Published: Aug. 31, 2016
Angie Chuang

TheHearstProfessional-in-Residence program provides fellowships for professionals to visit ֱ-Boulder each semester and provide helpful lessons and advice to students and faculty. Its purpose is to introduce nationally known, accomplished professionals to our students to enrich their studies.

The program is funded by the William RandolphHearstFoundation.

2016 ProfessionalAngie Chuangis an associate professor of journalism at American University’s School of Communication in Washington, D.C. Her research and teaching focus on race and media. She was an award-winning reporter forThe Hartford Courant, theLos Angeles TimesԻThe Oregonian, where she launched one of the first regional newspaper race beats.

Race, Violence and 'Sincerely Yours:' Letter-writing as a narrative response to the news

  • ٲٱ:Sept. 7, 2016
  • վ:5:00 p.m.
  • dzپDz:Humanities 1B80

When news of racially motivated police shootings, hate crimes and bitter campus protests permeated Angie Chuang's class on race and journalism at American University, the issues felt too emotional and volatile to address only with traditional reporting assignments or academic analysis. Chuang led her 19 students on an experimental exercise: randomly select a name—Michael Brown, Tamir Rice, Vincent Chin, NYPD officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu—of someone who lost their life in racially motivated violence, then research and write a personal letter to the deceased. The simple exercise grew into a student-produced, self-published book, “Gasping for Air: Letters ֱ Race and Social Injustice.”

The letters provide insights into the power of personal narrative in confronting and learning about race, violence and other urgent and challenging issues. In disciplines that are actively wrestling with the roles of objectivity, first-person narrative and appropriate (or profitable) forms of news delivery vs. storytelling, what can the deceptively simple act of composing a letter tell us?

The letters will be read by Chuang and her former studentD. Ashley Campbell—a PhD student in media studies at ֱ Boulder—who participated in the letter-writing project.

Campbellholds an MA in Journalism and Public Affairs from American University and an MA in religious studies from the University of Chicago Divinity School. She has interned at Interfaith Voices, the independent public radio show, and has written forThe Washington Post.