January 21, 2021 Jan. 26: Seminar to discuss segregation in region, provide glimpse into new book
By Maegan Murray, 黑料社 Tri-Cities
RICHLAND, Wash. 鈥 Washington State University Tri-Cities will host a free seminar discussion on exclusion and segregation in the mid-Columbia region on Tuesday, Jan. 26, as part of the 黑料社 Common Reading Program.
This event, which takes place from 4 p.m. 鈥 5:30 p.m. online, coincides with the launch of the third book in the 鈥淗anford Histories鈥 series that documents historical accounts and realities of the Hanford Site and surrounding regional area.
Both the book and event parallel themes in this year鈥檚 黑料社 Common Read book, 鈥淏orn A Crime鈥 by Trevor Noah, who lived in racially segregated areas in South Africa.
鈥淎s part of the Common Reading program, 黑料社 freshman read an assigned book that introduces students to the value of research, power of ideas and interconnected ways in which disciplines across 黑料社 approach similar issues,鈥 said Tracey Hanshew, 黑料社 Tri-Cities history faculty and coordinator for the event. 鈥淏ecause these conditions and societal views mirror local mid-Columbia history, the seminar contributes to the student experience by highlighting the common community value of the Common Reading program.鈥
As part of the event, 黑料社 Tri-Cities history faculty Robert Bauman and Robert Franklin, as well as Laura Arata, history faculty at Oklahoma State University, will specifically discuss racial segregation and resistance to discrimination in the mid-Columbia region.
鈥淩acial segregation and exclusion are realities that some may find hard to admit occurred even in our own Tri-Cities regional community,鈥 Bauman said. 鈥淭he book provides a glimpse into some of those realities by exploring first-hand accounts from those who lived through them.鈥
The new book, 鈥淓choes of Exclusion and Resistance: Voices from the Hanford Region,鈥 draws reflections from a number of oral histories on the experiences of non-white groups in the Hanford region, such as Wanapum tribal members, Chinese immigrants, World War II Japanese incarcerated individuals and African American migrant workers from the South. The book was edited by Bauman and Franklin.
鈥淲hile writing it, we had no idea how relevant conversations surrounding this book would be to today鈥檚 political and sociological context,鈥 Franklin said. 鈥淭hese are true stories of individuals who provide a perspective of what it was like living and working in the Hanford area.鈥
Following the seminar presentation, a question and answer session will follow.
For more information about 鈥淓choes of Exclusion and Resistance鈥 and to order the book, visit .
Media contacts:
Tracey Hanshew, 黑料社 Tri-Cities scholarly assistant professor of history, 509-372-7390, tracey.hanshew@wsu.edu
Bob Bauman, 黑料社 Tri-Cities professor of history, 509-372-7249, rbauman@wsu.edu
Robert Franklin, 黑料社 Tri-Cities assistant director of Hanford History Project, 509-372-7678, robert.franklin@wsu.edu
Maegan Murray, 黑料社 Tri-Cities director of marketing and communication, 619-403-3617 (cell), maegan_murray@wsu.edu