Events By Quarter

Dr. Mimi Khúc

Why We Feel We Owe Our Parents for Their Sacrifices: A Workshop on Filial Debt

Dr. Mimi Khúc

Online

Pre-registration required via Shoreline for Zoom link.

Do you feel like you owe your parents for their sacrifices? How does this sense of debt--and the gratitude that it requires--shape your experiences and choices? This workshop will discuss the concept of filial debt, where it comes from, and how it shapes relationships in immigrant families. We will explore how it feels to try to be a person in the shadow of all-consuming debt to one's parents. Participants will gain new tools for understanding their own family dynamics, reflect on how to navigate them, and perhaps find new strategies of finding agency and selfhood.
 
Speaker Bio: Mimi Khúc is a writer, scholar, and teacher of things unwell. She is the creator of the mental health projects, Open in Emergency and the Asian American Tarot. Her forthcoming book, dear elia: Letters from the Asian American Abyss (Duke University Press), is a creative-critical, genre-bending deep dive into the shapes of Asian American unwellness at the intersections of ableism, model minoritization, and the university.

 

Sins Invalid

Cup of Culture

Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty (screening #3)

MCC Lounge

5-7:30 PM, 32min documentary begins at 6 PM

Sins Invalid witnesses a performance project that incubates and celebrates artists with disabilities, centralizing artists of color and queer, and gender-variant artists. Since 2006, its’ performances have explored themes of sexuality, beauty, and the disabled body, impacting thousands through live performance. Sins Invalid is an entryway into the absurdly taboo topic of sexuality and disability, manifesting a new paradigm of disability justice. 
 
Activity Description: For the duration of this event, art supplies and pages of the “Disability Justice from A to Z coloring book” will be available in the MCC lounge for attendees to benefit from the creative, embodied, and self-soothing aspects of coloring. Attendees will have the opportunity to join community discussions before and after the documentary screening. The documentary will be captioned, and an ASL interpreter will be present. 

Co-sponsors: Commission on Disability Equity (CODE), DSP, & RCSGD

Reception for MCC Staff Art Exhibition

Art Exhibition

Reception for the MultiCultural Center’s 35th Anniversary: An MCC Staff Art Exhibition

MCC Lounge

Please join us for the MCC’s 35th Anniversary Art Reception honoring the caretakers of the MCC. The "Staff" (career staff, student-staff, and interns) are not just staff! We are creative in the ways we seek to change the campus and the larger community. Some of us are also artists! In honor of the MCC’s 35th Anniversary, this special art exhibition honors the current caretakers of the MCC. Food and drink provided.

Neptune Frost

Cup of Culture

Neptune Frost

MCC Theater

Multi-hyphenate, multidisciplinary artist Saul Williams brings his unique dynamism to this Afrofuturist vision, a sci-fi punk musical that’s a visually wondrous amalgamation of themes, ideas, and songs that Williams has explored in his work, notably his 2016 album MartyrLoserKing. Co-directed with the Rwandan-born artist and cinematographer, Anisia Uzeyman, the film takes place in the hilltops of Burundi, where a group of escaped coltan miners form an anti-colonialist computer hacker collective. From their camp in an otherworldly e-waste dump, they attempt a takeover of the authoritarian regime exploiting the region's natural resources – and its people. When an intersex runaway and an escaped coltan miner find each other through cosmic forces, their connection sparks glitches within the greater divine circuitry. Set between states of being – past and present, dream and waking life, colonized and free, male and female, memory and prescience – Neptune Frost is an invigorating and empowering direct download to the cerebral cortex and a call to reclaim technology for progressive political ends.

Co-sponsor: KCSB

scroll up icon