Here鈥檚 some CU news you can use: Celebrating Black women in science fiction and fantasy, the growing dangers of space debris, COVID vaccine concerns addressed and more.听
A whole new world: Celebrating Black women in science fiction and fantasy
What we learned:
- In a genre dominated by white men, one sci-fi book changed Stephanie Toliver's life:听Parable of the Sower stood out for having a main character who, like Toliver, was a Black woman.
- Now an assistant professor in the School of Education,听this听scholar has dedicated much of her career to celebrating and sharing the existence of Black women in science fiction and fantasy.
- More than any other literary genre perhaps, sci-fi and fantasy challenges readers to dream up new futures where people like them don鈥檛 just survive. They thrive. Toliver says, such works of fiction allow Black girls like her students to imagine new kinds of futures.
Crashing Chinese rocket highlights growing dangers of space debris
What we learned:
- Earlier this month,听a Chinese rocket booster, weighing nearly 23 tons, came rushing back to Earth after spending more than a week in space鈥攖he result of what some critics have attributed to poor planning by China.
- We鈥檙e launching a lot more objects into space every year. How common is it for an object like this rocket booster to crash back down to Earth?听
- Aerospace engineers at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 are researching听technology that can tug on an object or make it stop tumbling.
Still hesitant to get the shot? 7 COVID vaccine concerns addressed
What we learned:
- 鈥淭he COVID-19 vaccine was developed too fast.鈥 It may seem it was developed faster than usual, but never before has the entire world been working on the same group project at the same time.
- 鈥淭he mRNA COVID-19 vaccine is new technology and it hasn鈥檛 been tested.鈥 When you look at the number of people enrolled in previous vaccine trials, those numbers are miniscule compared to the clinical trials for the COVID-19 vaccines.
- 鈥淚鈥檓 young and healthy so even if I get COVID-19 I鈥檒l be fine.鈥 Some research says at least 70% of the population must be vaccinated for things to return to normal.听If you can get the vaccine, you should.
One year later: How George Floyd鈥檚 death changed us
What we learned:
- In the wake of Floyd鈥檚 death, the phrase 鈥淏lack Lives Matter鈥 rose to a prominence it has never had before.
- The United States鈥 vocabulary expanded to include 鈥渁nti-racism,鈥澨齛 word to describe the attitude and acts of those actively engaged in dismantling systemic and institutional racism.
- The public are now paying more attention to the overlapping issues of race, policing and the U.S. criminal justice system.
- The use of video footage in a trial, as it was in Derek Chauvin鈥檚 trial, is nothing new.听And the more we're seeing video, the more court systems need to think more carefully about the presentation of this evidence.
The history of camping: Inclusion, homelessness and protest culture
What we learned:
- A 兔子先生传媒文化作品 professor鈥檚 new book takes a closer look at how camping taps into some of our core American beliefs about nature and citizenship, and why some forms of camping became mainstream over time and others became marginalized.听
- Gradually, camping evolved from a functional, need-based action to an elite recreational activity for the upper class.听
- Why do we tend to see homeless camps as visual and environmental burdens, but national park campgrounds as wholesome and patriotic landscapes? Why did national movements such as听Occupy Wall Street result in less tolerance for the unhoused and unsheltered?