Las Vegas
SUN
March 16, 2006
Dealing with the world's woes
UNLV think tank is taking shape
By
Christina Littlefield <clittle@lasvegassun.com> Las Vegas
Sun
UNLV officials are attempting to harness the power of the pen with
a new think tank that will let authors and poets take a stab at some
of the world's greatest problems.
The proposed Black Mountain Institute would bring together scholars,
writers and artists to research and write about global issues, such
as the breakdown between Eastern Islamic and Western, Judeo-Christian
worldviews.
The goal is "to break the logjam of entrenchment," by recruiting
people of "unlike minds" to UNLV to tackle a topic at a time,
said English professor Richard Wiley, who will be heading the institute's
Forum on Contemporary Cultures.
"These problems aren't going to be solved by George Bush,"
Wiley said. "They're going to be solved by a congress of human
voices speaking in one way or another, and if we can become a part
of
that congress, it's a contribution rather than just saying the problem
is too huge to deal with."
What will set the UNLV institute apart from such think tanks as the
Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., and the Shorenstein Center
on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard is a focus on literature
and the arts as a way to evoke international change in public policy,
UNLV President Carol Harter said. Most think tanks address public policy
from particular political viewpoints and tend to lean left or right.
Harter is leaving the UNLV presidency June 30 to serve as executive
director of the Black Mountain Institute. A proposal to make the institute
a reality goes before the state Board of Regents on Thursday.
Harter hopes to raise enough money to bring in high profile writers
of the same stature of UNLV's Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka to engage
students, professors and community members and write articles in a
way
that "laypeople can understand."
"It will not be just scholars talking academic talk to each other,
but scholars and artists and writers who can translate those ideas to
the public at large and engage the public at large in major public policy
debates and discussions," Harter said.
How many scholars and artists Harter rounds up depends on the amount
of money she raises from private sources. She already has lined up an
impressive list of people to serve on Black Mountain Institute's board
of directors, including Soyinka; Harriet Fulbright, wife of the late
Sen. William Fulbright; Henry Louis Gates, director of the W.B.E. Du
Bois Institute at Harvard; and Russell Banks, president of the North
American Network for Cities of Asylum, which will be folded in under
Black Mountain.
Those kind of connections already helped Harter land Nobel prize winning "Beloved" author
Toni Morrison to kick off the institute's first fundraiser April 6
with a free public lecture at UNLV, followed
by a tickets-only dinner event with tables starting at $5,000.
It takes a Nobel Laureate to get a Nobel Laureate, Harter said, and
the support of people like Fulbright and Gates will be critical in
bringing
in funds and recruiting top writers. "Our foreign policy is far
more important now than it has ever been before," Fulbright said.
"Writers of that ilk and university leaders make a huge difference,
and I am really very pleased that they have banded together and are
going to be doing the kind of work they have outlined."
The proposal to the regents would include $268,000 in state money to
the Black Mountain Institute by the 2008-2009 school year. Harter will
strive to raise another half-million dollars. The North American Network
for cities of Asylum will be self-funded and serve as a major fundraiser
for the Black Mountain Institute because of its national prestige, Harter
said. Through the work of Fontainebleau Resorts President Glenn Schaeffer,
Las Vegas was the first U.S. city to offer asylum to persecuted writers.
Schaeffer's work with the asylum led him then to invest in UNLV's Master
of Fine Arts program, bringing UNLV national claim by paying for scholars
such as Soyinka to teach at the university. He also founded the nonprofit
International Institute of Modern Letters, which helps support persecuted
foreign writers and translate and publish their work into English.
Schaeffer has said that he saw literature as the stimulus to promoting
a free democracy of ideas.
That interest led Schaeffer to develop the idea for the Black Mountain
Institute, Harter said. It is based on the Black Mountain College experiment
in North Carolina. That now-defunct college, owned and operated by its
faculty, was a breeding ground for some of America's most famous postmodern
artists between the 1930s and the 1950s.
The small community of scholars encouraged collaboration between students
and professors. Among those present were composer John Cage, dancer
Merce Cunningham, "Projective Verse" poet Charles Olson,
architect and philosopher Buckminster Fuller, pop artist Robert Rauschenberg
and
abstract painter Willem De Kooning.
Artist Joseph Albers also took refuge at the college after the Nazis
forced him and his wife Anni to flee the Bauhausschool in Germany.
"A new kind of art came out of that," said Douglas Unger,
who founded UNLV's Master of Fine Arts program and handles grants and
acquisitions for the Institute of Modern Letters.
"And I think the idea of the Black Mountain Institute is to do
that in Las Vegas - trade ideas, do scholarship, write, do high-profile
events for the university, bring the university and the community together
and provide a resource for the students."
Initial plans had called for the Modern Letters Institute also to fall
under Black Mountain's umbrella, executive director Eric Olsen said.
But the Modern Letters Institute has since decided to leave the university
in July to focus on its publishing work.
The change is part of the Modern Letters Institute's natural evolution
as a nonprofit. Its publishing work has been its most successful venture,
Olsen said. But he also said that the institute's university affiliations
had not worked as well as he had hoped.
Schaeffer also will not be as involved in developing the Black Mountain
Institute as he originally intended because of his new work with Fontainebleau,
Harter said. She denied rumors of a rift between her and Schaeffer,
saying he was still looking at a founding gift for the institute and
that he had called Chancellor Jim Rogers to say he was glad Harter would
be coming on as executive director.
Harter, who is retiring as president because of management conflicts
with Rogers, said she saw the move to Black Mountain as very fitting.
Schaeffer did not return numerous phone calls from the Sun over the
last month.
"This is my natural intellectual roots," said Harter, whose
doctorate dissertation in English focused on the works of Nobel Prize
winning Mississippi novelist William Faulkner. "It is where I
started, so it's kind of a nice cycle to come back around."