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Total: 2
Basculer Community gathering spaces that appeal to a full cross-section of an areas inhabitants are rare. Scarcer yet are public sites that engender a deep personal connection between an individual and a specific place. Tumamoc Hill, or Cemamagi Du’ag, the “hill of the horned lizard”, is one of those places. Nestled on the edge of Tucson’s birthplace and within two miles of Downtown, Tumamoc receives about 1,000 daily visitors. The current work builds on and is guided by a year of data attained through open ended surveys and a focused questionnaire that has identified salient themes of people’s connection to this place. Yet, many voices remain underrepresented and additional characteristics that underpin neutral community gathering spaces are to be identified. To fills these gaps this second phase of Cuéntame Más will reach out into underrepresented Latinx and indigenous communities and dig deeper to understand generalizable core elements that create a space for personal, community, and natural connections. ( 1 )
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Ben Wilder 2019 Cuéntame Más Phase Two: Digging deeper into the connection between people and place Diversity Community Outreach Art-science Science communication Indigenous studies Community gathering spaces that appeal to a full cross-section of an areas inhabitants are rare. Scarcer yet are public sites that engender a deep personal connection between an individual and a specific place. Tumamoc Hill, or Cemamagi Du’ag, the “hill of the horned lizard”, is one of those places. Nestled on the edge of Tucson’s birthplace and within two miles of Downtown, Tumamoc receives about 1,000 daily visitors. The current work builds on and is guided by a year of data attained through open ended surveys and a focused questionnaire that has identified salient themes of people’s connection to this place. Yet, many voices remain underrepresented and additional characteristics that underpin neutral community gathering spaces are to be identified. To fills these gaps this second phase of Cuéntame Más will reach out into underrepresented Latinx and indigenous communities and dig deeper to understand generalizable core elements that create a space for personal, community, and natural connections.
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Basculer Tumamoc Hill is at the center of the Tucson community. The themes encompassed by this site touch on nearly every discipline, from history and indigenous studies, to ecology and a fantastic display of public health in action. This site has a history of over one-hundred years of scientific and four-thousand years of human use. Tumamoc Hill has recently opened to visitors during daytime hours, and it receives about 1,500 hundred visitors a day-- likely the most use the Hill has received in its history. This project extends an existing collaboration between the Confluencecenter and the Desert Laboratory on Tumamoc Hill as the Tumamoc Transdisciplinary Arts Program launches in the fall of 2017 to explore, understand, document, and share the stories and richness of Tumamoc Hill in new ways, focusing on the arts and sciences. Cuentame Más celebrates a collaboration between the arts and humanities through harvesting the stories of the community centered around Tumamoc, in the latest chapter of Cemamagi Du’ag, the “hill of the horned lizard.”
( 1 )
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Ben Wilder 2018 Cuentame Más: Understanding the Tucson Community Through Tumamoc Hill Diversity outreach art/science science communication Tumamoc Hill is at the center of the Tucson community. The themes encompassed by this site touch on nearly every discipline, from history and indigenous studies, to ecology and a fantastic display of public health in action. This site has a history of over one-hundred years of scientific and four-thousand years of human use. Tumamoc Hill has recently opened to visitors during daytime hours, and it receives about 1,500 hundred visitors a day-- likely the most use the Hill has received in its history. This project extends an existing collaboration between the Confluencecenter and the Desert Laboratory on Tumamoc Hill as the Tumamoc Transdisciplinary Arts Program launches in the fall of 2017 to explore, understand, document, and share the stories and richness of Tumamoc Hill in new ways, focusing on the arts and sciences. Cuentame Más celebrates a collaboration between the arts and humanities through harvesting the stories of the community centered around Tumamoc, in the latest chapter of Cemamagi Du’ag, the “hill of the horned lizard.”
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