Summer 2023

 

ANTH 161/ Cultural Anthropology/ Professor Tami Hill

Cultural Anthropology is the study of individuals and groups within the context of culture. Anthropology draws on many disciplines (history, politics, economics, gender studies, philosophy, linguistics) in the exploration, description, and interpretation of how people use culture to make meaning out of their lives. In this course, we will use the lens of various groups, countries, and cultures across the globe to examine the following topics: how humans have organized themselves over time and across space, religion and ritual, social identity, difference and inequality, colonialism and globalization, immigration and refugees. My main approach is to make the “familiar strange and the strange familiar”—helping us to question our own cultural beliefs and practices which we may take for granted and assume as “natural”—while trying to better understand other cultural practices that we might initially consider strange or bizarre.

GEOG 410/510/ Environment, Society, and the Imagination of Place/ Professor Scott Warren

In geography, delineating regions is one of our most basic tasks. But it is not an easy task. To do it well requires a keen eye to places and their characteristics. Often, the process of regional delineation reflects our imagination of a place and what we think it is like more than its actual characteristics. And the act of dividing up the world into distinct regions, when political or economic power is involved, has profound consequences for people, their livelihoods, and the environment. The course is divided into three parts. First, we learn what the sub discipline of regional geography teaches us about this basic task, and we reflect critically on the relationship between regional delineation, power, and imagination. Second, we dive into the geography of the North American Southwest, the region in which I live and a place often defined more by imagination than reality. Third, students reflect on the places and the regions in which they are from, whether they define that as the Pacific Northwest or elsewhere.

GEOG 442/542/ Urban Geography/ Professor Leslie McLees

Urban geography is the study of the development of cities and the people in them, with a focus on how the built environment and people shape each other. The spaces we live in are planned, built, maintained, and debated by government and non-governmental agencies as well as thousands of individual residents. This class explores the evolution of cities; urban hierarchies, space and belonging; global cities; urban land use patterns; urban renewal; residential segregation, race, and immigration; urban poverty and homelessness; and the challenges and opportunities of life in urban settings.

MATH 111/ College Algebra/ Professor AJ Rise

Algebra needed for calculus including graph sketching, algebra of functions, polynomial functions, rational functions, exponential and logarithmic functions, linear and nonlinear functions.

PS 405/605/ Democracy and Power in Contemporary American Politics/ Professor Gerry Berk

This class examines the ongoing debate about the health and future of American democracy. Some argue that the problem is that politicians violate norms that are necessary to keep the system healthy. Others argue that there are deeper causes of the threats to democracy. The US has seen a massive rise in economic inequality, in which powerful corporations have come to dominate the political process. Racial hierarchy remains a persistent problem, which keeps the US from becoming a fully inclusive democracy. While vigorous social movements have emerged in the past decade to address these issues, the challenges to American democracy persist.

PSY 407/507/ SPANISH – Psychological Perspectives on Social Conflict/ Professor Tamara Niella

This course is centered on Social Psychology, a discipline of science that utilizes the scientific method to comprehend human behavior within a social context. Initially, the class will delve into the foundations of the scientific method, providing an understanding of how knowledge in this field is established. Next, we will explore key findings pertaining to the origins and characteristics of social conflicts, such as political polarization and ideological extremes. A focus of our course will be the role of face-to-face dialogue to encourage idea exchange between differing viewpoints to aid conflict resolution. Throughout the course, we will discuss how these topics can be applied to daily life.

Classes Inside, Summer 2023 

Summer schedules mean that we aren’t able to offer Inside-Out classes, but we continue to be present in the prisons through in-person and packet/correspondence classes.

This summer we have 102 students in four prisons taking six classes. As usual, we are delighted to have a cadre of brand-new students: 24 who are new to our program, half of whom have never taken a college-level class before. Receiving applications is such a joyful part of the process—we have students who are pursuing a goal they never thought was possible, people continuing educations that hold enormous value to them, and others who are attempting something brand-new.

We also have a growing group of students taking classes at the graduate level: eight of our summer students have bachelor’s degrees, either through our program or through previous study. As usual, it is a particular pleasure to support their continued scholarship. It also adds value to the student community inside as people are able to watch their peers aspire to continuing to achieve academic success even after a traditional graduation.

Here’s to a good summer for all!

