| When
Tupac Shakur was a fixture in the hip-hop scene in the 1990s, Georgia
Roberts was a huge fan. Eight years after his untimely death at
age 25, she still is.
So are countless others, as Roberts discovered when she offered
a UW course on Shakur and texts that influenced his work, ranging
from Sun Tzu’s The Art of War to Machiavelli’s
The Prince. The popular course has been offered twice and
has led to a discussion series at the Seattle
Public Library.
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"If
people are encouraged to read by his example, well, I think
he'd see that as a cool thing," says Georgia Roberts,
above, about the late hip-hop artist Tupac Shakur.
Photo by Kathy Sauber. |
Roberts, a graduate student
in the Department of
English, says that the course evolved from a focus group in
the Comparative History
of Ideas (CHID) Program. Focus groups are reading groups offered
for credit but not graded, which students can offer on topics of
personal interest. Roberts had already offered focus groups on Henry
James’s travel narratives and the early history of hip-hop
culture when the idea for a Tupac Shakur focus group emerged.
“I kept referring to Tupac’s work in class,” says
Roberts. “It became sort of a running joke that all I wanted
to talk about was Tupac. Finally I thought, ‘Maybe I could
do a focus group solely on his work.’”
What made the idea feasible was Tupac Shakur’s interest in
a wide range of literature, which was reflected in his own writing.
“It’s been widely reported that he was a very avid reader,”
explains Roberts. “He was into religious, political, and cultural
theory. In interviews, he often paid homage to literary giants like
William Shakespeare and Maya Angelou.”
Roberts’ focus group attracted about 20 students, some of
them fans of Tupac and others simply curious. They read and discussed
a book each week. All were titles on Shakur’s shelf at the
time of his death.
Anna Waters was a freshman when the focus group was offered, and
being “the resident obsessive-compulsive Tupac fan,”
she couldn’t believe her luck. “Tupac has extremely
wide appeal,” she says. “The emotions he brought to
his work are really broad. Who doesn’t understand pain and
loneliness and feeling like ‘the other’?”
Word about the focus group travelled fast. It received considerable
media coverage, and after someone posted the syllabus online, Roberts
heard from people all over the country.
Given the positive response, CHID asked Roberts to develop a 400-level
course covering similar content in more depth. The course brought
together 30 students from a wide range of disciplines, including
CHID, business, biology, and religious studies.
“Comparative study is what CHID is all about so the method
of the course was a good fit,” says Roberts. “We studied
Tupac’s ideas alongside Nietzche, Frantz Fanon, and other
writers and philosophers and looked for connections. The students
challenged each other’s assumptions about categories like
race, class, and gender, as well as individual and collective ideas
about artistic ‘form’—all things, in my opinion,
that students ought to be grappling with at this level.”
The course had a waiting list and was offered again during summer
quarter. That’s when the Seattle Public Library came calling.
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| A
poster for the Seattle Public Library book discussion series,
designed by UW student Katie Harkins. |
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The coordinators for
the library’s young adult programs had been seeking ways to
expand their programming. Having read a Seattle Post-Intelligencer
article about Roberts’ course, they saw possibilities for
reaching a broader audience and asked Roberts to plan a three-session
book discussion group suitable for young adults.
“As we talked more, I realized what a unique opportunity I
was being presented with, and I really wanted to use it as a way
to work collaboratively with undergraduate students from my class,”
says Roberts. “If we were going to attempt to have a dialogue
around some of these books, the students’ insights and expertise
made their partici-pation important.”
Roberts created a working
group with four student volunteers who decided which books to include
for the library sessions and how to frame the discussion. “We
were all very excited that what we were doing in class might turn
into a more public conversation,” recalls Roberts.
The group decided to focus on one book for each session, starting
with The Art of War, then the poetry of Nikki Giovanni,
and finally Richard Wright’s Native Son.
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The
working group for the library series included (from left)
Anna Waters, Katie Harkins, Georgia Roberts, Bryanna Boyd,
and Nick Wong. |
No one, including the
librarians, knew who would show up for the discussions and what
their interest in Shakur might be. They needn’t have worried.
Each session attracted up to 40 people, with an interesting mix
of ages and opinions of hip-hop culture. There were mothers of teenagers
who wanted to understand their children’s obsession with Tupac
Shakur, as well as teachers, teens, and a mother of four children
who told the group she found daily inspiration and hope in Tupac’s
songs and poems.
“When you have a public space like the library, you get this
conglomerate of people from different backgrounds,” says Roberts.
“That was the amazing part. The university classroom can be
pretty predictable at times, but we went into the library not knowing
what might happen. Sometimes it felt like having class in the middle
of the city. Other times it felt kind of like a town hall meeting.
Totally unpredictable, but in a really good way.”
The library was so pleased with the series that it is scheduling
more sessions this summer.
“It’s weird,” says Roberts, marveling at what
her interest in Tupac’s work has yielded. “This project
truly has a life of its own. I’m so thankful for the opportunity
to teach something I’m so passionate about as a graduate student.
I totally feel spoiled now.”
As does Waters, who has been part of Roberts’ focus group,
course, and library program. “At first it was about two things
I love—literature and music—but it’s become more,”
says Waters. “It’s allowed me to delve into the idea
of cultural studies—how we construct our realities and who
we place in this narrative of cultural history. I’m immersed
in it.”
What would Tupac Shakur think about courses and library sessions
focusing on his work?
“There’s this great quote from Tupac,” says Roberts.
“He says, ‘I don’t think I’ll change the
world, but I guarantee I’ll spark the brain that will change
the world.’ As someone who studies literature, I’ve
always believed in the transformative power of reading to spark
and ignite social change. So if people are encouraged to read by
his example, well, I think he’d see that as a cool thing.”
The
Seattle Public Library is offering three more sessions of the Tupac
Shakur Book Discussion Group from 3-5 pm on July 2, July 30, and
August 27. For more
information, visit the library’s
website in late spring 2005.
[Winter-Spring 2005 - Table of Contents]
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