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Community Conversations

A Place in the World

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Illinois Humanities’ Community Conversations center curiosity and active listening; encourage us to embrace fresh perspectives; and remind us of the wealth we have and gain from remaining connected.

Our focus this year is “A Place in the World.” What does it mean to live in a town or neighborhood, perhaps for generations, while staying connected to the rest of the world? What does it mean to leave one’s home and create a new life in an unfamiliar place? How can we learn from our neighbors, welcome new ones, grow our understanding and perspective, and become more interconnected? 

In partnership with eight Illinois communities, we will explore these questions and others through local, facilitated conversation and humanities-driven activities that help us explore our own relationships to ideas, people, resources, histories, and events around the world.

About our Theme, "A Place in the World"

The phrase “A Place in the World” reminds us that the places where we live and work shape and are shaped by ideas, people, resources, histories, and events around the world – often in unexpected and curious ways. This is not a feature limited to the 21st century. It is one that has always defined human existence even as the concept of “the world” continues to expand. Together, we want to think about change over time and the ways that places, including our own hometowns, can have different identities for different people in different moments. 

Consider the United States itself. For nearly 300 years, the regions that would become the United States were home to multiple nations, most of which were indigenous to the land and others of which were colonies of nations far away. By 1776, people around the world watched as a new nation on the very same land, the United States, announced itself on the global stage. Over time, the place we now call the United States has had differing “places in the world” and different meanings for both its inhabitants and observers. And the people who have identified as Americans over time have brought – and still bring – knowledge, cultures, practices, and even language from other parts of the world that enrich the American way of life. How do we celebrate this special American history in our personal “places,” while also embracing change? 

Community Conversations Toolkit

Community Conversations: A Place in the World supports Illinois-based communities in creating space for shared conversation, activity, learning, and connection.

These community conversations:

  • Center curiosity and active listening;
  • Encourage us to embrace fresh perspectives, de-familiarize the familiar, and re-discover each other in a new context;
  • Invite us to remember and retell our own stories and the stories of our
    communities; and,
  • Remind us of the wealth we have and gain from remaining connected.

The Community Conversations Toolkit serves as a guide guide for host organizations that are planning activities for this pilot round of Community Conversations programming. It contains promotional materials and additional resources.

Download the Toolkit

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Partners

Illinois Humanities is proud to work with this inspiring group of community partners and is excited about the programming they will produce as part of the Community Conversations series. Their commitment to the humanities and lifelong learning is at the core of their mission and values. Learn more about our community partners below.

Artspace 304, Carbondale
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Since its founding in 1987 as Carbondale Community Arts, Artspace 304 has nurtured generations of artists and creators. It aims to platform creative talent throughout the region, and reflect the vibrancy of the many communities of Southern Illinois. Artspace 304 is particularly committed to supporting young people’s involvement in cultural spaces, including through its yearly summer camp and youth group exhibition, and various other activities focused on advancing the next generation of creative talent.

Follow @artspace304: Website | Instagram | Facebook

Little Village Public Library, Little Village, Chicago
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The Little Village Branch of Chicago Public Library opened on October 3, 2011, and serves the neighborhoods of Little Village and Lawndale. As part of the Chicago Public Library system, which opened in 1873, the Little Village branch provides equal access and free and open places to gather, learn, connect, read, and be transformed in the pursuit of lifelong learning.

Follow @chicagopubliclibrary: Website | Instagram | Facebook

National Public Housing Museum, Near West Side, Chicago

In 2007, civic leaders, preservationists, historians, cultural experts, and many others joined with residents to help incorporate the National Public Housing Museum, which has since then offered transformative programs that connect the past with contemporary issues of social justice and human rights. The Museum’s mission is to preserve, promote, and propel the right of all people to a place where they can live and prosper—a place to call home.

Follow @thenphm: Website | Instagram | Facebook | LinkedIn

Naper Settlement, Naperville
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With a commitment to the community and a focus to the future, the mission of the Naperville Heritage Society is to collect, document, preserve, and support the history of Naperville, Illinois past and present. The Naper Settlement, established in 1969, also operates under the direction and governance of the Naperville Heritage Society.

Follow @napersettlement: Website | Instagram | Facebook | LinkedIn

McHenry County Historical Society & Museum, Union
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Since 1963, the McHenry County Historical Society has strived to engage and educate current and future generations about their county's history. In addition to operating the museum, the Society plaques historic sites and structures, hosts workshops and classes, makes satellite exhibits available, and arranges a wide variety of school and other group programs.