Sister Helen’s Virtual UO Visit

On May 11th, our program had the honor of virtually welcoming Sister Helen Prejean to the University of Oregon. Sister Helen joined students, faculty, and community members in Lillis Hall via Zoom, as she had just arrived back to Louisiana after sharing time with Richard Glossip in Oklahoma prior to his scheduled execution. She spoke to a group of over 100 attendees with high spirits following Glossip’s stay of execution, remarking that she did not even need a plane to fly back to Louisiana; her hopes and happiness carried her home.

Sister Helen inspired us all with her remarkable stories of resilience, perseverance, positivity, and passion. She discussed news and updates following her time with Glossip, thanking those who worked so tirelessly on his case. Prejean told stories of wonderful and devoted people she met through her career, and shared with us some snippets of her path to where she is today. 

“I was in over my head, and it made me learn. You have to have knowledge, you have to read, and you have to be a part of a community. You can’t do it by yourself. Justice is a long haul, you don’t see overnight changes. But the gift you get is the people you meet along the way… that’s the gift that rewards us.” 

Senator Michael Dembrow, who joined us online, opened the question-and-answer portion by speaking to Sister Helen about prison education in Oregon. She was excited to hear about the work we are doing here, and was happy to hear of Dembrow’s support. Sister Helen took a moment to recognize the value of Inside-Out courses, and urged the audience to take advantage of opportunities that humanize those who are incarcerated. 

“Learning is what keeps you alive, and keeps fueling your heart.”

Sister Helen took time to respond to several UO students and professors as they asked questions about her line of work, the criminal justice system, and broader issues of human rights. One student asked what someone who is passionate about this work, but might not know how to get involved or make changes should do. To this, Sister Helen responded with an invitation to keep learning, keep connecting with people, and keep that fire inside you. 

“How do you know you’re doing what you need to be doing? Your heart keeps firing up. As you meet people, and as you learn about this, as you wake up, and as you grab hands with the community to work for change.” 

The work Sister Helen Prejean engages in is not easy. She is often with people during some of the hardest times of their lives; and yet, she still manages to lead with kindness, love, and a touch of Southern humor. We are greatly appreciative of her for making time to share her wisdom and insight with our community. 

“To be awake to human rights is not darkness, it is light. You are lucky to be young and beginning to be awake. You could have spent your whole life not being awake. To be awake is a great grace. You have agency in your life, you’re not stuck behind bars, you have some agency and some freedom to do some good in the world. And that’s the light.”

Watch Sister Helen’s talk here.

 

Ducks Give Day

Today is Ducks Give – a day when alumni and friends of the UO come together to raise funds to support programs across campus – and the UO Prison Education Program is participating for the third year! 

 

What have we done this year? 

  • Held 6 Inside-Out classes and 19 other classes 
  • Brought ​over 90 UO campus-based students, faculty, and staff into classes in the prisons, and served ​over ​450 incarcerated people 
  • Celebrated another two additional people completing their Bachelor’s Degrees while incarcerated 
  • Expanded our network of partnerships on campus and in the community 

Our work changes lives. We hope you will support us as we expand, deepen, and innovate our programs. Help us continue to grow with a gift to the Prison Education Program today.

 

Current fundraising efforts: 

  • Providing new support for people re-entering the community  
  • Purchasing graphing calculators for students at the Oregon State Penitentiary 
  • Support for our 6 continuing interns, and the 4 we will select next week (!) 
  • Purchasing books for classes  

 

Share this email with your network and encourage them to do the same, then watch the page for updates in real time, as we grow our family of supporters. Together, we will empower individuals to learn, lead, and contribute to the community through the Prison Education Program.

 

Thank you!

Internship Application for 23/24 Open Through May 17th

Announcing: Prison Education Program internship applications open for our internship for the upcoming year! Applications are due May 17th by 11:59pm

University of Oregon’s Prison Education Program is opening applications for our 2023-2024 Internship. Our interns help us with all elements of our program, providing support for in-person classes inside the prisons, distance learning, in-person events, communication, research, logistics support, etc. We are seeking students who are passionate about this kind of work, will be flexible in a changing work environment, have the emotional maturity to work in difficult spaces, work as a team but also be able to do independent projects, and are able to abide by a range of rules that make our work possible. We encourage non-traditional students and people with lived experience with the justice system to apply. You must be a current, full-time UO student, and unfortunately Graduate students with GE appointments cannot be program interns.

If you are interested, please apply here. A more detailed description of the position is also in the application.

