Upcoming Events
Past Events
Writing Beyond the Prison: Digital Archive and Curriculum for Incarcerated Authors
November 6, 2024 | 5-7 pm
Humanities Building, Room 1006 Stony Brook University
This event is co-sponsored by the Center for Changing Systems of Power (CCSP) and the Humanities Institute at Stony Brook
This event celebrates the launch
of a digital humanities project
designed to amplify the voices of
those who have been impacted by
the carceral system. “Writing
Beyond the Prison” features a digital archive of over 100 writings by incarcerated
authors, an interactive website and an online writing curriculum for use in—and beyond--carceral
settings. The event features a panel conversation with project leaders, our community
partners, and incarcerated and formerly incarcerated authors and activists.
Featuring:
Lawrence Bartley, The Marshall Project Inside - Keynote Speaker
Ivan Kilgore, Founder, United Black Family Scholarship Foundation & Incarcerated Author
Erika Duncan Founder/Director, Herstory Writers Network
Robert T. Chase, History Department, Stony Brook University
Zebulon Vance Miletsky, Africana Studies Department, Stony Brook University
Susan Scheckel, English Department, Stony Brook University
Other scheduled presentations
Dissent, Democracy & Higher Education: Under Attack October 22, 2024 | 5:15 pm (EST) Humanities Building, Room 1006 Stony Brook University This event is co-sponsored by the Center for Changing Systems of Power, the Humanities Institute, and the Asian American Justice & Innovation Lab and is supported by Mellon’s Affirming Multivocal Humanities Program
Learn how the legal attacks on campus protests and free speech in New York fit into the broader national context. Speakers: Tariq Habash - former DOE employee and first person to resign from Biden administration to protest the US's support for Israel's war on Gaza; Fellow, American Association of University Professor’s Center for Defense of Academic Freedom Rana Jaleel - Associate Professor of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies and Asian American Studies and Chair of the American Association of University Professors’ Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure Danny Shaw - Latin American & Caribbean Studies Professor & Ethnographer who was doxed, harassed, fired from CUNY, and detained and interrogated by the FBI and DHS for his pro-Palestine activism Jonathan Wallace - longtime movement lawyer based in New York doing pro bono work to support faculty and students attacked for their support of Palestinian liberation
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Non-Western Marxisms: Towards a South-South Perspective | Lecture by Martín Cortés (University of Buenos Aires) September 30, 2024 | 12:30 pm - 1:50 pm, Campus Lifetime (EST) Humanities Building, Room 1008 | Stony Brook University Sponsored by HISB and CCSP. This presentation aims to explore the theoretical implications arising from the expansion of Marxism beyond its European origins, particularly in the context of peripheral capitalist societies. It examines the concept of "non-Western Marxisms" and the challenges it poses to Marxism's claims of universal applicability. Building upon previous research on the reception and translation of Marxism in Latin America, the presentation seeks to extend this analytical approach to other non-Western Marxist traditions, including those from the Caribbean, Asia, and Africa. Beginning from the assumption that these "peripheral" Marxisms have made important theoretical contributions in areas such as historical time, the national question, and the political subject, the main goal is to critically interrogate the tendency within traditional Marxist historiography to treat these regional contexts as isolated case studies, rather than as sites of substantive theoretical elaboration with universal implications. More info HERE. Martín Cortés is a professor of Political Science at the University of Buenos Aires and the author of, among other titles, Translating Marx, José Aricó and the New Latin American Marxism (Brill, 2020). |
"I am not the river Jhelum" | Film screening and Q&A with director Prabhash Chandra September 23, 2024 | 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm Humanities Building, Room 1008 | Stony Brook University "I'm Not The River Jhelum" is a film that delves deep into the complexities and hardships faced by individuals in Kashmir, primarily through the eyes of its young protagonist, Afeefa. The film seeks to shed light on the various perspectives and realities that exist within Kashmir and across India, touching on sensitive subjects that are both timely and significant. |
Voices from Gaza & West Bank: Health Care in Crisis September 19, 2024 | 5:45 pm - 9:30 pm MART Auditorium, 1 Lauterbur Dr | Stony Brook University Join us for dinner and a selection of speakers on the state of healthcare in Gaza and the West Bank amid the ongoing crisis. Program Details - Dr. Syed M. Sayeed presents eyewitness medical accounts from Gaza. - Steve Sosebee speaks on the efforts of HEAL Palestine. - Children of Gaza, The Kites Still Fly: photographs by Tom Lewendon. - Medical evacuee shares experiences from Gaza. - Q&A with our speakers. Registration link HERE |
AI Advocacy Fair April 30, 2024 Humanities Building Room 1008 | Stony Brook University Hosted by WRT302 and the Center for Changing Systems of Power. The goal of the AI Advocacy Fair is to learn more about advocating for causes that matter to our community in the AI age. WRT302: AI and Advocacy delves into the transformative impact of new Generative AI tools like ChatGPT and Google Gemini. The AI Advocacy Fair explores how these tools reshape our approach to communication and writing and impact our ability to change people's minds and take action on urgent issues like climate change, racial justice, and gender equality. During Spring 2024 students of WRT302: AI and Advocacy, directed by their instructor, Dr. Matthew Salzano, created a public-facing report identifying major risks and opportunities for social justice advocates seeking to use AI. This report is the result of an undergraduate research collaboration. Download the “AI and Advocacy: Maximizing Potential, Minimizing Risk” report here. |
