Screening of “He Named Me Malala” film hosted by WSU Common Reading

The Washington State University Common Reading Program presents a screening of the award-winning documentary “He Named Me Malala,” Tues., Nov.29 at 7 p.m. in Todd 116. The public is welcome at this free campus event.

The 2015 film directed by Davis Guggenheim is an intimate portrait of Malala Yousafzai, author of this year’s common reading book for WSU students titled I Am Malala. Yousafzai is the youngest recipient of a Nobel Peace Prize, awarded for her efforts speaking out for women’s education in her home country of Pakistan. To stop the schoolgirl’s work, she was shot by the Taliban, but survived to carry on with her campaign and her own education.

The film portrays events that are described in the book, her relationship with her father who inspired her passion for education, and her life following the attack as she continued her studies and advocacy in Birmingham, England.

Guggenheim also directed the Academy Award-winning 2006 documentary “An Inconvenient Truth,” about former U.S. Vice President Al Gore’s campaign to explain global warming.

The Common Reading Program began in Pullman in 2007 to help students, their teachers, and the community better engage in academically centered critical thinking, communication, research, and learning around a body of shared information presented in a single, specially selected book. This year’s book aligns with the program’s 2015-2017 theme of “social justice and leadership.” 

For more information about the Common Reading, the book, and upcoming events visit: https://CommonReading.wsu.edu/.


MEDIA: Karen Weathermon, Common Reading Program co-director, WSU Undergraduate Education, 509-335-5488, kweathermon@wsu.edu

Emma Epperly, Communications and Marketing Junior Assistant, WSU Undergraduate Education, 509-335-9458, emmaepperly@wsu.edu