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Interim at Calvin
College is known for unusual course offerings. For three weeks Calvin
students take just one class, a format that allows for a little more
latitude than the regular semester. So it's no surprise to see a course
at Calvin this January on knitting.

Diane VanderPol |
Okay, admits, course
co-instructor Diane VanderPol, maybe it's a bit of a surprise. But,
she says, the knitting offering, which attracted 32 students and began
January 7, has more to it than meets the eye.
In fact, the official
course title is "Knitting: Handcraft as a Window into Domestic
Culture and Religious Practice" and the class will not only do
some knitting (including making an afghan for charity), but also look
at the distinctions between craft and art; the role of handcrafts in
the building of community, especially among women; the connection between
the practice of handcrafts and play or leisure; and the connection between
the practice of handcrafts and contemplative practice.
The students will
write three reflection papers and guest lecturers will be part of the
program, including a woman who knits as a way of coping with a serious
illness, the woman who runs a knitting program at Gilda's Club (a free
support community of men, women and children with cancer and their family
and friends), a man retired from the Calvin faculty who knits hats as
a service project, and a woman who incorporates fiber arts into her
teaching of mathematics.
VanderPol, a documents
librarian at Calvin, will teach the course with professor of religion
Laura Smit.

Laura Smit |
Both instructors
say they want students to understand how this handcraft - that could
easily be obsolete in an age of quick and inexpensive textiles - has
seen a growing number of practitioners take up the art. They also want
students to think more deeply about the connections between body and
spirit that an art such as knitting can forge. And they hope students
will, through the practice of knitting together as a class, learn the
connections between people that a seemingly solitary exercise such as
knitting can bring about.
As part of that
fostering of community the class plans to spend a couple of afternoons
at Raybrook Manor, knitting with seniors there and hearing their stories.
Knitting, notes
VanderPol, is on the rise in the United States, especially on college
campuses and even among high school students.
The Knitting Guild
of America began in 1984 with 550 members and now numbers more than
10,000. Its annual convention draws every year a greater number of women
in their 20s and 30s. Many local yarn shops teach knitting classes,
and in August the Michigan Fiber Festival brings in both nationally
known and local instructors for five days of workshops at the Allegan
County Fairgrounds.
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