Events By Quarter

David Rojas

Children's Event: The Building Blocks of American Music

David Rojas

MCC Lounge

This Children's Event will explore American percussion rhythms with blues musical artist David Rojas in a hands-on workshop! Learn the diasporic roots of musical genres you may already know and rock out with us in the MCC Lounge. No previous music experience necessary, ages 5+ recommended.
 
Speaker Bio: Recognized by colleagues and friends as an established professional musician and dedicated director of music programs, David Rojas has developed an exceptional leadership profile founded on being a devoted advocate for music and creative arts. Mr. Rojas oversees the Turner Foundation’s Music & Imagination program (TFMI), a Santa Barbara-based nonprofit that provides a free out-of-school resource that actively engages young peoples’ imagination through music education. Along with his role as Director of TFMI, Mr. Rojas actively plays professionally as a guitarist and lead vocalist for one of Santa Barbara’s top blues bands called, Rent Party Blues. Lastly, Mr. Rojas currently serves on the board of The Santa Barbara Blues Society and assists with hosting community blues music events where he enjoys teaching the history of blues and its influence on America's popular music.

Dr. Ugo Edu

Race Matters Series

Forecasting through Anthropology and Theatre For Black Life

Dr. Ugo Edu

Online

Drawing on experiences utilizing playwriting to grapple with the historical legacies entangling Blackness and the development of the sciences, medicine, and health that emerged through ethnographic fieldwork, Dr. Edu addresses how anthropology and theater can be put together in the service of predicting what is to come and making space for that exploration and galvanization for change and improved Black lives. Can it help us make futures that invite, nurture, and sustain Blackness, Black reproduction, bodies, technologies, and life, towards the promotion, celebration, and sustenance of Black life? Ugo Edu is a medical anthropologist working at the intersection of medical anthropology, public health, black feminism, and science, technology, and society studies (STS). Using interdisciplinary approaches, her scholarship focuses on reproductive and sexual health, gender, race, aesthetics, body knowledge, and body modifications. Her book project: The “Family Planned”: Racial Aesthetics, Sterilization, and Reproductive Fugitivity in Brazil, traces the influence of an economy of race, aesthetics, and sexuality on reproductive and sterilization practices of women in Brazil. She is working on a play, Securing Ties, which draws heavily on her book project as a means for critical public engagement and an incorporation of the arts in her scholarship. She is an Assistant Professor in the African American Studies Department at UCLA.

Building the American Dream

Cup of Culture

Building the American Dream

MCC Theater

Across Texas, an unstoppable construction boom drives urban sprawl and luxury high-rises. Its dirty secret: abuse of immigrant labor. BUILDING THE AMERICAN DREAM captures a turning point as a movement forms to fight widespread construction industry injustices. Grieving their son, a Mexican family campaigns for a life-and-death safety ordinance. A Salvadorian electrician couple owing thousands in back pay fights for their children’s future. A bereaved son battles to protect others from his family's preventable tragedy. A story of courage, resilience, and community, the film reveals shocking truths about the hardworking immigrants who build the American Dream, of which they are excluded. 1 hour 15 minute

Dr. Nadia Kim

Diversity Lecture

Feeling Politics: The Role of Emotions in Environmental Racism Fights

Dr. Nadia Kim

MCC Theater

Dr. Kim’s book, Refusing Death, examines race, class, gender, and citizenship with respect to the growing social phenomenon of marginalized and unauthorized immigrants – especially women and youth – making political inroads by way of grassroots activism, at times, sidestepping the need for formal political channels. By way of nearly four years of ethnographic observation, in-depth interviews, and document analysis of Asian American and Latin@ environmental justice activism in the industrial-port belt of Los Angeles, she finds that these mostly female immigrant activists view their work as much more than an effort to spare their children’s lungs from the grey exhaust plumes of cargo ships and oil refineries; they are also redefining notions of politics, community, and citizenship in the face of America’s nativist racism and its system of class injustice, defined by disproportionate pollution and neglected schools, surveillance/deportation, and political marginalization. By inventively dovetailing all of these dimensions, the women show that they are highly conscious of how environmental and educational harms are an assault on their bodies and emotions; hence, they center embodied and affective strategies to uniquely challenge the neoliberal state’s neglect and betrayal and, ultimately, to refuse death.
 
Short Bio: Nadia Kim is Professor of Asian and Asian American Studies (and, by courtesy, Sociology) at Loyola Marymount University. Her research focuses on US race and citizenship injustices concerning Korean/Asian Americans and South Koreans, race and nativist racism in Los Angeles (e.g., 1992 LA Unrest), immigrant women activists, environmental racism and classism, and comparative racialization of Latinxs, Asian Americans, and Black Americans. Throughout her work, Kim’s approach centers on (neo)imperialism, transnationality, and the intersectionality of race, gender, class, and citizenship. Kim is author of the multi-award-winning Imperial Citizens: Koreans and Race from Seoul to LA (Stanford, 2008); of multi-award-winning Refusing Death: Immigrant Women and the Fight for Environmental Justice in LA (Stanford, 2021); and  award-winning journal articles on race and assimilation and on racial attitudes. In part as a UCSB undergraduate, Kim has long organized on issues of immigrant rights, affirmative action, and environmental justice, some of which she has incorporated into her research. She and/or her work have also appeared (inter)nationally on National/Southern California Public Radio, Red Table Talk, Radio Korea, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Korea Times, NYLON Magazine, and The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Co-Sponsors: Environmental Justice Alliance, Office of Equal Opportunity & Discrimination Prevention, and Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

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