04/29/2022
The countdown is on! Our Second Annual Spring Farmers Craft Fair is just six days away. We are looking forward to a great event!
This is the official page of the Africana Studies Program, Vassar’s longest-running multidisciplin
Africana Studies is Vassar’s longest-running multidisciplinary program. Established in 1969, it has been at the heart of transforming the curriculum and broadening the intellectual and social experience of students, faculty, and administrators for four decades. Its educational mission is to promote a focused and critical study of the people, cultures, and institutions of Africana and the African D
04/29/2022
The countdown is on! Our Second Annual Spring Farmers Craft Fair is just six days away. We are looking forward to a great event!
12/09/2021
04/12/2019
Please join the Asian American Studies Working Group and participating faculty (Eve Dunbar, Hiram Perez, and Chris Eng) for this conversation about what ethnic studies at Vassar means.
Time: 7:00 pm
Date: Next Thursday, April 18th
Location: Sanders Auditorium
Check out their page (link below) to follow and read more about the group!
https://www.facebook.com/pg/VassarASAM/posts/?ref=page_internal
03/26/2019
Please join us TODAY for Professor William Darity's lecture titled "The Subaltern Middle Class" at 6:00 pm in Rocky 200!
03/25/2019
Please join the program for the lecture on "The Subaltern Middle Class" by Professor William A. Darity tomorrow Tuesday, March 26 at 6:00 pm in Rockerfeller Hall, Room 200!
Individuals with disabilities requiring accommodations or information on accessibility should contact the Campus Activities Office, (845) 437-5370.
01/16/2019
Africana Studies Program 50th Anniversary Show Case
Thank you Savannah Smith
Poetry Reading from Making Mirrors: Writing/Righting by Refugees, 2018
Date
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Time
7:00 pm
Location
Rockefeller Hall 200-Auditorium
Making Mirrors: Writing/Righting by Refugees (Interlink 2018) is edited by Jehan Bseiso and Becky Thompson, and it features original and translated poetry by refugee artists, poets, and survivors, recent immigrants, as well as longtime exiles.
From their first call for submissions at a café in Beirut to offering poetry workshops in refugee camps, Becky Thompson and her co-editor Jehan Bseiso sought a range of voices to avoid monolithic, one-dimensional representations of refugees. Becky will reflect on lessons learned when offering poetry workshops, examine what working across language requires and how poet activists need to stay loose in the knees as state policies change. As the refugee crisis fades from the front page of newspapers, this collection is a plea against historical amnesia and inertia; the poems are an antidote that reaches beyond despair to renewed action.
The poets and poems featured in our reading hail from diverse backgrounds linguistically and culturally. The expansive physical geography of our nationalities, stretching from the US to Africa (Nigeria and Eritrea), all the way to Asia (Iran), and the Middle East (Palestinian Diaspora), mirrors the complexity of the mental and emotional worlds that brought us together and inspired our poetry reading.
Mootacem Mhiri, lecturer in Arabic at Vassar, translated and contributed two poems in this border-crossing anthology, by expatriate Eritrean poet and novelist Abu Bakr Khaal. He will host this event and read some poems. Featured Guest Poets include Gbenga Adesina, Zeina Azzam, and Sholeh Wolpe.
Sponsored by Arabic Language Program Mootacem Mhiri and Tagreed Haddad
12/02/2018
Alvin Ailey
11/26/2018
All are welcome!
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| Tuesday | 9am - 5pm |
| Wednesday | 9am - 5pm |
| Thursday | 9am - 5pm |
| Friday | 9am - 5pm |