Attending the Common Read Kickoff

The 2019 Common Read event was an integral part of 欧美AV Orientation for the whole community.

Every year, 欧美AV selects a Common Read 鈥 a reading that holds relevance to the College community, especially first-year students, as decided by a panel of faculty, staff and students. During the end of Orientation week, new students are invited to a Common Read event to indulge in, to put it formally, their first intellectual discourse based on a shared text.

The 2019 Common Read is 鈥淭here There鈥 by Tommy Orange, a novel about several individual Native Americans living in Oakland, California, whose paths invariably entwine at an annual powwow. It explores the lives of the 鈥渦rban Indian that belongs to the city, and the city belongs to the earth.鈥

First year students in yellow holding copies of the Common Read
First-year students attend the Orientation talk, featuring Tommy Orange

Eagerness was palpable among first-years 鈥 still clad in their class color from that morning鈥檚 Convocation 鈥 as I entered Chapin Auditorium and encountered a deluge of yellow. President Stephens introduced author Tommy Orange, an enrolled member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma, as well as Iko Day, associate professor of English and critical social thought at 欧美AV and faculty member in the Five College Asian/Pacific/American Studies Program.

The discussion started with Professor Day acknowledging the first-years, and asking about Orange鈥檚 experience in college. Orange narrated an 鈥渆mbarrassing鈥 story about how he was playing a game of hide-and-go seek with his nephew right before his first day at college, during which he jumped unsuccessfully from a large rock. During his first couple of weeks at college, he walked around with a cast on his broken foot and had to explain, with chagrin, what had happened.

As a student myself, it was interesting to hear that what Orange studied in college 鈥 sound engineering 鈥 provided inspiration for him as a writer. Music plays a big role in his novel: The character Thomas Frank is a drummer who is invited to play at the Big Oakland Powwow, and who calls old Native songs the 鈥渟ound of pain forgetting itself.鈥 Another character, Edwin Black, despite not learning much about his Native culture growing up, listens to Native songs. And Orville, a young boy in the novel, finds comfort in dancing in his regalia.

Author Tommy Orange and Professor Iko Day
Novelist Tommy Orange (left) with Professor Day

Professor Day then probed Orange for the significance of the title. She referred to the text Orange quotes in his novel, from Gertrude Stein鈥檚 鈥淓verybody鈥檚 Biography,鈥 which describes Oakland as having 鈥渘o there there.鈥 Orange joked that Getrude Stein always 鈥渨rote about not writing about Oakland.鈥 He then confessed to have not read the entirety of Stein鈥檚 book (鈥淪eriously, has anyone made it through Stein?鈥 he quipped), but found her quote about Oakland鈥檚 constantly changing landscape applied to Indigenous people to his novel.

Orange explored many complex questions about identity and what it means to be Native American. Does one still identify with being Indian if they are not in touch with their culture, language and traditions? Who decides what it means to be Indian? How do we deal with the erasure of identity that Native Indians have been facing since the Americas were colonized?

Orange asserted that 鈥淲e cannot put history behind us,鈥 noting that Native Americans and First Nations peoples are suffering from the effects of colonialism to this day. As someone who is from a country that celebrated its independence just 70 years ago, I felt the power of that statement. Is it easy to break free from colonial hangups and oppression?

A student poses a question during the Common Read kickoff event
A student poses a question during the 2019 Common Read talk

The discussion was followed by insightful audience questions. There were many instances when Orange would pause, take a deep breath and say, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a big question.鈥 It was heartening to see the class of 2023 already embodying the 欧美AV spirit of asking tough questions!

One of the most memorable questions came from a student who introduced themself as 鈥減robably the only other Indigenous person in the room.鈥 They asked Orange if he knew any solutions for keeping the various Native American and First Nation tribes united. Orange posed a counterquestion: Do the tribes need to be united and have one voice in the first place? They were, after all, considered separate 鈥渘ations鈥 in the Americas before colonization. He proposed a revised America, one whose map would not have met colonial standards.

Tommy Orange (left) signs a student鈥檚 copy of 鈥淭here There鈥
Tommy Orange (left) signs a student鈥檚 copy of 鈥淭here There鈥

During the well-attended book signing, Orange answered questions individually, taking his time with each student to have a personal and meaningful interaction. He was curious why almost everyone was wearing yellow and wanted to know what Convocation was. He also asked students about their lives and about life at 欧美AV.

The 2019 Common Read event 鈥 an integral part of 欧美AV Orientation 鈥 has opened new possibilities and ideas to many different problems concerning race, identity and oppression today.