Description
In honor of Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM), check out Haven, Help Restore Hope, and Shaw's library display on the 3rd floor of Case-Geyer throughout April. The display includes featured books that speak to survivorship, resiliency, healing, and action. You're invited to engage with and borrow these books and additional ones on display, make a bookmark, grab a teal awareness pin, and more.
More from Today's Events
- Apr 2310:30 AMThe Locker RoomToday's Events | Clifford Gallery, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
2023/2024 Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation Artist-in-Residence jackie sumell and Studio CAJAIR present “The Locker Room.”Artist jackie sumell works at the intersection of social sculpture, abolition and healing. With the principle of abolition always in mind, sumell inhabits the physical materials and architectures of oppression and transforms these physical structures into lived spaces of radical hope.For The Locker Room, a work created especially for Colgate University, sumell worked with a team of students who go by Studio CAJAIR (an anagrammatic nod to the Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation Artist-In-Residence program, which underwrites this work). Together, sumell and Studio CAJAIR spent the academic year considering the relationship between athletics and activism, ultimately recreating the architecture of a locker room to envisage how sports and locker rooms can be horizons of liberation. They ask, “What happens if the locker room becomes public, seeded with the best of its potential? Can we make the lockers themselves altars to the future[s] we wish to see?”sumell and Studio CAJAIR, along with students they invited from Art & Activism (ARTS 132A), transformed 12 lockers into altars to future worlds. They imagine everything from ecological justice, racial equity, and classless societies to happiness after retirement, as wins.The Locker Room is presented by the Art Department and the Christian A. Johnson Foundation. The Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation Artist-in-Residence was established in 1986 as a challenge grant in support of the arts at Colgate. The residency program permits one or more artists to become part of the Colgate community every academic year.Opening reception and gallery talk with jackie sumell and Studio CAJAIR will take place at 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 27.Please note that weekend gallery hours are dependent on the availability of student monitors. If driving a distance, please contact the department at 315-228-7633 during regular working hours to ensure the gallery will be open.Learn more at https://www.cliffordgallery.org/ - Apr 2311:30 AMWGGS Senior Capstone ProjectsToday's Events | Center for Women's Studies, East Hall WMST Lobby
Join us for the 2024 WGSS Senior Captstone Projects - Beloved Community: Belonging, Grief, Accessibility and Safety.Come support our graduating seniors:Camryn Yeager: Senior Reflections: Community,Belonging, and Loneliness at ColgateIsrael Zarate: Feminist Book Club: Reading as CommunityShenice Mobley: Equity and Equality in the ClassroomTaylor Cigna: Death Library: A Personal andPolitical Grief ProjectJason Qian:(Counter-)Mapping Safety on Colgate’s CampusLunch will be provided. - Apr 234:15 PMAlexander the Great in Kashmir: The Alexander Romance and the RajataranginiToday's Events | Lawrence Hall, The Robert Ho Lecture Room, 105
Presentation by Daniel Tober, assistant professor of The Classics.By the time of his death in 323 BCE, the young king of Macedon, Alexander III “the Great,” had expanded his rule from northern Greece to northern India, transforming the Mediterranean world and the Middle East and earning himself unparalleled fame. His conquests quickly became the stuff of legend. The so-called Alexander Romance, a highly fictionalized account of Alexander’s life and conquests composed not long after his death, became the best-selling book of late antiquity and the early Middle Ages; by the 13th century CE, it had been translated from Greek into Coptic, Ge’ez, Syriac, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, and Armenian, not to mention every language of Europe. Stories about Alexander, meanwhile, worked their way into many other texts and traditions. We find Alexander at the gates of Eden in the Talmud, vanquishing the monstrous “Unclean Nations” of the North in the Qur’an, and talking to a magical tree en route to China in the Persian epic Shahnameh. Yet, while many Alexander legends, including much of the Romance, concern his marvelous adventures in India, we have very little evidence for the reception of Alexander among the inhabitants of that region themselves. This talk addresses this lacuna by exploring echoes of the Alexander Romance in the Rajatarangini (River of Kings), a local history of Kashmir written in Sanskrit by the poet Kalhana in the 12th-century CE.Refreshments provided. All are welcome.Reception begins at 4:00 PM. Lecture begins at 4:15 PM. - Apr 234:30 PMVulnerabilities of Intersectional IdentitiesToday's Events | ALANA Cultural Center
In highlighting Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM), join the ALANA social justice peer educators and Haven ambassadors for a conversation on the impacts of creating awareness about sexual assault amongst marginalized communities and the implications and vulnerabilities on intersectional identities. - Apr 235:00 PMOpen Zazen MeditationToday's Events | Chapel House, Chapel
Designed to help you to accept and become aware of the present moment, zazen meditation is focused on being aware of every sensation simultaneously, including thoughts. This helps in finding peace in the present moment.This meditation is led by visiting Zen Buddhist teacher and scholar Jeff Shore with guidance for beginners. - Apr 235:30 PMConflict KitchenToday's Events | Jane Pinchin Hall, Kitchen
Come and cook traditional Palestinian foods while learning about the food sovereignty issue in Palestine through a screening of Jumana Manna's Foragers (2022).This event is inspired by Conflict Kitchen, a restaurant in Pennsylvania that utilizes the social dynamics of food and economic exchange to foster discussions about countries, cultures, and people often overlooked in mainstream political discourse and media coverage.We will be preparing dishes like mutabal, mussakhan, and maqluba.Co-sponsored by Peace and Conflict Studies and the Colgate University Greenhouse, and supported by the Residential Commons Program, Dart Colegrove Commons, and Brown Commons.