Additional questions can be sent to Katie Dwyer at kdwyer6@uoregon.edu 

Apply to Spring Inside Out Classses

FALL 2023 / THE ETHICS OF AMBIGUITY / HC444/431H / DAWN MARLAN

Institutions manage and process people. Medicine, like many institutions, tends to define people in terms of their problems – disease, drugs, mental illness. Fiction inverts this structure, seeing character as something that transcends problems. Fiction tends not to diagnose, pathologize, or moralize. And while medicine leans toward closure (a cure, death), narrative’s drive toward resolution is most satisfying, I would argue, when the questions that drive the narrative remain, to some degree, unanswered, retaining mystery.

 

The new field of Narrative Medicine, inaugurated at Columbia University by a team of doctors, scientists, literature and film scholars, and fiction writers, begins with the premise that medicine centrally involves a nuanced human exchange mediated by language, specifically narrative. A patient tells a story, and a practitioner interprets, retells, alters, and “concludes” it, often without doing justice to the complexity of such an exchange, the power relationships that animate it, and without recognizing the ways in which “closure” eludes us. Institutions are designed to solve problems, not multiple them. Yet by imposing closure prematurely, science “ignores the ethical demand out of which it arises,” namely, its commitment to doubt, uncertainty and ignorance, hallmarks of scientific inquiry. The promise of narrative medicine is that literary values and techniques of interpretation can answer this ethical demand in multiple ways: by restoring attention to the ambiguity and nuance, which fruitful narrative exchanges require; increasing tolerance for uncertainty; sharpening powers of observation and reflection; developing awareness of our affect and its interference in interpretation; building cooperation and trust in relationships that are traditionally hierarchical; respecting different forms of knowledge and experience; adopting a practice of radical listening, and fostering creativity. In this course, we will study some of the most striking and innovative short stories in various linguistic traditions and periods alongside theoretical materials that will help us to better understand the elements of narrative and the principles of Narrative Medicine. By focusing on moments of ambiguity and problems of closure, we will accept the Jamesian challenge laid out in The Art of Fiction: “Try to be one of those on whom nothing is lost.” Assignments will be both interpretative and creative.

Application: Application Inside-Out Fall 2023 – Dawn Marlan CHC (1)

FALL 2023 / CLIMATE JUSTICE / ENVS410/510 / MARK CAREY

How do different groups of people live with, or sometimes die from, climate change impacts? Who produces the knowledge to grapple with climate change — and who doesn’t? How is climate change experienced, understood, studied, and managed in different ways depending on race, class, gender, age, and geography? These are the kinds of questions this course tackles to learn about environmental justice, about the unevenness of climate change, and about ourselves. The course will grapple with these issues across many places worldwide: from coastlines and mountains, to prisons and Antarctic icebergs, to farms and food. While the course will examine theoretical and scientific aspects of climate, the justice emphasis asks us to think also about ethics, morality, and fairness. Ultimately, this helps us reflect more profoundly on how people interact with and influence not only our planet but also each other.

Application: Application-Inside-Out-Fall2023_ENVS-ClimateJustice-Carey (1)

FALL 2023 / THE ETHICS OF AMBIGUITY / HC444/431H / DAWN MARLAN

Institutions manage and process people. Medicine, like many institutions, tends to define people in terms of their problems – disease, drugs, mental illness. Fiction inverts this structure, seeing character as something that transcends problems. Fiction tends not to diagnose, pathologize, or moralize. And while medicine leans toward closure (a cure, death), narrative’s drive toward resolution is most satisfying, I would argue, when the questions that drive the narrative remain, to some degree, unanswered, retaining mystery.

 

The new field of Narrative Medicine, inaugurated at Columbia University by a team of doctors, scientists, literature and film scholars, and fiction writers, begins with the premise that medicine centrally involves a nuanced human exchange mediated by language, specifically narrative. A patient tells a story, and a practitioner interprets, retells, alters, and “concludes” it, often without doing justice to the complexity of such an exchange, the power relationships that animate it, and without recognizing the ways in which “closure” eludes us. Institutions are designed to solve problems, not multiple them. Yet by imposing closure prematurely, science “ignores the ethical demand out of which it arises,” namely, its commitment to doubt, uncertainty and ignorance, hallmarks of scientific inquiry. The promise of narrative medicine is that literary values and techniques of interpretation can answer this ethical demand in multiple ways: by restoring attention to the ambiguity and nuance, which fruitful narrative exchanges require; increasing tolerance for uncertainty; sharpening powers of observation and reflection; developing awareness of our affect and its interference in interpretation; building cooperation and trust in relationships that are traditionally hierarchical; respecting different forms of knowledge and experience; adopting a practice of radical listening, and fostering creativity. In this course, we will study some of the most striking and innovative short stories in various linguistic traditions and periods alongside theoretical materials that will help us to better understand the elements of narrative and the principles of Narrative Medicine. By focusing on moments of ambiguity and problems of closure, we will accept the Jamesian challenge laid out in The Art of Fiction: “Try to be one of those on whom nothing is lost.” Assignments will be both interpretative and creative.

