The Campus Community Book Project is more than a book. The project also has lectures and discussions, a film and a performance, discussions and exhibits (including Justice for All? in Shields Library). The first lecture is Wednesday (Oct. 21).
Taibbi
RESPECTFUL DISCUSSION
The , begun in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and held annually since then, promotes respectful discussion among the university鈥檚 diverse population, around a subject that students, faculty and staff are all reading about.
Each year鈥檚 book selection process starts with a topic 鈥 it鈥檚 鈥渟tructural inequality鈥 for 2015-16.
'THE DIVIDE'
The paperback ia available at 嘿嘿视频 Stores for $11.95, about a 30 percent discount off the list price (and less than the Amazon price!).
You can start reading anytime, of course, or maybe you鈥檝e already begun or finished The Divide: American Injustice in the Age of the Wealth Gap, in which investigative reporter and Rolling Stone magazine contributor Matt Taibbi ponders a 鈥渂izarre statistical mystery鈥 two decades in the making: Poverty goes up. Crime goes down. The prison population doubles.
And, he says in his New York Times best-seller, not one of the new prisoners is among the rich whose fraud wiped out 40 percent of the world鈥檚 wealth.
The book project lectures and panels and other events (most of them free, and all open to the public) are in addition to the book鈥檚 inclusion in many course syllabi this fall quarter. Everything leads up to the author鈥檚 visit, Feb. 3, for two events: a panel discussion (free and open to the public) and an evening talk followed by a book signing.
鈥業f you cannot afford an attorney 鈥︹
In questioning the adequacy of legal representation for low-income people, Taibbi tells about Andrew Brown鈥檚 in New York criminal court after his arrest on a charge of 鈥渙bstructing pedestrian traffic鈥 just before 1 a.m. outside his apartment building. The 35-year-old black man had been similarly harassed countless times before, Taibbi writes.
Brown told his defense attorney (paid by the state to represent low-income defendants): There was no pedestrian traffic to obstruct at 1 in the morning. Nevertheless, the lawyer advised Brown to pay the $25 fine. Brown refused and told the judge the same thing he told the attorney, prompting the judge to ask the arresting officer: Did you see any other people on the sidewalk? No, came the response.
鈥淣ot guilty,鈥 the judge declared. Out in the hallway, Taibbi asks the attorney why white people never get arrested for obstructing pedestrian traffic.
鈥淟ow-class people do low-class things,鈥 Taibbi quotes the attorney as saying.
Legal representation also happens to be the topic of the first lecture in the 2015-16 Campus Community Book Project:
- 鈥 Lisa Pruitt, professor, School of Law; and Gary Smith, executive director of Legal Services of Northern California. Oct. 21.
The first week鈥檚 programming also includes (click on title for details):
- 鈥 Lecture by Steven Lee, graduate diversity officer, STEM disciplines, Office of Graduate Studies. Oct. 22.
- 鈥 The 2013 documentary, presented by the course 鈥淲riting in Social Justice鈥 (University Writing Program 104J). Oct. 23.
Next week鈥檚 schedule includes a panel, a lecture, and a program combining a lecture and performance:
- 鈥 Panel featuring student-run clinics. Oct. 26 (Sacramento campus).
- 鈥 Sarah Lappas, ethnomusicology, California State University, Sacramento. Lecture accompanied by a performance. Oct. 27.
- 鈥 Jesus Hernandez, lecturer, Department of Sociology. Oct. 29.
Other events are still being added to the campus's ; .
Book discussions
- Interprofessional Book Club, 嘿嘿视频 Health System, Sacramento 鈥 Oct. 16, Nov. 9 and Jan. 29.
- Sacramento Community Book Discussion Forum: Is Justice Truly Blind? How the Justice System Operates for the Rich vs. the Poor 鈥 Oct. 27.
- Davis Public Library Book Group 鈥 Nov. 19.
Exhibitions
- 鈥 Resources that can facilitate a discussion about contemporary structural inequalities and their cultural fallout. October-February, first-floor lobby, Shields Library. In preparing the exhibit, David Michalski, social and cultural studies librarian, selected scholarly work from across a variety of academic fields to explore the role geography, cultural norms, economics and social policy play in the maintenance of inequality and the construction of social control. He also devloped an for students looking to pursue these important questions.
- Ai Weiwei Circle of Animals: Zodiac Heads 鈥 Jan. 24-May 1, , 216 O St., Sacramento.
- Revealing Ai Weiwei (interactive) 鈥 Jan. 24-May 1, Crocker Art Museum.
Author鈥檚 visit: Wednesday, Feb. 3
- The Forum @MC 鈥 "Movement of the Moment or an Old Battle Cry: Black Lives Matter," a panel discussion. Moderated by Scott Syphax, president and chief executive officer, Nehemiah Companies; and host and co-executive producer, KVIE Public Television鈥檚 Studio Sacramento. 4-5 p.m., Jackson Hall, . Free.
- Author鈥檚 talk 鈥 Same title as his book, The Divide: American Injustice in the Age of the Wealth Gap. 8-9:30 p.m., Jackson Hall, . Book signing to follow in the Yocha Dehe Grand Lobby. Tickets are available or by visiting or calling the box office. It鈥檚 open from noon to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and one hour before all ticketed events. Telephone: (530) 754-2787 or (800) 754-2787.
All events are open to the public, and all are free except the author's evening talk and the Crocker Art Museum exhibits.
Follow the book project on and .
Media Resources
Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu