Art and activism in an intergenerational setting
During the 20 years of her life thus far, 鶹ƽ junior Tashawn Reagon has sat down
many times for conversations with her mother and grandmother.
But her meeting with them Friday, Nov. 14, will be different. It will take place on
a stage in Dallas with 1600 people watching. In fact, it will be the keynote address
of the annual , the largest multiracial, inter-generational gathering for organizers, educators,
creatives and other leaders.
From left, Bernice Johnson Reagon, Toshi Reagon, and Tashawn Reagon '16.
This all makes sense if you know that Tashawn's grandmother is , who rose to prominence during the Civil Rights Movement with her powerful political
songs, then founded the all-female, African-American a cappela ensemble called Sweet
Honey In The Rock, and went on to become a noted composer, teacher and scholar.
Tashawn's mother, , also is a noted composer and the producer, founder, and leader of her own ensemble,
Toshi Reagon and Big Lovely. She and her mother have created two operas and they have
written the music scores for “Africans in America” on PBS and “BEAH: A Black Woman
Speaks” for HBO.
The two often join each other on stage in live performance (as they did ). Now, at this conference in Dallas, they will be joined by Tashawn, a sociology
and gender studies major, an intergroup relations minor, and the co-facilitator of
a two-credit, intergroup dialogue between students of color and white students on
race.
“I'm excited just to be on the stage with them," she said. "I feel like I've gotten
to a place in life where I now have the language and the words that I wish I had when
I was younger and I would talk to them about race.”
Their conversation will be livestreamed from 4:30 to 6 p.m. .
The Facing Race National Conference is “an important way to stay connected to past
struggles and triumphs, as we also embrace the intersections of different generations
and experiences,” said Rinku Sen, president of , which organizes the annual event. “The Reagons have a story to tell that illustrates
how art and activism can come together in an intergenerational setting and mobilize
us all."