American Studies AMST

Lecture by Emily Raymundo '10--Equal in Love and Death: Revising M. Butterfly's Multiculturalism in Trump's America

Sponsored by:
American Studies
In 2017, David Henry Hwang’s now-canonical M. Butterfly returned to Broadway in a revival headlined by Clive Owen and directed by Broadway auteur Julie Taymor with a newly revised script. This talk considers both the original and revised versions of the play in the context of the height of multiculturalism, in 1988, and the emergence of a post-multicultural racial regime in 2016, following Donald Trump’s election. Tracing how the play’s representations of whiteness, multicultural Asian Americanness, and queer desire have transformed, Dr.

Axinn Center 219

Building Equity in Education: A Global Imperative, not just for Educators

Sponsored by:
American Studies
Korydon Smith is a faculty member at the University at Buffalo – State University of New York, the most comprehensive public research university in the northeastern United States. Serving as Professor and Associate Dean in the School of Architecture and Planning and Co-Director of the Community of Excellence in Global Health Equity, Dr. Smith conducts research on planning and design for diversity, health, and social justice in the United States and abroad.

Axinn Center 229

Open to the Public
Image of of woman with dark hair

Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar Lecture: Thinking about Migration through Latinx Art

A lecture by Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar Professor Charlene Villaseñor Black, Professor of Art History and Chicana/o Studies Studies at UCLA. Professor Charlene Villaseñor Black will offer a public lecture on the relationship between migration and art. In introducing the lecture, Charlene Villaseñor Black writes: Can art effect political change, and if so, how? Can it move us to action, empathy, andhope? I consider these questions as I investigate Chicanx (Mexican American) artists’ responses to global migration, in particular, Los Angeles artist Sandy Rodriguez (born1975).

Dana Auditorium (Sunderland Language Center)

Open to the Public
Image of a man wearing a blue shirt

My Journey to Become an American Mangaka

Kofi Bazzell-Smith is an artist, a graduate student at the University of Illinois, and a professional boxer. Pursuing his Master of Fine Arts in New Media, Kofi is currently a Mellon Foundation Interseminars Initiative Fellow with the Humanities Research Institution.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Open to the Public
Image of people breaking the bonds of slavery

American Studies Guest Lecture: Prof. Ford Risley, "Abolition and the Press: The Moral Struggle Against Slavery"

Sponsored by:
American Studies
Prof. Ford Risley, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Communications at Penn State University, will give a guest lecture titled, “Abolition and the Press: The Moral Struggle Against Slavery.” Abolitionist newspapers played an essential role in opposing slavery in the decades before the Civil War. Some 40 newspapers were founded with the goal of promoting emancipation of the more than three million slaves in the United States. At a time when most mainstream publications either supported slavery or ignored the subject, abolitionist newspapers were an unmistakable voice of outrage.

Axinn Center 232

Open to the Public

Liz Kinnamon Guest Speaker Event

Liz Kinnamon, PhD Candidate, University of Arizona, will give a guest lecture, titled, “Undoing the Property Form: Feminist Consciousness Raising as a Practice of Freedom”.

This talk examines 1960s and 70s feminist Consciousness Raising as an example of creating positive freedom. Kinnamon paints a picture of what radical feminist Consciousness Raising was; how it developed out of Third World liberation movements, such as in Vietnam and China, and Civil Rights; how it spread across the US and transnationally; and what kinds of effects these group practices had.

Robert A. Jones '59 Conference Room

close up of a guitar

The Guitar in American Culture Concert

Sponsored by:
Music and American Studies
The Guitar in American Culture course culminates in an evening of celebrating the musical instrument that we all love with performances by members of the class, ranging across genres. Sponsored by the American Studies Program and the Department of Music.

Full vaccinations and boosters (or valid medical or religious exemptions) and masks required.

If you have symptoms, or have been exposed to or tested positive for COVID-19 within the past 5 days, you may not attend arts events.

Mahaney Arts Center, Olin C. Robison Concert Hall

Free
Open to the Public
Man and boy on a dusty dirt road following a wagon filled with debris

Film Screening of "Human Flow"

This epic film by renowned artist Ai Weiwei is a detailed and heartbreaking exploration of the global refugee crisis. Captured over the course of a year in 23 countries, the film follows a chain of urgent stories that stretches through Afghanistan, Greece, Iraq, Kenya, Mexico, Turkey, and beyond. From teeming refugee camps to perilous ocean crossings to barbed-wire borders, ‘Human Flow’ witnesses its subjects’ desperate search for safety, shelter, and justice. (2017, dir. Ai Weiwei, 140 min.) Free and open to the public.*

Wilson Hall, McCullough Student Center

Open to the Public