Events By Quarter
The MCC in I.V.
An Evening of Self-Expression: MC TINY, Poverty Skola
Biko Garage, 6612 Sueno Road, Isla Vista
The MCC hosts an open mic for anyone to artistically express themselves through all creative outlets including music, poetry, spoken word, and dance while educating others on current issues affecting students of color, women, and all marginalized groups. This quarter’s MC, Tiny (aka Lisa Gray-Garcia), is a poverty scholar, revolutionary journalist, lecturer, Po' Poet, spoken word artist, and welfareQUEEN, mixed race, and the co–founder of POOR Magazine/Prensa POBRE/PoorNewsNetwork.
Cup of Culture
Crossing Arizona
MCC Theater
Heightened security along the Texas and California borders funnels undocumented migrants, most traveling on foot, into remote sectors of the Arizona desert. The influx of migrants and rising death toll have elicited complicated and impassioned responses regarding human rights, culture, class, and national security. Viewing this crisis through the eyes of ranchers, local activists, desperate migrants, and Minutemen, Crossing Arizona reveals the surprising political stances people take when border policy fails everyone. A Skype Q&A session with the filmmaker to follow. (77 min, English and Spanish w/ English subtitles, 2006)
Watch the trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfCaIdJa6fE
DIVERSITY LECTURE
The Making of Asian America with Erika Lee
MCC Theater
“The Making of Asian America is a stirring chronicle long overdue.” – The Los Angeles Times
Asian Americans are the fastest growing group in the US today, but most Americans know little about their long history here and their current complicated status. Award-winning historian Erika Lee unravels 450 years of Asian American history to explain how these citizens, once a 'despised minority,” became a 'model minority' and how Asian Americans help us understand America today. Erika Lee teaches American history at the University of Minnesota, where she holds the Rudolph J. Vecoli Chair in Immigration History and is Director of the Immigration History Research Center.