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Topic: Arts and Humanities

Displaying 109 - 126 of 868
  • Off-loom and online — App State art professor creatively approaches studio class
    Off-loom and online — App State art professor creatively approaches studio class
    May 8, 2020

    A move to online instruction due to COVID-19 prompted Appalachian art professor Jeana Klein and her students to think outside the loom regarding materials used in their weaving projects. Horsehair and ladies’ tights are among some of the unconventional items used.

  • Netflix shows like 'Too Hot to Handle' and 'Love Is Blind' offer more stereotypes than insights [faculty op-ed]
    Netflix shows like 'Too Hot to Handle' and 'Love Is Blind' offer more stereotypes than insights [faculty op-ed]
    NBC News
    May 8, 2020

    In this opinion piece, Appalachian sociologist Dr. Ellen Lamont — author of “The Mating Game: How Gender Still Shapes How We Date” — reviews two new shows and the images they offer of love.

  • App State seniors pivot to finish movie production while socially distanced
    App State seniors pivot to finish movie production while socially distanced
    May 8, 2020

    The original, student-produced movie “Where You Should Be” follows four Appalachian broadcasting students and the uncertainty they face with graduation looming. Read how the movie’s creators — three graduating Appalachian seniors — finished the movie in the face of COVID-19 restrictions.

  • Local author uses art to help teach kids during pandemic [program mentioned]
    Local author uses art to help teach kids during pandemic [program mentioned]
    WSOC
    May 8, 2020

    Tyler LeBlanc, an alumnus of Appalachian State University’s Scholars with Diverse Abilities Program, is featured in this television segment that highlights his puppets and their messages for children regarding how to stay safe and process their emotions during COVID-19.

  • App State business writing students help hometown communities through class project
    App State business writing students help hometown communities through class project
    April 29, 2020

    An Appalachian State University faculty member has turned her students’ final class project into an opportunity to help their local communities during COVID-19.

  • App State librarian selects 50th annual Coretta Scott King Book Awards winners as CSK juror
    App State librarian selects 50th annual Coretta Scott King Book Awards winners as CSK juror
    April 29, 2020

    As one of seven members chosen to serve on the Coretta Scott King (CSK) Book Awards Jury, Appalachian librarian Jewel Davis is responsible for helping select CSK Book Awards winners — awards recognizing the artistic expression of the black experience through literary and graphic arts.

  • App State sophomore wins top prize in 2019–20 Otto Zenke Student Design Competition
    App State sophomore wins top prize in 2019–20 Otto Zenke Student Design Competition
    April 23, 2020

    Sophomore Isaac Wood, an interior design major at Appalachian, has won the top prize — a $1,000 scholarship — in the 2019–20 Otto Zenke Student Design Competition for North and South Carolina students. Appalachian’s applied design program received a matching $1,000 prize.

  • App State’s Turchin Center for the Visual Arts creates opportunities to engage with the arts at home
    App State’s Turchin Center for the Visual Arts creates opportunities to engage with the arts at home
    April 21, 2020

    Appalachian State University’s Turchin Center for the Visual Arts provides online access to its exhibitions and programming to engage the Appalachian and greater communities.

  • With Empty Campuses, College Radio Stations Face Uphill Battle During Coronavirus [student quoted]
    With Empty Campuses, College Radio Stations Face Uphill Battle During Coronavirus [student quoted]
    Billboard
    April 20, 2020

    While a third of the nation’s college stations aren’t operating during COVID-19, student station manager Nate Saunders says Appalachian's radio station 90.5 WASU FM is running strong.

  • Appalachian State University Students Sing 'The Song of Purple Summer' in Lieu of Cancelled Production of SPRING AWAKENING
    Appalachian State University Students Sing 'The Song of Purple Summer' in Lieu of Cancelled Production of SPRING AWAKENING
    Broadway World
    April 11, 2020

    In honor of their cancelled production of “Spring Awakening,” students from Appalachian State University put together a video of themselves singing The Song of Purple Summer.

  • Civil War Talk Radio: ‘The Environmental History of the Civil War’ [faculty featured]
    Civil War Talk Radio: ‘The Environmental History of the Civil War’ [faculty featured]
    VoiceAmerica
    April 8, 2020

    In this episode, Dr. Timothy Silver of Appalachian State University’s Department of History talks about his newly released book co-authored with App State colleague Judkin Browning titled "The Environmental History of the Civil War.” Silver discuss the impacts of health, medicine, weather and other environmental issues during the Civil War with host Gerald Prokopowicz of East Carolina University.

  • App State student videographer creates online fandom for family beagle
    App State student videographer creates online fandom for family beagle
    April 7, 2020

    A 30-second video assignment completed by an Appalachian State University student videographer has earned a social media following and fame for Vanya, a beagle living the good life in Salisbury.

  • Turn the channel to AppTV — the Best College TV Station of 2020
    Turn the channel to AppTV — the Best College TV Station of 2020
    April 3, 2020

    Appalachian’s student-run media outlets — The Appalachian newspaper, The App (WASU-FM 90.5) radio station and AppTV — were recognized for excellence in communication at the 80th annual Intercollegiate Broadcast System International Media Conference held March 6–8, 2020, in New York City.

  • The news must go on: App State’s student-run media continue remotely
    The news must go on: App State’s student-run media continue remotely
    April 3, 2020

    Appalachian State University’s student-run media transition to an all-online format to report breaking news and COVID-19 developments.

  • App State’s Turchin Center for the Visual Arts creates Little Free Art Pantry
    App State’s Turchin Center for the Visual Arts creates Little Free Art Pantry
    March 30, 2020

    The Turchin Center’s Little Free Art Pantry provides free bundles of art supplies for the community. Each bundle is themed and includes instructions. Themes include “Paint Night,” “Watercolor,” “Visual Journaling” and “Collage.”

  • SoundAffect: Nikki Giovanni on holding on and letting go
    SoundAffect: Nikki Giovanni on holding on and letting go
    March 27, 2020

    A Civil Rights activist and world-renowned poet, Nikki Giovanni's journey led her from Knoxville, TN to the forefront of the late 1960s Black Arts Movement. On the path she fell in love with hospitals and space, befriended gangsters and nuns, and determined that writing is not about keeping score - but it is about making a point.

  • App State’s Dr. David Koppenhaver co-authors book on ‘Literacy for All’
    App State’s Dr. David Koppenhaver co-authors book on ‘Literacy for All’
    March 25, 2020

    The book “Comprehensive Literacy for All,” co-authored by Appalachian professor of reading Dr. David Koppenhaver, serves as a “practical guide to providing comprehensive, high-quality literacy instruction to students with significant disabilities.”

  • Seen through the eyes of folklorists and educators, Appalachia is a region still defined by its people [faculty quoted]
    Seen through the eyes of folklorists and educators, Appalachia is a region still defined by its people [faculty quoted]
    Daily Mail WV
    March 19, 2020

    People in Appalachia have a spirit of collaboration as they find new ways and look for new experiences that will help the region grow, says Tom Hansell, interim director of the Center for Appalachian Studies at Appalachian State University.

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