Tag Archives: Spoken Word

Real World Geneseo and the Power of Student Performance

Posted by Kyle Frink, Poetry reader for issue 4.2

Mariposa Fernandez at the McVittie Union Ballroom during All- College Hour January 20th

Mariposa Fernandez at the McVittie Union Ballroom during All- College Hour January 20th

In mid-January of this year several students participated in the Real World Geneseo class taught by Professor Becky Glass, Executive Assistant to the President, and Mrs. Fatima Rodriguez, the Assistant Dean of Students, Multicultural Programs & Services. Even at a school where the majority of students are white, it’s important to note that there are people dedicated to providing resources and support for those who are marginalized and/or underrepresented. The four-day class focused on intersectionality, and the heart of it was a writing seminar lead by Mariposa Fernandez. Fernandez is a Puerto Rican author, poet, and performance artist born and raised in the Bronx. She is the author of Born Bronxeña: Poems on Identity, Love & Survival (2001), and has been featured on the HBO series Habla Ya! and in the HBO documentary Americanos: Latino Life in the United States. She lives in New York City. She, along with Dr. Broomfield, Assistant Professor of Dance Studies, prompted the students to divulge their inner most feelings and share intimate stories about their backgrounds. Some of these students weren’t writers, or familiar with creative nonfiction, and had not ever shared these stories before.

In mid-January of this year several students participated in the Real World Geneseo class taught by

12783802_10207601587090632_7824670462349144150_o

Jenny Soudachanh, Liz Boateng, Seung Yun Kim, Nana Boakye, Momo (Jawad) Tazari, and Skyler Susnick during the performance February 28th.

Professor Becky Glass, Executive Assistant to the President, and Mrs. Fatima Rodriguez, the Assistant Dean of Students, Multicultural Programs & Services. Even at a school where the majority of students are white, it’s important to note that there are people dedicated to providing resources and support for those who are marginalized and/or underrepresented. The four-day class focused on intersectionality, and the heart of it was a writing seminar lead by Mariposa Fernandez. Fernandez is a Puerto Rican author, poet, and performance artist born and raised in the Bronx. She is the author of Born Bronxeña: Poems on Identity, Love & Survival (2001), and has been featured on the HBO series Habla Ya! and in the HBO documentary Americanos: Latino Life in the United States. She lives in New York City. She, along with Dr. Broomfield, Assistant Professor of Dance Studies, prompted the students to divulge their inner most feelings and share intimate stories about their backgrounds. Some of these students weren’t writers, or familiar with creative nonfiction, and had not ever shared these stories before.

The script to the full New Vistas performance is archived in the Theatre department. Video recordings of the performance can be purchased for $25. I went and saw it twice. The powerful message Geneseo’s student artists have to share is more than meaningful; it’s their everyday reality. This performance says, “This is who we are. We are proud. We demand respect. We are the voices of this generation. We are the change.”

Comments Off on Real World Geneseo and the Power of Student Performance

Filed under Blog

Hip Hop Symposium 2016 and a Multimedia Glace at Hip Hop as Performance

Posted by Sean Delles, CNF reader for issue 4.2

“The revolution will not be televised… The revolution will be live”

-Gil Scott Heron

I don’t know about you all out there, but the art of performance has always struck me as being connected in some strange way to the literature we read. I think this correlation exists in my mind not because of something cut and dry that both the forms share (e.g. convention, narrative structure, whatever), but because of the eventual impact these forms have on one’s perception. I often find myself at the end of a great performance getting that same exact inward glow of profundity that one receives finishing a great book. Like suddenly the thin layer of snow plastered onto the side of your car window you couldn’t scrape off from earlier has flung off in-passage, and driving now you can see the glory of what’s in front of you in its entirety.

Perhaps it’s a stretch to compare the afterglow of a performance to driving visibility, but I can’t be the only one who has felt this feeling and marveled at it at some point or another. Here… try this if you think I’m exaggerating: Think to the last time you went to a performance- whether it was a play or a concert or music event- and recall that exact moment you stepped out of the venue. That’s when I’ve noticed the sensation is at its strongest. Feel the cool air of the evening brush against you (your lungs sigh in relief at the prospect of breathing in air that hasn’t already been breathed out by dozens of others); notice the muffled chatter of strangers around you (talking about what transpired inside no doubt); and scan the just-beginning-to-fill street in front of you. You’ll realize then that nothing really even looks like how it once did. That’s the feeling. However long you were in that building witnessing that particular performance, you became separated from yourself. Nothing (if the performance did what it was supposed to do) existed beyond the present moment of spectatorship, and in coming back down to reality your brain got tripped up in transition. Surroundings are new and profound and filled-to-the-brim with meaning, and what you soaked up indoors superimposes itself outdoors onto the very fabric of your personal being. I see this exact moment in time as the true power of performance, because without doing anything but buying a ticket, you alter your consciousness in significant ways.

Continue reading

Comments Off on Hip Hop Symposium 2016 and a Multimedia Glace at Hip Hop as Performance

Filed under Blog