
Dear Members of the Class of 2013,
A central feature of Skidmore’s First-Year Experience is its summer reading program. Indeed, the goal of the first-year reading program is twofold. First, we want to celebrate the fact that the educational experience—the process of learning—is ongoing and not just confined to the classroom or the academic calendar. Our aim is to get you thinking before you arrive on campus. Second, we want to provide first-year students, and the entire College community, with a common experience centered on an intellectually interesting and challenging subject. The way we see it is that the first-year reading program provides a starting point for members of the Skidmore community to engage in important intellectual dialogues.
For the class of 2013, the FYE has chosen to examine Abraham Lincoln. Enclosed are the two readings we’ve selected—a DVD from the Bill T. Jones Arnie Zane Dance Company in which the award-winning choreographer examines, through dance, the life, myth, and paradox of America’s 16th president, and a more traditional book, Our Lincoln: New Perspectives on Lincoln and His World, edited by Columbia University historian, Eric Foner.
We chose the subject of
If you’re at all like me, reading, interpreting, and analyzing a dance performance will represent a new experience. We selected “Serenade/The Proposition” precisely because it poses a difficult challenge; it highlights the type of intellectual exercise that rests at the core of a liberal arts education. So much of the way in which we communicate our thoughts, ideas, and stories is through non-narrative means. Like studying an unfamiliar language, examining a non-written text requires more than just a casual review; in this case, it requires more than simply putting “Serenade/The Proposition” on your television and sitting passively. As such, we ask that you spend time intentionally contemplating and exploring the movements, the music, the set, and the dialogue of the dance performance—reading the “text,” if you will—while formulating questions or comments related to its central themes. Ask yourself what it is that the artist is trying to accomplish. What message is he trying to convey? How does the work reveal the emotions of the artist, or how does it reflect the life and accompanying myth of Abraham Lincoln?
All first-year
students are expected to read, contemplate, and scrutinize both parts of the
summer reading package in their entirety prior to arriving on campus. In other words, please read all of the essays in Our Lincoln and watch the entire DVD (several times). There will be ample opportunity throughout
the academic year to examine and discuss the issues raised by this set of
readings. The highlight of our year-long
exploration of
In the meantime, enjoy the rest of your summer! We look forward to your arrival on campus in early September.
All the best,
Beau Breslin
Assistant Dean of the Faculty and Director of the First-Year Experience
CREATIVE THOUGHT MATTERS
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