Follow @mchenrycountyhistory: Website | Instagram | Facebook | LinkedIn

Kuumba Lynx, Uptown, Chicago

Kuumba Lynx (KL) is an urban arts youth development organization founded in 1996 by three women, Jaquanda Villegas, Leida Garcia-Mukwacha, and Jacinda Bullie. For two decades, alongside many of Chicago’s artists, activists, educators, and youth communities, KL has honed an arts making practice that presents, preserves and promotes Hip Hop as a tool to reimagine and demonstrate a more just world.

Follow @kuumbalynx: Website | Instagram | Facebook

CIRCA Pintig, Palmer Square, Chicago

CIRCA-Pintig's roots trace back to the early 1980s when its founders, newly arrived from the Philippines, found support and inspiration in the immigrant communities of Chicago. Born from the experiences of political refugees and economic migrants, the organization embodies the resilience, creativity, and communal spirit of immigrant communities.

Follow @circapintigtheatre: Website | Instagram | Facebook

Fortunehouse Art Center, Bronzeville, Chicago

Fourtunehouse Art Center’s mission is to create spaces and opportunities for artists, entrepreneurs, and organizers to express themselves and contribute to a thriving creative ecosystem. Located in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood, Fortunehouse Art Center features five primary exhibition walls and three collection walls, all suitable for a variety of multidisciplinary arts programming and community-building.

Follow @fourtunehouse: Website (under construction) | Instagram

Events

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The NEA Big Read

From 2021 to 2024, Illinois Humanities participated in the NEA Big Read in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts and Arts Midwest. This community book group and events series directly inspired our Community Conversations program, which continues our work to create spaces where shared reading experiences help us better understand ourselves and our neighbors.

Below is a brief history of our Big Read programming, which explored three distinct themes in partnership with communities across Chicago and Illinois.

  • 2023-2024 NEA Big Read:
    The NEA Big Read: Reconsidering the American Dream was a series of critical conversations across Illinois that explored the evolving idea of the "American Dream." These conversations were framed by reading and discussion groups engaged with two books:  Heartland: A Memoir of Working Hard and Being Broke in the Richest Country on Earth by Sarah Smarsh, and Infinite Country by Patricia Engel.

  • 2022 23 NEA Big Read Book Covers 1024x512

    2022-2023 NEA Big Read:
    The NEA Big Read: Indigenous Stories celebrated the diverse Indigenous heritages of North America through free community book groups, public discussions, and hands-on workshops. Presented in English and Spanish, the books included There There by Tommy Orange (Cheyenne and Arapaho), Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz (Mojave), and New Moon/Luna Nueva by Enriqueta Lunez, a Mexican poet who writes in English, Spanish, and Tsotsil.

  • 2021-2022 NEA Big Read:
    Rememory: haunting, trauma, and historical fiction was inspired by the multiple reckonings we encounter and absorb as we imagined more flourishing, inclusive futures together. No vision for such a future can be sustained without a deep regard for how the past, with its traumas and victories, has produced our present. The texts explored in this series used the supernatural, magical realism, and science fiction to give life, agency, and dimension to histories that are at once unbearable and necessary for us to confront. Texts used included Toni Morrison’s Beloved, Octavia Butler’s Kindred, and Alejo Carpentier’s The Kingdom of This World.

  • Beginnings: Indigenous Stories at the Field Museum
    Illinois Humanities celebrated the launch of "The NEA Big Read: Indigenous Stories" with our friends at the Field Museum amongst their groundbreaking exhibition, "Native Truths: Our Voices, Our Stories" on Saturday, November 19, 2022. 

  • Growing Up Poor: A Documentary Film Screening & Community Discussion
    Presented as part of the 2023-2024 NEA Big Read and hosted by the LaSalle Public Library and Oglesby Public Library, this free screening and discussion invites guests to learn more about issues facing families experiencing poverty and share their hopes and ideas for future generations of Illinoisans.

The NEA Big Read Resources

Below are DIY toolkits that will allow you to start a reading group in your community based on two themes: Reconsidering the American Dream and Indigenous Stories.

Contact Us

Nicole Prahin Rodriguez
Senior Manager of Community Conversations