KU News: University Honors Program announces spring awards recipients

Today's News from the University of Kansas

0
147

From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

University Honors Program announces spring awards recipients
LAWRENCE — Each spring, the University Honors Program at the University of Kansas considers students for several annual awards and prizes that serve the dual purpose of providing financial support and recognizing students’ academic achievements and aspirations. The 2023 recipients include students from Emporia, Eudora, Overland Park and Paola as well as one recipient from Kansas City, Missouri.

Researchers uncover unconscious biases in the music of Carmen Sandiego
LAWRENCE — A University of Kansas School of Music scholar and alumnus have contributed a chapter to “The Intersection of Animation, Video Games, and Music,” exploring unconscious biases in music from the Carmen Sandiego franchise. In the two series they studied, co-author T.J. Laws-Nicola said, “There are all of these intentional or unintentional power structures being put out on display.”

Full stories below.

————————————————————————

Contact: Dustin Vann, University Honors Program, [email protected], @KUHonors
University Honors Program announces spring awards recipients
LAWRENCE — Every spring, the University Honors Program at the University of Kansas considers students for several annual awards and prizes that serve the dual purpose of providing financial support and recognizing students’ academic achievements and aspirations. The 2023 recipients are listed below, with a brief description of each award and its corresponding cash prize.
John Lubianetsky, an East Asian languages & cultures, global & international studies, and political science major from Kansas City, Missouri, received the RWJ Scholars Award in Memory of Richard W. Judy. Navya Singh, a biochemistry and pre-medical major from Chandigarh, India, received an honorable mention for the award, which provides $1,000 to the writer of an essay addressing some aspect of entrepreneurship, workforce development, Russian and American relations or their future.
Singh was also named winner of the Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett Outstanding Contribution Award, which gives $1,000 to a student exhibiting leadership, innovation and engagement in the honors program. Additionally, Singh will deliver remarks to incoming first-year students at Honors Convocation, which serves as the program’s kickoff event for the academic year.
Emily Schrumpf, an architecture major from Bridgeton, Missouri, received the Sara and Mary Edwards Paretsky Award for Creativity. Fatima Asif, a biochemistry, English and pre-medical major from Overland Park, received an honorable mention for the award, which provides $500 to a female junior honors student demonstrating creativity and originality in her field.
For outstanding performance in their first-year honors seminars, three deserving students received the David Paretsky Honors Program Book Award, which provides each with $300 to help cover textbook expenses:
1. Nicole Giam, a chemistry major from Overland Park
2. Kate Rosa, a molecular, cellular & developmental biology, East Asian languages & cultures, and pre-pharmacy major from Emporia
3. Steven Young, a chemical engineering major from Eudora.
Two students received this year’s Yarick-Morgan Prize for Excellence, a $10,000 nonrenewable scholarship recognizing graduates of the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences who earned university honors and plan to pursue graduate studies at KU:
1. Claire Cox, a history major from Paola
2. Austin Nguyen, a biology and ecology & evolutionary biology major from Overland Park.
Additionally, Cox won the Whitcomb Essay Contest for her piece, “Decolonizing the Wakarusa Museum: The Role of Public Education and Forced Displacement Within the Settler Colonial Structure.” Cox will receive $500 and recognition on a plaque located in Nunemaker Center, home of the honors program. The contest is conducted in partnership with KU’s Department of Philosophy and is open to any undergraduate student, regardless of honors involvement.
“Student excellence takes many forms, and these students have demonstrated tremendous motivation and talent through their academic achievements,” said Sarah Crawford-Parker, the program’s director. “We are grateful to our donors who make recognizing this success possible.”
To learn more about each award, visit honors.ku.edu/awards.

-30-
————————————————————————
The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.
Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.


————————————————————————

Contact: Rick Hellman, KU News Service, 785-864-8852, [email protected], @RickHellman
Researchers uncover unconscious biases in the music of Carmen Sandiego

LAWRENCE — According to contributing authors in a new book on music for animation, some versions of the popular educational franchise Carmen Sandiego serve to “corroborate the power structures connoted in exoticist and imperialist narratives.”

