a speaking engagement with the author or other prominent guests to broaden what is gleaned from each book. The interactions between campus and community help further understand diverse populations and to become more informed and enlightened citizens.
ââRead This!â helps us cross boundaries that are usually parallel from one another and rarely meet,â Lee said. âIt just improves and enhances the entire reading experience so much more.â
Since the programâs inception, ten novels have been read and discussed. The first six years brought a new book to the program, but it has since evolved to dig deeper into each story, with a new one being examined every two years.
Beginning with âTrue Gritâ by Charles Portis, the âRead This!â program has covered: âThe Sunflower: On the Possibilities and Limits of Forgivenessâ by Simon Wiesenthal; âThe Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-timeâ by Mark Haddon; âThe Things They Carriedâ by Tim OâBrien; âThe Joy Luck Clubâ by Amy Tan; âHouse Made of Dawnâ by N. Scott Momaday; âInto the Beautiful Northâ by Luis Alberto Urrea; âStation Elevenâ by Emily St. John Mandel; âKillers of the Flower Moonâ by David Grann; and most recently âThe Nickel Boysâ by Colson Whitehead.
Programming centered around âThe Nickel Boysâ concludes in 2024 and was made possible from funding provided by the Winthrop Rockefeller Distinguished Lecture program and a grant from the Arkansas Humanities Council and National Endowment for the Humanities.
Through the grant, Whitehead came to ÍćĹź˝ă˝ă to discuss his novel with students, faculty, staff, and residents of the River Valley. During the presentation, Karen Haggard, a committee member and student success librarian, was immersed in a conversation with a high school student who had previously read âThe Nickel Boys.â
âHis enthusiasm about the book and the chance to hear the author was contagious. Iâm so glad âRead This!â creates those opportunities for students,â Haggard said proudly.
As the programming for âThe Nickel Boysâ continues, Lee organized expert lecturers to discuss what Arkansas reform schools looked like and the disproportionate minority contact in the area. Later, there will be a presentation by Dr. Erin Kimberly, who will go over the forensics related to âThe Nickel Boysâ â the process of finding, digging, and identifying the victims.
Looking back at the programming from past âRead This!â books and extended learning, Lee is pleased with the results. From using your imagination to create live extensions to interactive exhibits for the books, Lee calls experiential learning âone of the best and most meaningful ways to learn.â
âIt just makes everything more fun and interactive and blurs cross-cultural lines,â Lee said.
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The ÍćĹź˝ă˝ă Office of Communications fields all media inquiries for the university. Email Rachel.Putman@uafs.edu for more information.
Send%20an%20EmailRachel Rodemann Putman
- Director of Strategic Communications
- 479-788-7132
- rachel.putman@uafs.edu