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2024-25 Year in Review

Two women sit at a table in a dimly lit room at C21's Attention Activism Workshop at Turner Hall. They appear to be locked into deep conversation.

Letter From the Director

Dear Friends,

At the end of our last event, , one of the workshop facilitators asked us to imagine “the great empty cup of attention” from the 1902 Henry James novel The Wings of the Dove, and to think of one thing that each of us would place in that cup. What is one moment in your everyday life, big or small, in which you consistently place your attention? We all shared our individual moments of attention so that, together, we might fill the cup.

I’ve been collecting such meaningful moments scattered across this hard year, trying to hold onto some of the things that I, and maybe also you, placed attention on, and to see them together as collective practices of care in this unsteady world. Many of these moments happened at C21, as we offered events and gatherings and supported research initiatives and collaborative projects that explored the pace of being human across a slower tempo, where “slow” could mean an attentiveness to how and what we each experience, a situatedness in a specific place or body, or it could mean kinship.

Many of these moments we will carry into next year, as C21 strives to counter the unsettledness of our time by continuing to practice slow and collective care. We will be collaborating with UW-Madison’s Center for the Humanities on a series of programs on “Aesthetics, Art, and AI,” with grant support from the . We are also very pleased to announce that we recently received a grant from the   to expand our attention activism work within communities across Milwaukee.

As the resources and attitudes surrounding higher education continue to shift into the next fiscal year, C21 will turn its programmatic focus homeward, deepening our roots in Milwaukee through local events and participatory workshops that fill the collective cup and affirm our commitment to building communities of thinkers.

Take care, and we’ll see you again in September,

Jennifer Johung

Director, Center for 21st Century Studies


Let’s Recap: A Year of Slow Knowing

This year, the Center for 21st Century Studies had , a great group of summer Story Cart fellows, and a supportive . We supported a cohort of seven faculty , . Our annual theme, , explored the pace of being human, spawned a , and inspired a . We engaged hundreds of people over the course of 33 C21-produced events, co-sponsored programs, and Story Cart activations.

Our programming kicked off with  voter registration events that built upon the summer’s Story Cart: Trust and the Vote campaign. Our graduate fellows spoke to continuing and first-time voters in the months before an historic presidential election. We brought DoSomething, a , to campus to talk to 51 students about the issues that matter most to them.

We turned the Trust and the Vote initiative into a  showcasing interviews collected by our Story Cart fellows. We also partnered with  to produce an adaptable pop-up exhibition that is currently touring community centers across Milwaukee.

We walked the grounds of  with . Members of the collaboratory and Lynden introduced us to trees, mushrooms, and trees becoming chairs.

We revived , our in-house podcast, which had been dormant since May 2023, and produced seven episodes and even made a special episode for an immersive listening session at the 51 Planetarium.

We also revived the UW System Faculty Lecture Series with a virtual lecture by 51 Assistant Professor Derek Handley, who presented research related to his new book .

Members of the , a C21-sponsored working group, invited Milwaukee artists Amal Azzam and Liala Amin to C21 to discuss recent instances of censorship of their work within Milwaukee.

Slow Growing in the Time of Trees returned to Lynden Sculpture Garden with artist , who led a walk-and-talk tour of his Lynden installation, followed by a wood carving workshop. 

C21 hosted two nature-inspired workshops. Kate Beutner of Slow Growing in the Time of Trees led a collaborative writing exercise focused on fungi. C21 staff collaborated with Sociocultural Programming on a poetry and nature walk that celebrated poet Ada Limon’s visit to 51.

, a C21-sponsored collaboratory, hosted a lecture by award-winning author Meghan O’Gieblyn. O’Gieblyn discussed the purpose of thinking in the age of machine learning, covering ground from the apparent thoughtlessness of Adolf Eichmann to bad AI recipe suggestions.

In our last big event of the year, C21 welcomed Kyle Whyte, the George Willis Pack Professor of Environment and Sustainability at the University of Michigan, to 51 for a lecture on Indigenous concepts of kinship and how they might model new approaches to environmental responsibility. 

The academic year wrapped with a visit from the . We learned about attention activism and put our Slow Knowing theme into practice through perception exercises and shared reflection. We loved it so much we’re going to build on this workshop in the coming year.


2024-25 may have been a challenging year, but enough friction starts a fire. As we prepare for 2025-26, the year of Slow Care, we are buoyed by a renewed dedication to our mission: to foster a community of thinkers bold enough to truly address the pressing issues of our time.