University of Kansas School of Music doctoral candidate T.J. Laws-Nicola and their co-author, Brent Ferguson, who holds a doctorate in music theory from KU, wrote the chapter “Who on Earth Is Carmen Sandiego? Two Case Studies in Aural Identity” in the new book “The Intersection of Animation, Video Games, and Music: Making Movement Sing” (Routledge), edited by Lisa Scoggin and Dana Plank.
Laws-Nicola and Ferguson wrote that the composers who scored the 1992 deluxe version of the video game “Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?” (WWCS) and the 1994 animated series “Where on Earth is Carmen Sandiego?” (WECS) have chosen motifs that function as “an ironic set of musical chains — binding Carmen sonically where she is otherwise free.”
Carmen Sandiego is an antihero in the game’s universe. As Nicola and Ferguson wrote, players “travel the Earth as an A.C.M.E. (The Agency to Classify and Monitor Evildoers) agent capturing villains of the organization V.I.L.E. (Villain’s International League of Evil), which is led by Sandiego.” She is, they wrote, nonspecifically Latinx in ethnicity.
“It’s part of my dissertation research,” Laws-Nicola said. “I look at animation, and in particular bad women, women antagonists, and how they’re treated sonically. I’m looking at what the trends are and the unconscious bias we have when we’re listening to and also creating sounds.”
In the two Carmen Sandiego series they studied, Laws-Nicola said, “There are all of these intentional or unintentional power structures being put out on display.
“The whole series is sort of a cat-and-mouse game between her organization and A.C.M.E. … and there are a lot of symbols and ways you can take it. I don’t necessarily say that the animators of the game or the show expressly wanted Carmen thought of as an imperialist symbol. But often, when you create something, once you show it to the world, your intent doesn’t really matter so much as how it’s interpreted by those that consume what you’ve made. I just felt that there was a way to look at this sort of animation or show critically, which is how we how we approach things.”
The authors make particular note of exoticism in the theme song for WECS, which is an adaptation of a song in Mozart’s opera “The Abduction of the Seraglio.”
“The opening title theme for the show is a rock adaptation of the end of Act 1,” Laws-Nicola said. “It’s a big finale number from the opera. The Pasha, who is the antagonist of the opera because he stole the protagonist’s love interest — physically kidnapped and kept her — comes in with his entire crew.
“It’s done in the Alla Turca style, which was very popular at the time. Mozart was well known for creating or contributing to the creation of this style, which musically connoted the Turkish Janissaries. Typical aspects were lots of cymbals or percussion and big chorus-type numbers. An audience watching ‘The Abduction of the Seraglio’ at that time would have felt that that number was exotic, in part because the antagonist is supposed to be foreign, but also because the musical style was markedly different than anything else in the opera.
“The show uses an adaptation of that same theme. They just update it, which adds this extra layer. The song is already exoticist, and you have it filtered through a pop adaptation for a theme song for a thief who goes around the world stealing things. It just seemed like really tongue-in-cheek. A bit on the nose, if you will.
“Whether or not Mozart respected the Turkish Janissaries, there’s an exoticist connotation that is developed on top of all of this,” Laws-Nicola said. “So this connotation of thieving or taking what isn’t yours, or the keeping the racial purity of women, these are all sort of undertones and connotations of this exoticist style. And when you toss that in with a children show, and the woman antagonist happens to be a thief … you buy into that negative connotation, intentional or not. What we were trying to get at in the article is that the song’s a whole jam, and you can still enjoy the show. But keep in mind that the sonic layer of what’s being done here isn’t completely innocent.”
-30-
————————————————————————

KU News Service
1450 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence KS 66045
Phone: 785-864-3256
Fax: 785-864-3339
[email protected]
http://www.news.ku.edu

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here