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The UW-Madison will host a semester-long fall lecture series based on the scholarship and art of Hip-Hop. The public and entire campus community are invited to attend the free lecture series, which is a cooperative venture of the Office of Multicultural Arts Initiatives (OMAI), the Havens Center and the Office of the Vice Provost for Climate and Diversity.
For nine consecutive weeks some of the nation’s top university and college experts on emerging field of Hip-Hop will present their research and perspectives on a variety of themes in academic topics including sociology, history, women’s studies and communication arts. The series is tied to a Hip-Hop studies faculty hire initiative spearheaded by OMAI and supported by a growing number of senior faculty and university departments whose objective is to recruit new, diverse faculty members to the UW-Madison.
“We already know that students cross the performance and expressive skills involved in Hip-Hop into their passion and academic discipline,” said Willie Ney, Executive director of the UW-Madison Office of Multicultural Arts Initiatives, “and these guest experts will explain how Hip-Hop has not only been used as an expressive art of choice for a generation, but also has been intertwined in the evolution of political, social and even technological thought across the globe.”
Every Monday evening at 7 p.m. in 1100 Grainger, the campus and community are invited to attend an open lecture/discussion on the topic of the week. Each Monday, faculty and staff from departments across the campus will join the experts in examining the interplay between Hip-Hop and their academic discipline. Weekly campus faculty discussions are listed on the UW-Madison Havens Center for the Study of Social Structure and Social Change at www.havenscenter.org.
The School of Education Office of Multicultural Initiatives hosts the First Wave Spoken Word and Urban Arts Learning Community, a cutting-edge multicultural artistic program for incoming UW-Madison students. The First Wave Learning Community is the first university program in the country centered on spoken word and hip-hop culture. There are now 45 students in this close-knit, dynamic campus learning community.
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