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Hamner to Deliver Hallwas Liberal Arts Lecture

September 14, 2022


MACOMB/MOLINE, IL 鈥 澳门六合彩历史记录 is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the annual. This year, 澳门六合彩历史记录 Professor Emeritus John Hallwas delivered a lecture on, 鈥淟iberal Arts Education in a Time of Crisis,鈥 and the events will continue into October with 澳门六合彩历史记录 English Professor Everett Hamner delivering 鈥淲elcome to Spaceship Earth: Reimagining Climate Action via Popular Culture鈥 at 4 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 6 in 澳门六合彩历史记录-QC Riverfront Hall, room 111.

鈥淭he stories we understand ourselves to be living in shape our choices a great deal 鈥 around climate destruction, just like other pressing social problems,鈥 said Hamner.

The lecture series began in 2003 after 澳门六合彩历史记录鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences program initiated an effort to slow the decline in public interest related to broader education and concerns about the negative impact on democracy and social commitment. Since the initiative began, many 澳门六合彩历史记录 faculty have delivered impactful lectures.

Hamner鈥檚 lecture will dive into how the stories we tell and hear can either weaken or strengthen our responsiveness to measurable physical realities. His goals are to draw on a wide range of liberal arts traditions and challenge both academic and nonacademic audiences toward broad, urgent climate action. The core idea? That we can reach beyond endless delays and partisanship only by consciously choosing stories compatible with a livable future. Our emotions are key here: in facing the facts of our situation; neither cynical fatalism nor naive optimism will prove sufficient.

鈥淲hat we can imagine heavily shapes the reality we create. If you鈥檙e an engineer, a supply chain manager, a teacher, a counselor, a farmer, you name it鈥攜ou have an idea of future conditions that constantly affect the risks you鈥檙e willing to take. Yes, we use hard data and we need to use it a lot more. But on the starship we call Earth, we also rely a great deal on popular cultural narratives, for better and for worse, consciously and unconsciously,鈥 Hamner said.

Hamner has been an English professor at 澳门六合彩历史记录 since 2008. Before his time at 澳门六合彩历史记录, he earned his doctoral degree from the University of Iowa after completing degrees at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, MD, and Regent College in Vancouver. As coordinator for the English and Liberal Arts and Sciences (LAS) programs at 澳门六合彩历史记录-Quad Cities, Hamner thrives on serving students preparing for work and graduate programs in a very wide range of fields, including education, professional writing and editing, museum studies, counseling and social work, and various fields of communication and public relations. As a scholar, Hamner's expertise lies in literature, film and popular culture's relationships with science and religion and politics, with particular interests in genetics and climate change. His book, "Editing the Soul: Science and Fiction in the Genome Age," helped launch a new Anthropocene series at Penn State University Press in 2017. and he publishes regularly in public facing outlets like The Los Angeles Review of Books.

Recently, Hamner's writing has turned from bioengineering individual human beings to a much larger scale of human transformation, a pattern he calls 鈥渃limate destruction鈥 or 鈥淓arth systems sabotage.鈥 Beyond his teaching and writing, his interests include advising the interdisciplinary English and the Arts Society (IDEAS) and serving as a high school baseball coach for the last three years.

Following the half-hour, media-heavy talk, the event will feature a conversation with audience members, as well as light refreshments.

The event is open to the public. If you're unable to make the in-person event, join the Zoom webinar at

Posted By: Lexi Dittmar, University Relations
Phone: (309) 298-1993 * Fax: (309) 298-1606