Rose Jang, 2021-08-30, 2021-09-03
Scope and Contents
The Evergreen Oral History Project collection contains interviews with more than one hundred retired Evergreen faculty, administrators and staff. These conversations were conducted mostly by current and emeritus faculty. From the initial year devoted to designing the College (1970-71) to the present, Evergreen has been a highly innovative academic institution, committed to pedagogy that strongly supports students’ learning. The project’s purpose has been to document a very wide range of experiences and points of view of longtime members of this community. Faculty narrators recall how they developed their practices of team-teaching, interdisciplinary studies, communities of inquiry, and other distinctive features of the curriculum. Nearly all narrators tell stories about their biographical backgrounds, how being at Evergreen affected them, and how their work contributed to students’ education. Narrators also reflect on how they and Evergreen responded to challenges and changes of politics and culture, including issues of class, gender and race, over the College’s first half century.
The Evergreen Oral History Project began in 2016. As of May 2024, 104 retirees had been interviewed by twenty-eight interviewers. Interviewers have chosen whom they wish to interview, which imbues many of these discussions with the tenor of dialogues between friends. Rather than respond to a preset list of questions, narrators discussed whatever was most memorable and interesting to them.
Special thanks go to transcriber Penny Miller, who made draft transcripts of almost all of the recorded interviews; Amanda Walker and Abby Kelso, Vice-Presidents for Advancement, who sponsored and found funding for the project; Pat Barte and Ray Janssen-Timmen, for administrative support; John Sheehy, director of Reed College’s oral history project, for guidance launching ours; Susan Fiksdal, Anthony Zaragoza, Barbara Smith, Nancy Taylor and Nancy Koppelman, each of whom interviewed many retirees; Liza Harrell-Edge and Sadie Aymond, for accessioning and managing the collection in the Library Archives; and the anonymous donor whose generosity made the project possible. Sam Schrager has been director of the project.
Dates
- Creation: 2021-08-30
- Creation: 2021-09-03
Biographical / Historical
Rose Jang was Faculty Emeritus at The Evergreen State College and taught from 1988-2018. Her expertise was in China studies and theater as well as Cultural Studies, Performing Arts, Literature, Language, and Communication. Her research articles include: "Teaching American Students the ‘Essence’ of Chinese Theatre at the National Academy of Chinese Theatre Arts (Zhongguo Xiqu Xueyuan)" and “Learning Yuzhou feng (Sword of the Cosmos): A Journey into the Heart of the Art of Mei Lanfang." During her 2010 sabbatical she studied Mei-school Chinese opera (Jingju) with Chinese opera professional teacher Lu Yiping. In addition to directing English-language plays like Trojan Women by Euripides and King Lear by Shakespeare, Jang performed in Chinese opera performances such as The Jade Bracelet (Shi Yuzhuo) and The Yo Sisters. She also was an External Evaluator for the production of Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare at the University of Puget Sound in 2016 as well as lighting designed, dancer, and assistant choreographer for various other productions at TESC and outside of TESC.
Extent
From the Collection: 1.44 Terabytes
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Repository Details
Part of the The Evergreen State College Archives and Special Collections Repository
http://www.evergreen.edu/archives
2700 Evergreen Parkway NW
Olympia WA 98505 USA
archives@evergreen.edu