Application DUE May 17th: Application Inside-Out Fall 2023 – Dawn Marlan CHC (1)

FALL 2023 / CLIMATE JUSTICE / ENVS410/510 / MARK CAREY

How do different groups of people live with, or sometimes die from, climate change impacts? Who produces the knowledge to grapple with climate change — and who doesn’t? How is climate change experienced, understood, studied, and managed in different ways depending on race, class, gender, age, and geography? These are the kinds of questions this course tackles to learn about environmental justice, about the unevenness of climate change, and about ourselves. The course will grapple with these issues across many places worldwide: from coastlines and mountains, to prisons and Antarctic icebergs, to farms and food. While the course will examine theoretical and scientific aspects of climate, the justice emphasis asks us to think also about ethics, morality, and fairness. Ultimately, this helps us reflect more profoundly on how people interact with and influence not only our planet but also each other.

Application DUE May 17th: Application-Inside-Out-Fall2023_ENVS-ClimateJustice-Carey (1)

Sister Helen Prejean Visiting the UO in May

The University of Oregon’s Prison Education Program invites you to a public talk by award winning author Sister Helen Prejean. A longtime advocate for the poor and disenfranchised, Sister Helen is an international leader in the movement to abolish the death penalty. For over 40 years, Sister Helen has been a voice for people on death row, their families, and the families of their victims. She joins the UO community to share her insights on our country’s justice system. We hope to see you there!

 

Spring 2023

 

PHIL 410/510/ Ethics Through Science Fiction/ Professor Caroline Lundquist

Today, as in the past, our technology often outpaces our ethics. Here, traditional ethical philosophy is of limited use. We– ethicists and laypeople alike– tend to focus our ethical reflection on the here and now, or on the problems that already confront us. The same is rarely true of science fiction, which from its inception has not only anticipated the technologies that will shape our world, but has also, and perhaps more importantly, called readers to think about the ethical consequences of that reshaping. Science fiction therefore has a special role to play in contemporary ethical thinking, by pointing out in advance the ethical questions that are likely to arise in response to technologies that do not yet exist. This course enlists an array of historical and contemporary science fiction in order to revive and rethink some of the most pressing questions in historical ethics in the light of emerging scientific and technological advancements (such as artificial intelligence, genetic manipulation, body modification, cloning and social engineering), and in order to imagine, articulate and begin to address the ethical questions that may and should arise in response to these advancements. In this course we prepare ourselves to fall with grace into the strange new world that is already on the horizon, and approaching fast.

MATH 101/ Math/ Professor AJ Rise

Math 101 is designed as a “bridge” to college math. It starts with a review of some fundamental concepts and then goes over the basics of algebra and other concepts needed for the more advanced math classes.

GEOG 410/510/ Regional Geography/ Professor Scott Warren

In geography, delineating regions is one of our most basic tasks. But it is not an easy task. To do it well requires a keen eye to places and their characteristics. Often, the process of regional delineation reflects our imagination of a place and what we think it is like more than its actual characteristics. And the act of dividing up the world into distinct regions, when political or economic power is involved, has profound consequences for people, their livelihoods, and the environment. The course is divided into three parts. First, we learn what the sub discipline of regional geography teaches us about this basic task, and we reflect critically on the relationship between regional delineation, power, and imagination. Second, we dive into the geography of the North American Southwest, the region in which I live and a place often defined more by imagination than reality. Third, students reflect on the places and the regions in which they are from, whether they define that as the Pacific Northwest or elsewhere.

GEOG 343/ 510/ Power, Culture, and Place/ TBD

This course is about power, culture and place. These terms are closely entangled with personal and social life. Strangely though, these concepts—and many others related to them—are rarely the subject of conscious reflection. Rather, they commonly seem to lurk in the shadows of the material world and the conscious mind. Inseparable from these concepts is the question of space—its definitions, production, partitions, regulations, in/access, etc. Taking a geographic approach, this course aims to shed light on these concepts, how they shape and are shaped by space, and how they impact personal and collective life. The goal is for the students to engage with concepts and theories in contemporary cultural geography and make connections with their own personal experiences.

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