Monday, December 29, 2014

Spring 2015_Adventure Two: What is place, whose place is it, and whose place is it not?




By the time you arrive to this adventure, you will have begun to unpack the importance of place.  In particular, you will have been asked to think about the university, your specific college, and your city, and you will, perhaps more importantly have been asked to think about what defines a community of need and a community of promise.  

The fundamental question is, why is place important?  This exercise will help you further the journey down the road, and it will also help you understand how your place needs YOU, and people like you, to make it better.

Here are the words to Clint Smith's Spoken Word piece titled Place Matters, the one in the video above.  Play it again, but this time scroll down here to read the words.  Then, respond to the prompt below.

As a child, my father would tell me stories of ancient Egyptian warriors
Traveling for endless days and nights across infinite desert plains
Showing signs of endurance and bravery I could only dream of emulating.
He would tell me
That, upon their return home, these warriors would be welcomed with a feast
Worthy of their bravery on the battlefield.
Years later, as a teacher in ? Washington D.C.,
I do now find myself traversing a desert,
Though it is not the one I envisioned.

A food desert
Is categorized as a poor urban area where residents cannot afford
Or are not given access access to healthy foods and grocery stores.
Every day, at 2:45,
I watch my students hop onto this leaking submarine of a school bus,
Every block bringing them deeper into an ocean where the only fish they find are fried,
Where fruits and vegetables just can't be found because there are no grocery stores here;
Just liquor stores and Popeye's,
Dunkin' Donuts, and 7-11's, children born into a neighborhood that fills more pollution than solution.
It is then I realize
That I am not too far from the deserts I once dreamed of.

See whether Anacostia or the Sahara, it doesn't make much difference because the [whole foods?].
Southeast D.C. is no different than the Serengeti
To them, brown-skinned little boys like my students are nothing more than walking cacti.
Just a piece of scenery, this world who taught everyone to stay awake.

Brianna
Literally has a landfill in her backyard
So she has a hard
Time convincing herself
The world then just thinks she's trash.
Restaurants come and dump the remains of food she'll never be able to afford
To eat three steps from her back door.

Jose
Eats fast food five days a week
Because his mother works three jobs to take care of six kids
And only sees her son when she arrives home from work
At the same time he's leaving for school.
He has gotten so big
That the excess fat ? his skin puts added pressure on his joints.
His knees are literally crumbling under the weight of this world.

Olivia
Watched her father shot two feet from her front porch.
She wants nothing more
Than to go outside and play at the park after school,
But gun violence has made a merry-go-round feel more like Russian Roulette.
So she doesn't go outside,
Simply eats any processed food from the cabinets
That will last long enough to prevent her from leaving the house too often.

These are my students,
My warriors,
Fighting a battle against an enemy they cannot clearly see.
These kings and queens,
Meant to feast not to fester,
But their zip code has already told them that their life expectancies are 30 years shorter than the county seven miles away.
I can see the faults of my own ancestry shaking in their eyes.
Diabetes and high blood pressure run through the roots of my family tree.
Heart disease is as much a part of my history as shackles and segregation.
So from my father's kidney transplant to Oliva's asthma,
These things are more than mere coincidence.
Both grew up in places more accustomed to gunshots than gardens.

So tell me place doesn't matter,
That the neighborhoods that are predominately healthy aren't the same ones that aren't predominantly wealthy.
Because when you're not choosing between buying your medicine and your groceries, health doesn't have to be a luxury,
Doesn't have to be an abstract concept that are presented in academic journals and policy briefs.

My students overcome more every day than I will in my lifetime.
They are the roses that grew from the concrete,
The budding oasis in the heart of the desert.
And their lives are worth far much more than the things that this world has fed them.

Answer the following prompts with no more than three sentences each.
  • Prompt One: Why do you think place matters?  
  • Prompt Two: What is "place" anyway?
  • Prompt Three: And who does it belong to?
  • Prompt Four: And who should it belong to?

Answers to these prompts are due at the beginning of Adventure Three.










6 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Matt Rensel
    Place matters tremendously. Where we are born can define a little part of who we are. If you were born in Africa, not saying its guaranteed, but you have a better chance of living through a tougher life than being born in America. Many countries struggle financial and medically. Some families in other countries cant even afford to pay for clothes and food. Countries like them need countries like america to come help and aid.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Jennifer Benesh
    1) Place matters because it determines who you are and what you believe in. It determines how you grow up and the kind of person you are growing up to be.
    2) Place is the location of where you are, either mentally or physically.
    3) Place belongs the people who surround the place and the environment. This is because the people who make up the place determines the social part of the place and the environment determines the way of life of the people.
    4) Place should belong to every individual because every individual should have the right to decide the kind of person they want to be.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ashley Borghese

    Place defines who you are. From the activities you like to do and the things you support. If someone lives next to a pool that could affect how much they enjoy swimming. If football is important to a town then the people there will tend to be more excited about it. Things such as these affect who each person is and shapes our personalities making everyone uniquely themselves.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Place matters because it can determine many aspects of one's life. It can determine the type of food one consumes, the education one receives, the type of clothes one wears and more.
    A place is a geographic location but more specifically the location may contain unique factors such as many run down buildings. open meadows, poor school, and other positive or negative attributes.
    The place usually belongs to some government or the people living in the place who gives themselves authority. Not all the people living in the place own it. Usually the self proclaimed owners are not ones to bring positive aspects to the place.
    It should belong to every resident who lives in the place. Everyone should have equal say in their community instead of letting one or few make the decisions and bringing unwanted attributes.

    ReplyDelete
  6. 1. Place matters because the community and environment in which you are located can greatly influence almost every single aspect of your life either directly, or indirectly.
    2. It is where you spend either most of your time or where you live.
    3. You, and your friends and family.
    4. Exactly that of above.

    ReplyDelete