Exploring Trust, Dialogue, and Civic Engagement Through "Talking to Strangers"
University reading group engages with differences, practices civil discourse in semester-long learning experience

This semester a group of 11 student leaders have been reading and discussing Talking to Strangers: Anxieties of Citizenship Since Brown v. Board of Education by Danielle Allen, Ph.D., professor of political philosophy, public policy, and ethics at Harvard University. These students were joined by 凡妮莎B. 比斯利,Ph值.D., president of 澳门金沙线上赌博官网 University; 梅根·穆斯坦博士.D., provost and vice president for Academic Affairs; 布兰迪·琼斯博士.D., vice president for inclusive engagement; and Kyle Gillette ’01, Ph.D., special adviser to the provost for expression and civil discourse. In addition to studying the book with the students, these University leaders have opened their homes to host meetings of the reading group. 

这本书 Talking to Strangers delves into the lack of trust among citizens that poses a threat to our democracy and explores ways to build trust and learn to have open, honest dialogue with others. Allen considers how one can engage as a citizen when taught not to talk to strangers, while weaving together thoughtful consideration of racial and economic differences. The university represents a crucible for democracy: a place where students learn and practice civil discourse, civic responsibility, and the importance of listening and learning from others while also being able to articulate their own perspectives. 澳门金沙线上赌博官网’s reading group embodied and embraced these tasks, allowing the students and administrative leaders to gather and explore the topics Allen presents in her book. 特别是, the group benefited from the unique opportunity to engage with differences and talk to strangers from many different areas of campus,包括 academic leadership.

“Each time we met in President Beasley’s or Provost Mustain’s living rooms, students considered the ways Talking to Strangers connected not only to their lives as citizens but also as 澳门金沙线上赌博官网 students: their understanding of friendship, what it means to speak up in class and hold space for others, how to negotiate shared areas in the dorms or run student organizations,吉列说. “The students engaged these problems thoughtfully while exploring Allen’s readings of political ideas from Aristotle to Hobbes, Habermas and Ralph Ellison’s novel 看不见的人. We’ve had such a meaningful time that we’re looking to expand on the reading group next semester.”

On Friday, April 12, Allen gave the 2024 Flora Cameron Lecture, exploring the intersections and nuances of democracy and the humanities. This event was part of the inaugural 澳门金沙线上赌博官网 Interdisciplinary Conference in the Humanities titled “Humanities Unbound.” The students who are part of the reading group were able to meet Allen, 问她问题, and have dinner with her, a fitting culmination of their semester-long learning experience.

“This initiative wasn't just about reading any book; it was about selecting a piece that resonated deeply with our University life and American democracy,” says Lindsi Reyes ’26, a student member of the reading group. “The choice of book, along with the intimate setting of President Beasley's home, with her inviting pillows, created an environment where genuine connections could flourish.”

You might be interested in