Grab a maize adirondack chair and enjoy the view of Chancellor’s pond, a few playing geese and some blooming flowers. While relaxing in the shade, consider streaming a podcast episode (or two) created by ÂÜÀòÉç-Dearborn professors.
• Relaying Detroit’s unknown or seldom remembered history is the driving force behind . Always on the lookout for those “I didn’t know that'' moments about the Motor City, Communication Professor Tim Kiska’s Detroit History Podcast tells the city's history through its cultural, social, political, musical and automotive heritage. In the five seasons of the podcast, Kiska has covered , shared that the during the 1950s Stanley Cup years, explored and more. If you listen to all of the 50-plus available episodes, know that more are on the way. Kiska said season six will be out at the end of summer and gave a sneak peek: topics include the life of composer/rapper J Dilla and the creation of the Detroit Institute of Arts.
• The — Seen Jeem is Arabic for Q and A — highlights the work of contemporary Arab American writers. Produced by the Center for Arab American Studies, Seen Jeem features two seasons of conversations with poets, novelists, and essayists about their latest works. You can hear New York Times Book Review noted author read passages from her award-winning book The Beauty of Your Face. You can learn how author and ÂÜÀòÉç-Dearborn alum based her children’s book Noura's Extraordinary Superpower — where 8-year-old Noura discovers that her missing father is in prison — on her own childhood experiences to help explain and unpack incarceration to youth of all ages. And you can hear author and journalist talk about his latest book, What Strange Paradise, which was named a best book of the year by the New York Times, the Washington Post and NPR.
If you are a ÂÜÀòÉç-Dearborn faculty or staff member with a podcast you would like added to the list, please let us know at [email protected].
Look up at the stars.