Saturday, September 17, 2011

Jordan Explores Ethics and Art

originally written for The Emory Wheel: Arts & Living(www.emorywheel.com)

Growing up in a communist regime, junior Mariangela Jordan learned about the revolutionary value in art and its ability to change the course of human events.

Today, she continues to fuel the power of art as co-president of the Ethics and Art Society at Emory, a student arts organization whose mission is to explore the intersection between creativity and ethics, and the role art plays in inspiring positive social change.

Jordan grew up living in Soviet-occupied Romania.

“Living under communism in a family which defied the regime was a rather traumatic experience,” Jordan said. “However, under my father’s guidance, I quickly learned to escape the bleakness of our immediate existence by employing my imagination.”

Imagination opened the door for Jordan’s artistic inclinations, despite the war-torn nation she lived in.

She learned quickly that “books are worth their weight in gold.”
For Jordan and her family, art was essential.

“Poetry was a cathartic form of political resistance and freedom,” she explained.

Today, as a well-established member of the Emory community, Jordan continues to catalyze change through creativity as one of the founding members of the Ethics and Arts Society.

The Society began as part of Carlton Mackey’s Ethics and the Arts Initiative, a program in the ethics center with a variety of partners: the Atlanta Opera, High Museum of Art, Alternate ROOTS, The Alliance Theater Company, WonderRoot, the Atlanta Music Project and others.

“As the first president of the Society, together with the society’s first artist members, alums Anirudh Dhullipalla [(’11C)] and Shreyas Sreenath [(’11C)] and senior Ian McCall, who is my current co-president, I was entrusted by Mr. Mackey with the opportunity of envisioning, articulating and setting in motion the Society’s vision,” Jordan said.

Jordan is constantly developing relationships with local artists and organizations for events such as the Society’s Best in Show Performance this year. The Society collaborated with activist music group Voices in the Treetops, headed by long-time “artivists” Paula Larke and Kim Nimoy.

As the year continues, the Society is working on developing a music program that offers young Burmese refugees in Atlanta an opportunity to learn music, as a platform for cathartic expression.

“We are also hoping to connect Emory music students with this program, in order to expand the number of music teachers as well as the number of youth participating in the program,” Jordan said.

The Society also organizes art events on campus throughout the year. For this fall, the Society is hosting the Ethics and Arts CafĂ©, a collaborative arts symposium organized by the center for Ethics and WonderRoot Atlanta. The event is about “bringing artists from eclectic backgrounds ... [in] varied art forms together under the umbrella of ethics,” Jordan said. “The event offers an opportunity to spark challenging conversations about various ethical issues.”

In addition to organizing on-campus art venues, Jordan is also constantly looking for a way for art to make an impact off campus.

She recently began teaching English as a Secondary Language (ESL) course to members of the refugee community in Atlanta.

Rather than sticking to previous ESL curricula offered by the resettlement agencies, Jordan plans to build her own curriculum for the course in collaboration with a local musician.

“[It’s a] primarily kinetic, culturally-sensitive technique of teaching English that integrates the use of photography, instructional songs, music and movement, and the awareness of rhythm and cadence of the English language,” Jordan said.

Jordan explained she plans to return to Romania in the future.

She hopes to one day become an ethnographic filmmaker. In an effort to integrate her interests in film and human rights, she is currently developing a non-governmental organization (NGO) to promote human rights in Eastern Europe.

“Unfortunately, even after the collapse of communism, corruption remains prevalent in Romanian journalism,” Jordan said. “The mission of my NGO is to recruit local ethical journalists, photographers and documentary filmmakers who will offer people who do not have a voice, as I once didn’t, a platform of expression and a way of stepping out of their invisible cloaks.”

1 comment:

  1. Great work MJ! You seem to be accomplishing some great things this year.

    And good article Simran!

    ReplyDelete