Catharine Cookson Lecture
How Shall We Remember? 
      Changing Narratives around  Early Virginia History, Slavery, and the Confederacy
    October 2021
 What do we remember from the past? What do we choose as a  society to forget? In recent decades, museum collections and interpretations  reflect that American history and culture have been undergoing considerable  transformation. Lessons that were learned a generation ago have been challenged  by new or expanded narratives that include the voices and experiences of previously  marginalized people. Christy Coleman discusses questions on the presentation of  Jamestown and early Virginia history, on the display of Civil War symbols in  public spaces, and on issues of historical memory. Christy Coleman currently  serves as the Executive Director of the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation. She also  has served as CEO of the American Civil War Museum in Richmond Virginia, where  she was instrumental in furthering discussion on the Civil War, its legacies,  and its relevance to our lives today.
What do we remember from the past? What do we choose as a  society to forget? In recent decades, museum collections and interpretations  reflect that American history and culture have been undergoing considerable  transformation. Lessons that were learned a generation ago have been challenged  by new or expanded narratives that include the voices and experiences of previously  marginalized people. Christy Coleman discusses questions on the presentation of  Jamestown and early Virginia history, on the display of Civil War symbols in  public spaces, and on issues of historical memory. Christy Coleman currently  serves as the Executive Director of the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation. She also  has served as CEO of the American Civil War Museum in Richmond Virginia, where  she was instrumental in furthering discussion on the Civil War, its legacies,  and its relevance to our lives today.
'Unity Flag' Traveling Exhibit
Neil Britton Art Gallery (January – March, 2021)
 The  was initiated by Dr. Meaghan Brady Nelson, Assistant  Professor of Art Education and Program Director of Fine Arts at Belmont  University, in anticipation of the final presidential debate held at Belmont on  October 22, 2020. She took the blue and red polarization of the current  political climate and used the visual arts to bring them together to foster  “purple empathy.” The project was designed to encourage civil discourse, build  empathy, and bridge political divides through the visual arts by inviting artists  from across the country to create representations of the U.S. flag that  expressed empathy for bipartisanship.
The  was initiated by Dr. Meaghan Brady Nelson, Assistant  Professor of Art Education and Program Director of Fine Arts at Belmont  University, in anticipation of the final presidential debate held at Belmont on  October 22, 2020. She took the blue and red polarization of the current  political climate and used the visual arts to bring them together to foster  “purple empathy.” The project was designed to encourage civil discourse, build  empathy, and bridge political divides through the visual arts by inviting artists  from across the country to create representations of the U.S. flag that  expressed empathy for bipartisanship.
The Robert Nusbaum Center was selected to create the Unity Flag for Virginia. “A Beacon of Hope” was one of the 30 state flags displayed during the October 2020 debate and features a lighthouse and heart images as symbols of welcome and hope, and to serve as a reminder to remain vigilant in uniting around a vision for a more perfect union, a union in which equality and justice for all rings true.
In January 2021, the Neil Britton Gallery at Virginia Wesleyan welcomed The Unity Flag Project nationwide traveling exhibit.
'Good Trouble' Exhibit
Neil Britton Art Gallery (October – December, 2020)
 Overwhelmed by today’s political climate and  accompanying pessimism, journalist and illustrator Christopher Noxon found  encouragement on a visit to the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis. He  left inspired and determined to learn the deeper lessons of the movement,  resulting in his latest book, Good Trouble: Lessons from the Civil Rights Playbook (Abrams,  2018).
Overwhelmed by today’s political climate and  accompanying pessimism, journalist and illustrator Christopher Noxon found  encouragement on a visit to the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis. He  left inspired and determined to learn the deeper lessons of the movement,  resulting in his latest book, Good Trouble: Lessons from the Civil Rights Playbook (Abrams,  2018).
                
Several of Noxon’s illustrations from the book -  generously on loan from the United Jewish Federation of Tidewater and the Leon  Family Gallery at the Simon Family JCC - were displayed in Virginia Wesleyan  University's Neil Britton Art Gallery. 
Constitution Day 2020
September 17th is recognized in the United States as Constitution & Citizenship Day to commemorate the formation and signing of the U.S. Constitution on September 17, 1787.