How SUNY Benefits from Prison Labor: A Teach-in March 25, 2024 | 4:30 pm Humanities Building Room 1006 | Stony Brook University Join the conversation with academics and activists on how SUNY benefits from prison labor. Speakers Robert Chase (Associate Professor, History, Stony Brook University) * Moderated by Stacey Finkelstein (Professor and Area Head of Marketing, College of Business, Stony Brook University)
This event is organized by 13th Forward, the Center for Changing Systems of Power, Citizen Action of New York, and United University Professions, and supported by Mellon's Affirming Multivocal Humanities program. To learn more and for additional resources, click HERE. |
Academics Under Attack: A Faculty First Responder Workshop March 4, 2024; 5:00 pm Online Faculty First Responders monitors the right-wing media ecosystem to track targeted harassment of higher education workers, to defend workers’ academic freedom and free speech rights, and to support workers targeted by the right-wing media. Learn about the causes and consequences of right-wing attacks on higher education workers, how to protect and defend yourself from attacks without curtailing your academic freedom, and about available resources for higher education workers facing targeted harassment, and advice on how to effectively respond to attacks. Sponsored by the Center for Changing Systems of Power and supported by Mellon’s Affirming Multivocal Humanities program. |
Casa Común/Communal House | Collaborative Art Exhibition February 8-22, 2024 Melville Library, North Reading Room | Stony Brook University "Casa Común/Communal House" is a collaborative art project that confronts the atrocities of the war in Colombia and gives healing, reconciliation, and hopes for a peaceful future through the handcrafted work of victims. Co-sponsors: The Latin American and Caribbean Studies Center | Department of Sociology | Department of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies | Department of Hispanic Languages and Literature | The Humanities Institute at Stony Brook University. OPENING RECEPTION: February 8, 2024; 6:00 pm (Food & drinks will be served!) To learn more about Casa Común here
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Sir Run Run Shaw Lecture Series: "Künü: A Space for Dialogue" | Documentary film screening and conversation with Francisco Huichaqueo February 9, 2024; 4:00 pm Charles B. Wang Center Lecture Hall 1 | Stony Brook University "Künü" by Mapuche filmmaker Francisco Huichaqueo, is a documentary that captures the collaborative efforts of 80 Mapuche communities to reclaim part of their ancestral lands from a large transnational forestry company in Chile, in the Araucanía-Loncoche region. "Künü" documents the creation of a space for difficult dialogue between groups with a long history of mistrust and power imbalances but at the same time focuses on the perspective of exercising the ancestral and political self-determination of local Mapuche communities. Francisco Huichaqueo is a filmmaker, artist, curator of memory garments, and a professor at the University of Concepción. His films have been showcased in various Chilean and international venues, including the Mother Tongue Film Festival at the Smithsonian, ImagineNATIVE in Toronto, Museo Reina Sofía, and the 11th Berlin Biennale. Co-sponsors: The Latin American and Caribbean Studies Center | Department of Sociology | Department of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies | Department of Hispanic Languages and Literature. |
War is not the answer: A teach-in on peace and human rights November 16, 2023; 4:00 pm Humanities Building Room 2001 (Poetry Center) | Stony Brook University Learn about how the occupation and violence in Palestine and Israel are affecting communities. Speakers Noura Farouk (Founder of Mothers4Justice, organizer, published writer, doula birth worker, and oral history archivist) Farrah Mozawalla (President of the Asian American Institute for Research and Engagement) Ruth Sergel (Artist, director, writer, interactive technology designer, and creator of Chalk and Voices of 9.11) |
Bringing Human Rights Home: The work of human rights cities | A talk with Jackie Smith November 1st, 2023; 4:00 pm Humanities Building Room 1008 | Stony Brook University Jackie Smith’s research focuses on how globalization impacts people and communities, and how social movements for the environment, health, and economic justice have advanced transformative struggles. She has documented long-term trends in transnational social movement organizations and coalitions, and connections between global politics and activism in cities and communities. Smith is currently engaged in participatory research with Pittsburgh and national human rights organizers. She is also engaged in work to connect municipalities with United Nations human rights work. |
CAS Events
- 11NovDIVERSITY BY DESIGN: Gateway to Inclusion for Transcultural Communicative CompetenceDepartment of Asian and Asian American Studies | LLRC...
- 12NovUniversity Orchestra - Concert at Staller CenterThe University Orchestra will present a concert on Tuesday, November 12 at Staller Center for the Arts – Main Stage at 7:30 p.m. ...
- 13NovRetirement Retrospective for Prof. Paul GootenbergThe Department of History and the Latin American & Caribbean Studies Center (LACS) are co-sponsoring a retirement retrospective for Distingu...
- 13NovHLL Invita: Prof. Joseph Lemelin, "Conversation on Philosophy and Digital Technologies"Assistant Prof. Joseph Lemelin (Philosophy) works on philosophical implications of digital technologies, with a particular emphasis on artif...
- 20NovFaculty Lecture by Lisa Diedrich/WGSS, "Illness Politics and Hashtag Activism"In this lecture, "Illness Politics and Hashtag Activism", will explores illness and disability in action on social media, analyzing popular ...