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The Community Library

OUTDOORS: Writer-in-Residence Sarah Springer and “How Media Trains Our Brains to Think About Minorities”

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

WATCH THE RECORDING

The Library’s Hemingway Writer-in-Residence, Sarah Springer, Emmy-nominated producer, documentary filmmaker, and creative, will be in conversation with Diana Muñoz, the Library’s communications intern who is working on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives and community conversations.Writer-In-Residence 2021

Expanding on Springer’s 2020 TEDx presentation, “How to Become a True Agent of Change,” co-presented with women-in-film activist Naomi McDougall Jones, Springer and Muñoz will discuss the ways popular media trains our brains to think about minorities, how this conditioning affects our perceptions and treatment of each other, and what it will take to change that.

Bring a low-back lawn chair or blanket and join us for their conversation on the Library’s Donaldson Robb Family Lawn on 4th Street.

Sarah Springer began her career at CNN where she reported and wrote stories about race and identity for Soledad O’Brien’s In America series, then later worked as a producer for ABC’s Good Morning America, Nike, CBS News/60 Minutes, BET, and VICE Media. She began working in immersive storytelling at RYOT Media where she oversaw creative direction and production for immersive, branded, and linear series before becoming an independent consultant and producer/director. Sarah was voted one of the top 28 most powerful black people in media by Blavity and is the Co-creator of STILL HERE, an immersive experience that premiered at the Sundance Festival and was created in partnership with Al Jazeera Contrast that focuses on Black women and their triumph over generational trauma, mass incarceration, gentrification and abuse. She is an activist and advocate for intersectional parity, inclusion and accurate representation in media and teaches about such topics at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. She is also Co-founder of Advocates for Inclusion in Media, an organization that works to create safe environments and a sense of community for underrepresented people in the industry. [Read more…] about OUTDOORS: Writer-in-Residence Sarah Springer and “How Media Trains Our Brains to Think About Minorities”

ZOOM – Tech Help Desk with Paul Zimmerman

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

Do you need one-on-one technical support for some of those more difficult technology challenges you’re facing?

This virtual Help Desk offers 15-minute slots with Paul Zimmerman, the Library’s tech guru, to help you answer your most pressing questions.

The help desk is hosted on Zoom. Meeting information will be sent to registered attendees.

Email mwilliams@comlib.org to sign up.

OUTDOORS – Tech Help Desk with Paul Zimmerman

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

Do you have questions regarding your computer, tablet, phone or smart watch? Paul Zimmerman can help you! Stop by the Library’s Cimino Plaza between 5:00 – 7:00 pm to have all of your questions answered.

The Cimino Plaza is outside the entrance to the Children’s Library at the corner of 4th and Walnut.

Email mwilliams@comlib.org with questions.

Teen Luncheon with Timothy Egan

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

During his visit to Ketchum, Hemingway Distinguished Lecturer Timothy Egan will also participate in a luncheon on Friday, July 9th from 12:00 to 2:00 p.m. with local teens who are interested in discussing social and political issues, the environment, and writing and its craft. A group of eight Wood River Valley students, in grades 9th–12th, will be selected to attend the small event, which will be hosted outdoors at the historic Ernest and Mary Hemingway House in Ketchum.  

Ahead of the luncheon, the students will be invited to choose one of Egan’s recent opinion articles from the New York Times, then meet during the week of June 28th over pizza at the Library to discuss the articles selected, evaluate how an opinion piece is written, and formulate questions to pose to Egan. Students will also be invited to pitch their ideas for op-ed articles to Egan as they discuss the craft of opinion writing during the July 9th luncheon. This is a unique opportunity for local students to engage with and learn from a significant American writer whose work shapes public opinion each week through his wide-ranging books and articles. 

Interested students can email their name and contact information, as well as an optional statement of interest, to the Library’s programs and education manager, Martha Williams, at mwilliams@comlib.org by June 21. Students selected to meet with Egan will also receive two tickets to outdoor lecture on July 8th. 

OUTDOORS: Lunch & Lit

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

The Senior Connection and The Community Library are teaming up this summer to provide nutritious meals, social connection, and cerebral stimulation to elders in the north valley. 

On Thursdays beginning May 6, takeout meals will be available in the Cimino Plaza on the corner of 4th and Walnut Street, at the Children’s Library entrance. 

Lunch will be distributed between 11:30 am – 12:00 pm. 

The Senior Connection will be providing meals at a cost of $5 for adults 60 and better and $8 for those under 60 years of age.  Kids are $4.  Scholarships are available. 

Reservations are required and need to be made by Mondays at noon by calling the Senior Connection at 208-788-3468 or emailing stephanie@seniorconnectionidaho.org.  The menu is available by calling the Senior Connection to be put on their newsletter mailing list or online at www.seniorconnectionidaho.org/menu.  Participants are encouraged to bring their own reusable bag for their lunch.

The Community Library will be providing a reading each week, and beginning in June, as the COVID situation permits, take out diners are encouraged to linger and enjoy lunch in their wonderful outdoor space.  Wi-Fi is available and people can engage with each other while following social distancing protocols.   

Writer-In-Residence Jared Farmer and “How (Not) to Write a Book about Trees and Climate Change”

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

WATCH THE RECORDING

The Community Library’s Hemingway Writer-In-Residence, Jared Farmer, will discuss the book project he is working on while in residency–Survival of the Oldest: Ancient Trees in Modern Times–his project’s local connection to the Wood River Valley, and about the craft and process of nonfiction writing.

Join us outside on the Library’s Donaldson Robb Family Green, and bring your low-back chairs and blankets.

Jared Farmer is the Walter H. Annenberg Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania. His temporal expertise is the long nineteenth century; his regional expertise is the North American West. His recent work has turned to global environmental history across the modern period. Originally from Provo, Utah, Farmer earned his degrees from Utah State University, the University of Montana, and Stanford. His book On Zion’s Mount: Mormons, Indians, and the American Landscape (Harvard, 2008) won the Francis Parkman Prize from the Society of American Historians for the best-written non-fiction book on an American theme, a literary award that honors the “union of the historian and the artist.” His subsequent book, Trees in Paradise: A California History (Norton, 2013), won the Ray Allen Billington Prize from the Organization of American Historians for the best book on the history of Native and/or settler peoples in frontier, border, and borderland zones of intercultural contact in any century to the present. In 2014, the Dallas Institute presented Farmer the Hiett Prize in the Humanities; in 2017, the Carnegie Corporation of New York named him an Andrew Carnegie Fellow; and in 2018, the American Academy in Berlin awarded him a Berlin Prize. His forthcoming book is Survival of the Oldest: Ancient Trees in Modern Times (Basic Books). For previews, see his op-eds in the Los Angeles Times from 2017 and 2020, and a recent interview in Humanities. In collaboration with Penn students, Farmer has begun a new research project called “Petrosylvania.” On Instagram, he posts @geohumanist.

Photo credit: Eric Sucar, UPenn.

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