Students launch literary and arts magazine 'Tale of One City'
Two ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ students this fall invited Dallas high school students to βtell us about your life in Dallasβ in words and images.
Two ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ students this fall invited Dallas high school students to βtell us about your life in Dallasβ in words and images.
They received more than 130 submissions from 18 public and private schools across Dallas for their new online bilingual literary and arts magazine, β,β which was featured Sunday, March 6, in .
βWe were both moved and humbled by the broad range of experiences represented by the studentsβ work,β says ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ senior Rebecca Quinn. βThese pieces prove that Dallas is not a homogeneous city.β
Quinn launched βTale of One Cityβ with senior Drew Konow through ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅βs undergraduate research program, which awards grants to student teams to investigate challenges facing the city. They were inspired to develop the magazine after studying Dallasβ decades-long struggle to desegregate its schools, Quinn says.
βWe hope to encourage communication among different ethnic and socioeconomic groups in Dallas,β she says. βWe really believe in the power of literature and the arts, and in giving people a forum to express themselves.β
Quinn is an ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Presidentβs Scholar from Dallas who is majoring in Spanish and French in Dedman College and art history in Meadows School of the Arts. Konow, of Baton Rouge, La., is a religious studies and foreign languages and literatures major, with a human rights minor, in Dedman College.
In November, the high school students shared their words and images with campus and community members during a coffeehouse discussion at the ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ student center. Their submissions were judged by ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ faculty and students, as well as Dallas community leaders. North Dallas High School students Amy Mosqueda, 16, and Simon Nolasco, 18, won the first-place $500 and runner-up $250 scholarships, respectively.
for more about the contest and the winners.
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