Finit Vita Nigra
Laura Woods
Delhi Braveheart
South Asian women, Indian gender roles, rape
"Delhi Braveheart" is a poem by Tiara Sharma, an 18 year old South Asian American, in reaction to the infamous 2012 Delhi Rape. It juxtaposes how Indian men treat women in different contexts: Goddesses, mothers, and young women. The image above the poem excerpts is of traditional South Asian jewelry that has aesthetic, religious, and social significance and worn by women of all ages, even on depictions of Goddesses.
Anisha Kaul
May 2017
Tiara Sharma
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
6 x 9 in; laser and letterpress printing
English
Broadside
La Fuga
Monica Acosta
Scripps College Press
May 2017
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
Adopted
adoption, identity, race, hispanic
My broadside addresses the issues and identity struggles that may stem from adoption. My birthparents both identified as Latinx but I was raised by Germanic/caucasian parents in a non-diverse home and town. Growing up it was very difficult for me to reconcile my outer appearance and the cultures I identified with. ADOPTED was meant to invoke the harsh and instantaneous categorization that people perpetuated onto me from an early age, which set me up for years of confliction.
Catherine (Kiki) Glah
Scripps College Press
Scripps College Press
May 6, 2017
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
Letterpress Print, 6x9in
English
Broadside Print
Black Boy, Fly.
Queerness, Blackness, Masculinity
Photos from the broadside, 'Black Boy, Fly.'
Mason Polk
Scripps College Press
May 08, 2017
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
English
Broadside, Artist Book
TCK
Third Culture Kids, Identity, Home
My broadside, TCK, references the identity conflicts that are present in Third Culture Kid's reflections of home. While I am originally from Illinois, I grew up in Singapore and have moved around ever since. When I am asked where I am from, I juggle a few different possible responses, none of which I whole-heartedly identify with. TCK is a representation of my internal identity conflict in relation to home.
Emma Stolarski
Scripps College Press
Spring 2017
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
6" x 9" paper, letterpress print
English
Broadside
Maps
Home, Identity, TCK,
Barbie
gender roles, feminine identity, childhood, sexism
"Barbie" tells the story of a painful childhood memory that seems inconsequential at first glance, but when examined more deeply hints at the problematic nature of indoctrinated gender roles. "Barbie" uses Barbie Dolls to exemplify the idealization and objectification of femme individuals and critique the widespread complacency with which people accept both the gender binary and the very strict roles that come with it.
Charlotte Hyde
Scripps College Press
Scripps College Press
April 2017
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
"The Wonder of Barbie: Popular Culture and the Making of Female Identity", Lenore Wright, 2003. Baylor University.
6'' X 9'' paper, letterpress print
English
broadside
Barbie
gender roles, femininity, childhood
The Fire that Burns
A memorial to Tatissa, her work, and her incredible legacy
The flames represent the power and strength of Tatissa, along with the broad scope of influence she had over everyone in each of her communities. The text describes the ways in which I will remember her and her accomplishments. The paradox between the warmth of the flames and their inherent risks encapsulate part of Tatissa's legacy, and the title demonstrates that while Tatissa is no longer physically with us, the depth of her work remains central to communities at Scripps and it is what will remain with me.
Grace Reckers
Scripps College Press
May 1, 2017
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
6"x9" flat paper
Broadside
Examination
Whiteness, White-Fragility, Ant-Racism
Letterpress print process for broadside
Eden Rose Niles
Scripps College Press
May 6, 2017
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
Letterpress print
Broadside
Examination
Habibi
The subject of this broadside is about interracial relationships between Jews and Arabs in the Middle East.
The phrase transliterated on the bottom of the page means "we cannot be together my love" in Hebrew. The print on top is the Arabic word for love.
Deena Ann Woloshin
Scripps College Press
April 2017
Copyrights to this item are the property of the artist. The image(s) may be used for non-profit research or teaching purposes or other fair use as defined by U.S. copyright law. Please be sure to credit the appropriate owner of each object. Reproduction of any collection content for any commercial purpose without prior authorization from the owning institution is strictly prohibited. Requests for commercial use permissions or high-resolution reproductions of images must be directed to the owner.
print
Hebrew (transliterated), Arabic
print
relationships, religion, politics