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Bill Green lends historical perspective to Black Lives Matter media coverage

Summer 2016 Pinterest6

What does it mean to matter? 鈥塛hat does it look like to matter?

With the Black Lives Matter movement, questions of racial equity have ignited important鈥攁nd difficult鈥攃onversations in communities and courtrooms, on political campaign trails, and at听college campuses.

Augsburg College Professor studies and writes about Minnesota history and law. He teaches U.S. Civil Rights subject matter, and he recently has been called upon to share his expertise on these topics听to assist media outlets covering Black Lives Matter news in the Twin Cities.

Green听was quoted in a Minnesota Public Radio article that examined the roles non-black activists play in furthering the听Black Lives Matter movement鈥檚 agenda.

In the article, 鈥,鈥 Green used听the history of the Civil Rights movement to analyze current demonstrations and protests. He also discussed the ways 鈥減rotest fatigue鈥 could impact the movement鈥檚 progression.

On August 5, Green also appeared on听Twin Cities Public Television’s “Almanac” program where he provided a comparison between contemporary protests or听demonstrations and听those occurring decades — perhaps听even centuries — earlier. Green explained that the tactic of making a public display can be useful when a group is seeking to meet a particular goal.

“The trick with the demonstrations, of course, is somehow helping society turn the corner so that … a community doesn’t feel the need to resort to desperate measures,” he said.

The听interview with cohosts Cathy Wurzer and Eric Eskola is available on the and begins at the 31:55 minute mark.

Green’s comprehensive knowledge of Minnesota history has been cultivated over decades, and his latest听book, 鈥淒egrees of Freedom: The Origins of Civil Rights in Minnesota, 1865-1912鈥澨齝hronicles conditions for African-Americans in Minnesota in the half-century following the Civil War. The publication picks up where his听previous book, 鈥淎 Peculiar Imbalance: The Fall and Rise of Racial Equality in Minnesota, 1837-1869,鈥澨齦eft off. Green spoke with MinnPost about the publication, describing his interest in state听history.

鈥淭he history [of Minnesota] is amazing, particularly when you look at who was here before statehood and how they interacted with each other,鈥 he听said. 鈥淚 found that we were lacking a good accounting of the black people who were part of that history. Most of them didn鈥檛 leave a written record, which looks like they had nothing to say, but of course they did. They were part of this experience.鈥

The Minnesota Book Awards honored Green and “Degrees of Freedom” with the 2016 Hognander Minnesota History Award.

Michael Lansing writes for MinnPost

Michael Lansing, associate professor and History Department chair, recently penned an article comparing听the United States’听contemporary political landscape听with periods in the late 1960s and late 1970s.

Lansing is a historian of the modern United States, and his research focuses on political history, environmental history, and other topics. In his Community Voices commentary, Lansing argued that the state of American democracy and milestones occurring in 1979 are听similar to current events.

Read, “” on the MinnPost site.

 

Andy Aoki discusses influence of vice presidential picks

Andy Aoki

WCCO TV recently sought counsel from Andy Aoki, professor and department chair of political science at Augsburg College, to answer a question about how much a presidential candidate’s vice president selection听influences voters.

鈥淗ow Much Does The Vice President Pick听Matter?鈥 was the focus of the听recent Good Question segment.

Aoki provided a straightforward answer.

鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 usually matter a lot,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he vice presidents tend to get a lot less attention, so it鈥檚 not that easy for people to make their pick based on them because you don鈥檛 know much about them.

on the听WCCO site.

Stadium expert Kristin Anderson speaks with
Star Tribune

Kristin Anderson gives tours and presentations at Target Field focusing on architecture, sustainability issues, and art at the ballpark.

At Augsburg College, teaches courses on the history of art and architecture, and she鈥檚 prepared to talk about works ranging from the Mona Lisa to the Metrodome.

Anderson鈥檚 current writing and research are focused on sports architecture, and she is co-authoring a book on the history of athletic facilities in the Twin Cities.

Minneapolis’ new U.S. Bank Stadium is scheduled to open its doors to the public following a ribbon-cutting ceremony on July 22, and Anderson offered an explanation in the听Star Tribune as to why the facility’s design needed to be bold.

鈥淓very sports broadcast will open with a view of the stadium, the skyline shot, the establishing view of the city,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f it weren鈥檛 distinctive or if it were ugly like the Metrodome, that鈥檚 not the statement you want to make.鈥

Read, “” on听the Star Tribune website.

Andy Aoki discusses international politics with WCCO-TV

AokiAndy Aoki, professor and department chair of political science at Augsburg College, recently spoke with WCCO-TV about the implications of Britain’s decision to leave the European Union, a move now referred to as “Brexit.”

