Mourning Our Losses Virtual Vigil: Marking a Year of Loss Behind Bars
Join Mourning Our Losses to honor the lives of those who have died while living or working behind bars during the past year.
Register on Eventbrite: http://bit.ly/one-year-vigil
Join Mourning Our Losses to honor the lives of those who have died while living or working behind bars during the past year.
Register on Eventbrite: http://bit.ly/one-year-vigil
Please join us for a second in the special webinar series slated to be held on the last Friday of every month. Led by Professor Moira Fradinger, this series is a part of a collaborative effort with CLAIS, Latin American Interdisciplinary Gender Network, and The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) to highlight gender studies and gender issues in Latin America.
Before Oprah, before Arsenio, there was Mr. SOUL! Join the Afro-American Cultural Center and YSC for a screening of the award-winning documentary followed by a discussion with writer/director and former New Haven resident Melissa Haizlip and Yale Professors Thomas Allen Harris and Daphne A. Brooks. The topic will be “Making the Archive Public: Radical History in Public Television.”
El Abrazo (The Embrace)
Friday, 5/7 from 1:30-2:30pm: When you think of the word “embrace,” who/what do you think of? In this workshop, participants will partner up to share moments of embrace. While one person is sharing, the other person will draw their story, and each person will get 20 minutes to share and create. All Yale students and staff are welcome! Bring paper, a writing utensil, and optional coloring supplies.
A Constant Reminder
Friday, 4/16 from 1:30-2:30pm: What does it look like to care for and nurture ourselves, even when we are in motion? This workshop is about holding yourself and others accountable to the act of self-love. We will write reminders of who we are and what self-care means to us. Participants can drop off their materials for this collaborative installation from 10am-4pm on Friday, 4/16 at Silliman College (505 College Street). More information to come soon for participants not located in New Haven this semester!
Intenciones (Intentions)
Friday, 4/2 from 1:30-2:30pm: What does intentionality look like for you, and what does it mean to grow into the person you are becoming? In this workshop, we will explore the importance of accountability, self-acceptance, being present, and acknowledging our past. We will reflect on who exactly we intend to be and create an origami craft detailing these intentions. All Yale students and staff are welcome! Necessary materials include paper (origami paper recommended but not required), a writing utensil, and optional coloring supplies.
The second Yale West Campus Conversation is Friday, March 26th, 4pm, when we will have a conversation with Nicholas Christakis and Niall Ferguson titled ‘The Pandemic of the 21st Century: An Analysis of a Catastrophe.’ Our thanks to Andre Levchenko and Kathryn Ferguson for hosting this session.
Zoom link: http://bit.ly/YWC_CC2
The Yale Healthcare Conference is a collaborative effort between Yale’s Schools of Management, Medicine, Nursing, and Public Health.
This annual student-led knowledge translation event brings together industry leaders, clinicians, and scholars to engage in meaningful discourse regarding today’s foremost healthcare issues, and opportunities for leadership, innovation, and interdisciplinary collaboration.
Please note the updated airdate. Witness what happens when Yale Dance Lab in partnership with the Yale Schwarzman Center invites 16 choreographers to create digital dance poems, performed by dancers from across the Yale community. Knitting together local, national, and international communities of dance, Transpositions: Dance Poems for an Online World explores the continuous and interrupted transmission of embodied dance practices in digital life. Edited by by Kyla Arsadjaja MFA ‘20, the concept and direction of this episode is by Dormeshia.
Please note the updated airdate. Witness what happens when Yale Dance Lab in partnership with the Yale Schwarzman Center invites 16 choreographers to create digital dance poems, performed by dancers from across the Yale community. Knitting together local, national, and international communities of dance, Transpositions: Dance Poems for an Online World explores the continuous and interrupted transmission of embodied dance practices in digital life. Edited by by Kyla Arsadjaja MFA ‘20, the concept and direction of this episode is by Irene Hultman.