Events By Quarter

Omar-8945

SyrianamericanA: Damascus to Harlem (Presented by Hip-Hop Artist Omar Offendum)

MCC Theater

From the jasmine tree-lined courtyards of Nizar Qabbani’s Damascene homes, to the flooded riverbanks of Langston Hughes’ poems, this event is a performance, presentation, and conversation. With an artistic journey that has paralleled the rise of social media and borne witness to major socio-political shifts in his ancestral home, Omar Offendum,a Syrian hip-hop artist, poet, and peace activist, discusses how he has been able to develop a special blend of Hip-Hop & Arabic poetry to bridge cultural divides.

2013LosPinguosPeirPhoto

An Evening of Latin Music: Los Pinguos

MCC Theater

They came to the US from Buenos Aires, Argentina, with a mixture of rhythms, performed with Spanish guitars, Latin drums, and harmonizing vocals. Vivacious and infectious, the sound of Los Pinguos has claimed fans worldwide. Join the four-man group - Adrián Buono, José Agote, Santiago Lee, and Pablo Medina - for a blend of groove and Latin rhythms.

*Purchase tickets online: $5 for UCSB students and youth under 12; $15 for general admission.

Michael Hanchard

Race Matters Series

Democracy, Racial Regimes and Inequality: Ancient Athens to the Contemporary World (Michael Hanchard)

MCC Lounge

Is racial exclusion antithetical to democracy? Dr. Michael Hanchard, Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, explores how regimes of racial and ethno-national hierarchy have functioned as modalities for political membership and exclusion in societies ranging from the city-state of ancient Athens to the modern and contemporary nation-states in our world. Rather than treating racial and ethno-national regimes as anomalous to democratic practice, Dr. Hanchard’s research suggests that racial and ethno-national regimes have been constituted in and by the very practice of democracy. In so doing, he exposes the limits of democratic theory to address issues of racial inequality.

TRAPPED

Cup of Culture

Trapped

MCC Theater

What remains of a woman’s right to choose? Since 2010, 288 laws regulating abortion providers have been passed by state legislatures. In total, 44 states and the District of Columbia have measures subjecting abortion providers to legal restrictions not imposed on other medical professionals. Unable to comply with these far-reaching and medically unnecessary laws, clinics have taken their fight to the courts. Trapped follows the clinic workers and lawyers who were on the front lines of the battle to keep abortion safe and legal for millions of American women. (English, 2016, 90 min)

Watch trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXFo0ELvGsg

Film courtesy of the UCSB Library. After the screening the DVD will be available in the Library's media collection.

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