Aoki noted that visitors to the United Kingdom may benefit from the devaluation of the pound, but Britain’s unexpected听political move also had far-reaching negative effects on financial markets around the globe.

“If you’re going this summer, you’ve kind of hit the lottery because the pound doesn’t look to recover much in the near future,” Aoki told reporter Rachel Slavik.

Economic and immigration issues were in the spotlight as the British debated whether or not to pull out of the European Union, and Aoki also provided Slavik with background on how these issues are influencing the 2016 presidential campaign in the United States.

Watch, “” on the WCCO website.

Kristin Anderson discusses new football stadium, history of athletic facilities in Minneapolis-St. Paul

Kristin Anderson 鈥 asports architecture expert, Augsburg College archivist, and art history professor 鈥 recently spoke with Minnesota Public Radio host Cathy Wurzer about the Twin Cities’听athletic stadium history.

The Vikings football franchises’ new U.S. Bank Stadium will celebrate its grand opening in approximately one听month, and Anderson provided context on听how the facility continues some local legacies while innovating in other regards.

Listen to, 鈥溾 on the MPR听website to learn more.

Augsburg creative writing mentor Neal Karlen describes connection to Prince in Star Tribune column

Minneapolis Star Tribune - logoNeal Karlen, a mentor in听Augsburg College’s Master of Arts in Creative Writing program, described the unlikely friendship he developed with music icon Prince in a recent Star Tribune column. Karlen is among an elite group of writers granted in-depth interviews with Prince in the mid-1980s. Over time, discussions between the print writer and the songwriter听developed into something akin to friendship, according Karlen.

“I always told Prince I knew he really didn鈥檛 consider me a friend, but as one of the few people in Minneapolis who was probably awake, like he always was, in the middle of the night, and was ‘Willing and Able,’ as my favorite song of his is titled, to talk about loneliness and death,” Karlen wrote.

“I even rubbed it in, in the opening of my second Rolling Stone cover story听on Prince, published in 1990.

‘The phone rings at 4:48 in the morning,'”

Kristin Anderson helps explain Norwegian church history

The Tri-State Neighbor newspaper recently sought expert input from Kristin Anderson, archivist and professor of art history at Augsburg College, for an article about the history of Singsaas Lutheran Church, a historic Norwegian church in Brookings, South Dakota. The article points out many of the church’s historical connections, including its听1884 altar painting.

Occupying the central panel of the Gothic altar, the image was painted by artist Sarah Kirkeberg Raugland, who’s work Anderson has studied. Among the few women who were creating altar paintings during the period, 鈥淩augland really stood out for both quantity and quality of her work,鈥 Anderson said. The altar was one of the few furnishings retained when the church was rebuilt in 1921.

 

Scott Washburn discusses public figures鈥 privacy with MinnPost

Scott Washburn, assistant director of Augsburg College鈥檚 StepUP庐 program, was one the experts interviewed by MinnPost for an article examining public figures’ right to privacy as well as the rights of the public figures’ significant others. The article examined an听overarching theme that probed, “How much of a candidate鈥檚 own personal life should be made available for public debate?”

In responding to a question on whether it is appropriate for the mental health or addiction history of a political spouse or other family member to be made public, Washburn argued听that sort of political playmaking听goes over the line.

“I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 appropriate at all,” Washburn said. “The candidate is running, not the family member. The electorate is voting for the candidate, not the family member. The family of a presidential candidate is going to be dragged into the public eye, but I think it鈥檚 important to respect some boundaries here. It鈥檚 an issue of respect and privacy. The candidate would be fair game from my perspective, but I don鈥檛 think family members should be. It just reflects how low things have gone in this political race.

All that being said, if the family member chooses to publically disclose his or her personal history, then that is a different conversation.”

Read additional responses from Washburn in “” on the MinnPost site.

Lars Christiansen adds expert opinion to MinnPost article on crosswalk laws

MinnPost recently published an article covering efforts by the City of St. Paul to more strictly enforce crosswalk laws and change a driving culture that places drivers and vehicles ahead of pedestrians. State crosswalk laws dictate that drivers should stop for pedestrians at every crosswalk, marked or unmarked, but drivers in the city rarely comply. This has led to fatalities and, more recently, sting operations designed to ticket drivers who fail to stop for pedestrians.

Lars Christiansen, associate professor of sociology and urban studies at Augsburg College, feels that the problem is larger, and less easily addressed, than simply ticketing individuals. “This isn’t about an individual flouting the law, it鈥檚 a very real feeling of pressure from motorists,” he said. “One feels the heat of the other cars around you as you鈥檙e moving, so to do something unusual [like stopping for a pedestrian] feels dangerous.”

Read on the MinnPost site.