Conversation Project programs cover topics such as marriage, life after war and the use and preservation of Oregon’s natural resources.
Communities around the state have year-round access to free discussions through the Conversation Project, a program of Oregon Humanities that brings Oregonians together to discuss provocative issues and ideas.
Forty-nine Conversation Project programs will take place in twenty-nine communities around the state this spring. This season’s programs address such topics as the state of marriage, urban-rural relations, cultural attitudes toward death and aging, and the use and preservation of Oregon’s natural resources. Programs scheduled between March 1 and June 30, 2014, are listed below by county.
For more information about each program and to view the full events calendar, please visit www.oregonhumanities.org.
Crook
• Your Land, My Land: Using and Preserving Oregon’s Natural Resources, by Veronica Dujon. (3/15 at Crook County Library, 175 NW Meadowlakes Dr., Prineville)
• We Are What We Eat: Connecting Food and Citizenship, by Wendy Willis. (5/30 at Crook County Library, 175 NW Meadowlakes Dr., Prineville)
Deschutes
• A City’s Center: Rethinking Downtown, by Nan Laurence. (5/10 at Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond)
• Toward One Oregon: Bridging Oregon’s Urban and Rural Communities, by Michael Hibbard, Ethan Seltzer, and Bruce Weber. (5/29 at The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend)
Jefferson
• A City’s Center: Rethinking Downtown, by Nan Laurence. (5/9 at Jefferson County Library District Rodriguez Annex, 134 SE E St., Madras)
Get together, share ideas, listen, think, grow.