Events By Quarter
Race and Literature
MCC Meeting Room
This year, the MultiCultural Center is kicking off a new series to explore the issues of race and belonging through literature. This will be an interactive space for lively discussions on various theories about race, a safe space for articulating perspectives on identity and belonging which are contextualized by different authors, and an intentional time for centering the narratives of marginalized communities. Discussions will be facilitated by various faculty members, graduate students, and staff members. Readings may be suggested but are not required for attendance. This series hopes to cultivate open dialogue, and a spirit of appreciation and intellectual kinship. Dessert will be provided! All are welcome. Please contact the MCC if you’re interested in leading the conversation.
Cup of Culture
A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night
MCC Theater
In the Iranian ghost-town, Bad City, a place that reeks of death and loneliness, the townspeople are unaware they are being stalked by a lonesome vampire. 1h 47m.
One Woman Show: Radical Time Travel and Other Acts of Resistance Denise Uyehara
MCC Theater
Award-winning performance artist, writer, and director, Denise Uyehara, asks difficult questions through solo and collaborative projects: If Columbus were assassinated, how would life today be different? What does life look like for an undocumented worker in Tucson? How do we begin to break the cycle of injustice happening over and over again? Through action, ritual, text, and video, Uyehara explores these questions, providing layered and complicated responses instead of outright answers, challenging us to look deeper in these troubling times.
Cup of Culture
Sorry to Bother You
MCC Theater
“An outrageous and uncompromising assault on capitalism, consumerism, racism and other unpleasant -isms that have come to define these United States of America” - Creative Loafing. Sorry to Bother You features Cassius Green, a young black man in modern-day Oakland trying to surpass his current living and financial situation. Brought in to the world of telemarketing, Cassius finds that, to succeed, being himself isn’t enough. In a blockbuster film that is sure to turn heads, audience members are taken on a journey between what is “right” and “wrong” as Cassius’ budding success makes him choose between the money and the social activism that accepts him for who he is. A discussion will follow the film screening. 1h 51 m.