In recognition of Constitution & Citizenship Day 2020, the Robert Nusbaum Center offered a series of video vignettes that feature Virginia Wesleyan University students. The vignettes draw attention to major anniversaries of milestone decisions in the United States’ ongoing struggle for civil rights, and remind citizens to remain ever vigilant in efforts to protect and preserve Constitutional rights and freedoms.
      Landry Moffo ‘22, ¾Å¾ÅÊÓÆµ
      Jennifer Vega ‘21, ¾Å¾ÅÊÓÆµ
      Celvin   Pelaez-Gonzalez ‘21, ¾Å¾ÅÊÓÆµ
      India Khanna ‘21, ¾Å¾ÅÊÓÆµ
Videos
How  to Be Less Stupid About Race: Racism and Anti-racism in Our Classrooms and  Communities
                Dr. Chrystal  Fleming, Associate Professor of Sociology and Africana Studies at SUNY Stony  Brook
              April 2018
 Dr. Chrystal  Fleming gave the 2018 Justine L. Nusbaum lecture at Virginia Wesleyan. She  illustrated why Americans of all ethnicities are ignorant about race. She  highlighted how institutions and patterns of thinking systemically reinforce  racial ignorance on all sides of issues, and showed how – if we are to be less  “stupid” about race – we need to take concrete steps toward deeper  understanding. Her book - How to Be Less Stupid About Race: The Essential  Guide to Confronting White Supremacy (Beacon Press, 2018) – combines  rigorous engagement with interdisciplinary research, no-holds barred social  commentary, memoir, and humor to debunk common misconceptions about racism.
Dr. Chrystal  Fleming gave the 2018 Justine L. Nusbaum lecture at Virginia Wesleyan. She  illustrated why Americans of all ethnicities are ignorant about race. She  highlighted how institutions and patterns of thinking systemically reinforce  racial ignorance on all sides of issues, and showed how – if we are to be less  “stupid” about race – we need to take concrete steps toward deeper  understanding. Her book - How to Be Less Stupid About Race: The Essential  Guide to Confronting White Supremacy (Beacon Press, 2018) – combines  rigorous engagement with interdisciplinary research, no-holds barred social  commentary, memoir, and humor to debunk common misconceptions about racism.              
When  God Isn’t Green: A Worldwide Journey to Places where Religious Practice and  Environmentalism Collide 
                Jay Wexler,  Professor at the Boston University School of Law
              February 2018
Law professor and humorist Jay Wexler writes that, “In New York, Miami, and other large U.S. Cities, Santeria followers sprinkle mercury in their apartments to fend off witches, poisoning those homes for years to come. In Central America, palm frond sales to U.S. customers for Palm Sunday celebrations have helped decimate the rain forests of Guatemala and southern Mexico. In Israel, on Lag B’omer, a holiday commemorating a famous rabbi, Jews make so many bonfires that the smoke can be seen from space, and trips to the emergency room for asthma and other pulmonary conditions spike. Jay Wexler spoke at Virginia Wesleyan in February 2018, and discussed “Can religious practice and environmentalism coexist?”
They  Say We Are Infidels: On the Run from ISIS with Persecuted Christians in the  Middle East 
                Mindy Belz,  Senior Editor of WORLD magazine
                December 2017
 From Syria into Iraq, Christians are being brutalized and killed by  Islamic State fighters (ISIS). Journalist Mindy Belz has spent more than a  decade reporting from the ground in the Middle East. Belz spoke at Virginia  Wesleyan and explored the complex dynamic at play in war-torn Iraq and Syria  and shared stories of Christians who refused to abandon their faith – even in  the face of losing everything, including their lives.
From Syria into Iraq, Christians are being brutalized and killed by  Islamic State fighters (ISIS). Journalist Mindy Belz has spent more than a  decade reporting from the ground in the Middle East. Belz spoke at Virginia  Wesleyan and explored the complex dynamic at play in war-torn Iraq and Syria  and shared stories of Christians who refused to abandon their faith – even in  the face of losing everything, including their lives.              
Escape  from North Korea: Asia’s Underground Railroad
                Melanie  Kirkpatrick, Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute in Washington, DC
                November 2017
It is a crime to leave North Korea. Yet every year a small number of desperate North Koreans escape their closed country by traveling along a secret route known as the New Underground Railroad. Journalist-author Melanie Kirkpatrick, the 2017 Catharine Cookson Lecturer, described the perilous journey of the North Koreans and the rescuers--many of whom are Christian--who help them reach free countries.