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Humanities Washington ||  Homelessness and the Meaning of Home (VIRTUAL)

Humanities Washington || Homelessness and the Meaning of Home (VIRTUAL) Online

Join us for our virtual Humanities Washington Speaker Series featuring Josephine Ensign.

Loss of a home, whether through financial difficulties, divorce, illness, or natural disasters like wildfires, is a widespread and growing problem affecting all of us. Often thought of as only an urban problem, homelessness also occurs in suburban and rural areas throughout Washington State. What are the historical roots of homelessness, and what lessons can we learn from them? What are the common meanings of home to us, and how can we apply those meanings to our responses to homelessness in our communities? 

In this talk, author and professor Josephine Ensign leads audiences through a values clarification exercise that includes individual writing time. Professor Ensign will share her research on the history of homelessness in her hometown of Seattle, along with discussion of what these stories can teach us about the contemporary crisis of homelessness throughout our state and country. 

Josephine Ensign (she/her) is a professor at the University of Washington in Seattle. Her scholarship and practice as a nurse practitioner focus on trauma-informed care and health inequities for people marginalized by poverty and homelessness. She experienced homelessness herself as a young adult. Ensign is the author of several books including Skid Road: On the Frontier of Health and Homelessness in an American City, a 2022 finalist for the Washington State Book Award. Her latest book, Way Home: Ways Out of Homelessness, is forthcoming from Johns Hopkins University Press.

Ensign lives in Seattle.

Date:
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Time:
6:00 PM - 7:00 PM
Time Zone:
Pacific Time - US & Canada (change)
Location:
VIRTUAL
Library:
Virtual
Online:
This is an online event. Event URL will be sent via registration email.
Audience:
  Adults  
Categories:
  Presentation  
Registration has closed.

NCW Libraries Statement:

All NCW Libraries programs are free and open to the public. All attendees must comply with the NCW Libraries Code of Conduct.

Event Organizer

Alicia O'Dell

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