Shrines and Sovereigns: Life, Death, and Religion in Rural Azerbaijan

LA5-167

You are invited to A Scholarly Intersectons Talk supported by: Departments of History, Anthropology, Religious Studies, Internatonal Studies, and Romance, German, Russian Languages and Literature. “Shrines and Sovereigns: Life, Death, and Religion in Rural Azerbaijan”  Taking up the case of a regionally famous mystical actor and rebel in the Caucasus region of the former Soviet […]

Scholarly Intersections: Science Denial – Why it Happens and What to do About It

Zoom

CLA Scholarly Intersections!! Science Denial: Why It Happens and What To Do About It A book discussion with author Dr. Gale Sinatra Dr. Gale Sinatra is a Professor of Psychology and the Stephen H. Crocker Professor of Education Rossier. Her areas of expertise include climate science education, evolution education, learning theory, knowledge construction, conceptual changes […]

Cambodian New Year A Point of Community Renewal and Reflection: a Talk with Dr. LinDa Saphan about Cambodian Rock Music

Zoom

Cambodian New Year A Point of Community Renewal and Reflection: a Talk with Dr.   LinDa Saphan about Cambodian Rock Music  College of the Liberal Arts Scholarly Intersections Talk  Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month Celebration 2022  Tuesday, April 19th | 2:00 - 3:15PM Zoom: https://bit.ly/aapi22_cam    Long Beach, California is home to the largest […]

Representation and Reclamation: Native Americans in Video Games

Zoom

The History Department and American Indian Studies would like to invite you to a Scholarly Intersections talk featuring Dr. Ashlee Bird (Western Abenaki) a Native American game designer, PhD in Native American Studies, and the Moreau Post Doctoral Fellow at the University of Notre Dame. Dr. Bird will present research from her dissertation and most […]

Healing Justice Through the Arts

Zoom

We invite you and your students to join us for “Healing Justice Through the Arts,” a Scholarly Intersections event hosted by Drs. May Lin and Janet Muñiz in Asian & Asian American Studies and Sociology on Thursday, April 21st, 2022 | 2-3:15pm. Register here to receive the Zoom link: tinyurl.com/SIApril21 This workshop features Narinda Heng, a queer Khmer […]

2022 Annual Solanki Lecture: Farhad Manjoo “Tech and the Burning World”

CPIE Conference Room

The Yadunandan Center for India Studies is proud to present the 2022 Annual Solanki Lecture: "Tech and the Burning World" Farhad Manjoo   Farhad Manjoo, an opinion columnist at The New York Times, has been covering the internet and the technology industry for two decades. He will talk about the ways digital technology is changing global societies […]

Annual Africana Studies Day Forum – Africana Studies and the Struggle for AB-1460 and a Quality Education: Conducting Our Blooming in the Noise and Whip of the Whirlwind

Zoom

The Department of Africana Studies California State University, Long Beach Presents Africana Studies and the Struggle for AB-1460 and a Quality Education: Conducting Our Blooming in the Noise and Whip of the Whirlwind Panelists: Dr. Marquita Gammage Professor and Chair, Department of Africana Studies, California State University, Northridge Dr. Ken Monteiro Former Dean, College of […]

We Go Down Sewing: A Conversation with the Auntie Sewing Squad

Zoom

We hope you can join us for a virtual panel conversation with Kristina Wong and members of the Auntie Sewing Squad, about the mutual aid organization and the new book, The Auntie Sewing Squad Guide to Mask Making, Radical Care, and Racial Justice, on Tuesday, April 26, 2pm to 3:15pm. We Go Down Sewing: A Conversation […]

The Price of Whiteness: Jews, Race, and American Identity

Zoom

What has it meant to be Jewish in a nation defined by the categories of Black and White? Are American Jews of European background members of a vulnerable minority group or part of the privileged white majority? Or both? This discussion will examine the uneasy place Jews have held in America’s racial culture since the late nineteenth century and also ask what role they have to play in today’s movements for racial justice. […]

Visibility Interrupted: Rural Queer Life & The Politics of Unbecoming

LA5-165 and Zoom

Scholarly Intersections Event Scholar Dr. Carly Thomsen, faculty in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies at Middlebury College, will be visiting campus next week on Thursday, April 28th (3-4:30pm) to share her research and excellent first monograph, Visibility Interrupted: Rural Queer Life & The Politics of Unbecoming. She will also be showing an associated short film […]