"The Killing of the Innocent" 2002 by Malaquias Montoya will be on display at the Nelson Gallery through May 21.
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"M*A*S*H" television star and human rights activist Mike Farrell will join other distinguished speakers this spring in challenging ºÙºÙÊÓƵ students and the community to examine their beliefs about capital punishment.
The spring-quarter "Forum on Capital Punishment" will feature public lectures by people involved in the death penalty debate -- pro and con as well as observers. The lectures will be open to the general public and university community.
The unusual program has been organized by Professor Allison P. Coudert, the Castelfranco Chair in Religious Studies, and Professor Malaquias Montoya of Chicana/o studies and art studio. The class coincides with an that features a suite of prints, drawings and paintings titled "Premeditated: Meditations on Capital Punishment" at the Richard L. Nelson Gallery.
Students will start the class by attending the opening of Montoya's exhibition 6-8 p.m. March 30 in the gallery. As part of the exhibition, Swedish artists Bigert and Bergstrom will present their videotape, "The Last Supper." This hour-long work (which will be shown continuously) interviews those who prepare the final meals of condemned inmates around the world.
All three artists will be present and speak at the opening. Following the opening, the class will be held in 3201 Hart Hall.
Farrell, who serves as president of the Death Penalty Focus advocacy group, will speak at 6:30 p.m. April 11. Other speakers will include Montoya, a prosecutor, supporters and opponents of capital punishment among victims' families, a defense attorney who represents serial killers, a newspaper reporter who has covered a number of executions, and an advocate for alternatives to capital punishment.
Students in this class will be asked to step out of the comfortable boundaries of a traditional college class, says Coudert, who came to ºÙºÙÊÓƵ two years ago from Arizona State University. She was hired as the first endowed chair in the Religious Studies Program because of her reputation as a scholar and a teacher.
"The structure of a 'forum' allows students to experience learning on a level of depth and personal involvement unavailable in a traditional university setting," Coudert said.
Students, for example, may elect to work with recognized organizations that can establish pen-pal relationships with death row inmates or volunteer with pro- or anti-capital punishment advocacy groups located throughout the greater Sacramento area.
In addition to weekly reading assignments, students will keep a journal of their responses to the readings, commenting on speakers and out-of-class activities in relation to capital punishment. They also will be expected to do in-depth research on one particular aspect of capital punishment as their final class project.
Montoya's exhibition first opened at the University of Notre Dame in 2004. It has been exhibited in eight art galleries across the nation before coming to ºÙºÙÊÓƵ.
He believes that art serves the purpose of challenging people to rethink their understandings of the world.
"What concerns me is, why do we kill and what happens to us as a humanity, as a culture?" Montoya said. "Why is state-sanctioned killing any different from a killing that takes place in the streets?"
Coudert anticipates that the "forum" approach will be a spur to further interdisciplinary studies, involving topics especially relevant to ºÙºÙÊÓƵ such as medical ethics, environmental policy, genetic engineering, animal rights and euthanasia.
To learn more about the class, people may contact Professor Coudert at apcoudert@ucdavis.edu.
Media Resources
Susanne Rockwell, Web and new media editor, (530) 752-2542, sgrockwell@ucdavis.edu
Allison Coudert, Religious Studies, (530) 752-7599, apcoudert@ucdavis.edu
Malaquias Montoya, Chicana/o Studies, (530) 752-4059, mmontoya@ucdavis.edu