Events By Quarter

Brother I'm Dying

Race and Literature Series

Brother, I’m Dying

This year, the MultiCultural Center kicked 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.

 
Shresthova

Engaging Communities with Resilient Love

Civic Imagination: Roadmaps, Stories, Research and Calls to Action Sangita Shresthova

MCC Theater

Drawing on the work of the Civic Imagination Project at the University of Southern California, this interactive talk engages the imagination as a complex tool for civic action. Here, the civic imagination is defined as the capacity to imagine alternatives to current cultural, social, political, or economic conditions; one cannot change the world unless one can imagine what a better world might look like.This talk will offer a historical context and theoretical framework to situate our approach to the civic imagination. Sangita Shresthova, Ph.D., focuses on digital media, civics, participation, the civic imagination, and cross cultural dialogue. Her recent academic research has focused on storytelling and surveillance among American Muslim youth, the fallout from the Kony2012 campaign, and global Bollywood.

CoC-Hailing Cesar

Cup of Culture

Hailing Cesar

MCC Theater

The grandson of civil rights activist Cesar Chavez, Eduardo Chavez, embarks on a journey to better understand his grandfather's legacy. Like his father and grandfather before him, he begins to work as a farm-worker, picking grapes in the field, and learns first hand the kind of labor that goes into putting fruits and vegetables on people’s plates. Through his reconnection with his family's legacy, we learn about Cesar Chavez's plight to create equality for farm-workers and use that knowledge to understand the current conditions that they face in the fields and back at home. Post-film discussion with director, Eduardo Chavez.

Gold

Spoken Word

An Evening of Poetry with Kavi Ade

MCC Theater

Kavi Ade’s poetry is a lamentation, a leaning in to what haunts the spirit of a Black
Trans Queer body. With poems that are deeply personal, while inescapably political,
Ade’s work grapples with being set at the throne of violence. Using art as resistance, 
they create transformative dialogue that aims to combat supremacist powers and
heal communities that have been relegated to the margins of society. Through poetry, 
Kavi will speak on race, gender, sexuality, and social justice, chronicling despair, grasping at hope, and exploring the ways a body can learn to survive. This event is co-sponsored by the Resource Center for Sexual and Gender Diversity and the Department of Women, Gender and Sexual Equality’s Women’s Center. 

 
scroll up icon