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Thursday, February 5, 2026
- 12:00 PM5hThose We Thought We Knew: ReimaginedArtist Marie Cochran reimagines the novel "Those We Thought We Knew," by David Joy that explores themes of generational trauma, and betrayal through the story of a young Black artist who returns to her ancestral home. This exhibition is presented in collaboration with Bucknell's Critical Black Studies program.
- 12:00 PM5hThose We Thought We Knew: ReimaginedArtist Marie Cochran reimagines the novel "Those We Thought We Knew," by David Joy that explores themes of generational trauma, and betrayal through the story of a young Black artist who returns to her ancestral home. This exhibition is presented in collaboration with Bucknell's Critical Black Studies program.
- 7:00 PM1hMeghana Mysore & Jordan FranklinJordan E. Franklin is the Spring 2026 Philip Roth Resident in Creative Writing at Bucknell. She is the author of the poetry collection, when the signals come home (Switchback Books), and the chapbook, boys in the electric age (Tolsun Books). She is the winner of the 2017 James Hearst Poetry Prize, the 2020 Gatewood Prize, and the 2024 AWP Intro Journals Project Award. Meghana Mysore, from Portland, Oregon, is an Indian American writer and a daughter of immigrants. Her poems, stories, and essays have appeared in The Yale Review, The Massachusetts Review, Pleiades, Roxane Gay's The Audacity, Michigan Quarterly Review, and the anthology A World Out of Reach (Yale University Press). Her short story collection, Let All Our Ghosts Depart, is forthcoming from West Virginia University Press. She is working on a novel about womanhood, memory, bodies, and ghosts. Mysore holds a Consortium for Faculty Diversity Postdoctoral Fellowship in English in 2025-26.
- 7:00 PM1hMeghana Mysore & Jordan FranklinJordan E. Franklin is the Spring 2026 Philip Roth Resident in Creative Writing at Bucknell. She is the author of the poetry collection, when the signals come home (Switchback Books), and the chapbook, boys in the electric age (Tolsun Books). She is the winner of the 2017 James Hearst Poetry Prize, the 2020 Gatewood Prize, and the 2024 AWP Intro Journals Project Award. Meghana Mysore, from Portland, Oregon, is an Indian American writer and a daughter of immigrants. Her poems, stories, and essays have appeared in The Yale Review, The Massachusetts Review, Pleiades, Roxane Gay's The Audacity, Michigan Quarterly Review, and the anthology A World Out of Reach (Yale University Press). Her short story collection, Let All Our Ghosts Depart, is forthcoming from West Virginia University Press. She is working on a novel about womanhood, memory, bodies, and ghosts. Mysore holds a Consortium for Faculty Diversity Postdoctoral Fellowship in English in 2025-26.
- 7:30 PM1h 30mEast Nash Grass (Bluegrass)The group is stacked with IBMA Best Instrumentalist winners including Grand Master fiddle champion and American Music Association Instrumentalist of the Year nominee Maddie Denton, Cory Walker (banjo) and Harry Clark (mandolin). They perform alongside charismatic frontman James Kee and bassist Jeff Partin (Rhonda Vincent, etc.) making them a powerhouse leader of the next generation in bluegrass excellence.
- 7:30 PM1h 30mEast Nash Grass (Bluegrass)The group is stacked with IBMA Best Instrumentalist winners including Grand Master fiddle champion and American Music Association Instrumentalist of the Year nominee Maddie Denton, Cory Walker (banjo) and Harry Clark (mandolin). They perform alongside charismatic frontman James Kee and bassist Jeff Partin (Rhonda Vincent, etc.) making them a powerhouse leader of the next generation in bluegrass excellence.