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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171113T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171113T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170925T192005Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171023T201148Z
UID:7315-1510596000-1510606800@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Film Screening: Dolores
DESCRIPTION:A special screening of Dolores\, the new documentary film about activist Dolores Huerta. \nHistory tells us Cesar Chavez transformed the U.S. labor movement by leading the first farm workers’ union. But missing from this narrative is his equally influential co-founder\, Dolores Huerta\, who fought tirelessly alongside Chavez for racial and labor justice and became one of the most defiant feminists of the twentieth century. \nLike so many powerful women advocates\, Dolores and her sweeping reforms were – and still are – sidelined and diminished. Even as she empowered a generation of immigrants to stand up for their rights\, her relentless work ethic was constantly under attack. False accusations from foes and friends alike\, of child neglect and immoral behavior—she married three times and raised 11 children – pushed Dolores out of the very union she helped create. \nPeter Bratt’s provocative and energizing documentary challenges an incomplete history. Through beautifully woven archival footage and interviews from contemporaries and from Dolores herself\, now an octogenarian\, the film sets the record straight on one of the most effective and undervalued civil and labor rights leaders in modern U.S. history. \nView the trailer: \n\nOrganized by the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs \n 
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/film-screening-dolores/
LOCATION:Melnitz 1409: James Bridges Theater
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/dolores-banner.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171113T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171113T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170705T221649Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171106T182930Z
UID:6308-1510588800-1510588800@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Nonny de la Peña\, "Immersive Journalism\, Breaking the Frame\, and the Gender Struggle in Virtual Reality"
DESCRIPTION:CSW is thrilled to feature Nonny de la Peña as part of Feminism and the Senses.\nRSVP for the Talk (Nov. 13\, 4pm\, Faculty Center): https://csw.ucla.edu/VR\nREQUEST an Individual Virtual Reality Appointment (Nov. 13\, 10am-3:30pm): https://csw.ucla.edu/VR-Request\nNonny de la Peña\, named “The Godmother of Virtual Reality” by The Guardian and Engadget and one of the 20 most influential Latina/os in tech by CNET\, is a pioneer of virtual reality and immersive journalism. As the founder and CEO of Emblematic Group she has collaborated with PBS Frontline\, Wall Street Journal\, Planned Parenthood\, the True Colors Fund\, the New York Times\, and other organizations to create impactful virtual reality experiences depicting real-life events. Her VR projects include “Across the Line\,” which helps viewers understand what some women go through to access abortion services\, “After Solitary\,” which takes viewers inside the Maine State Prison to experience a harrowing story of solitary confinement\, and “Out of Exile\,” which uses VR to draw attention to the plight of homeless LGBTQ youth. Other projects have explored Guantanamo Bay Prison\, then experiences of refugees\, and\, most recently\, the impact of climate change on the landscape of Greenland. \nDe la Peña’s talk will explore how immersive journalism can function as a vehicle for change by “breaking the frame” and by engaging the senses of viewers. She will discuss how this approach is informed by feminism\, and how gender inequity in the tech sector—and in VR in particular—shapes her work. \n\nExperience Immersive Journalism First-Hand: Sign up for a Virtual Reality Appointment prior to the talk\nCSW is thrilled to be partnering with Emblematic Group and the UCLA Transient Media Lab in order to offer members of our community a chance to experience Nonny de la Peña’s immersive journalism through the use of Virtual Reality technology and equipment. We will offer the opportunity to view one of the following virtual reality experiences: \nAcross the Line\n \nProduced in partnership with the Planned Parenthood Foundation of America\, Across the Line helps viewers understand what some women go through to access abortion services. The experience places viewers in the shoes of a patient entering a health center. Using real audio gathered at protests\, scripted scenes\, and documentary footage\, the film is a powerful multimedia depiction of the toxic environment that many health care providers\, health center staff\, and patients must endure to provide or access care on a daily basis. \nOut of Exile: Daniel’s Story\n \nOut of Exile is a powerful reminder of the kind of hostility faced by so many in the LGBTQ community. The piece shines a light on a terrible statistic: forty per cent of homeless youth in America identify as LGBTQ\, with the majority coming from communities of color. When Daniel Ashley Pierce is confronted about his sexual orientation by his family in a “religious intervention\,” the scene turns dramatic and violent. This piece\, created in partnership with the True Colors Foundation\, recreates the event using video captured by Daniel at the time. \nGreenland Melting\n \nOn the heels of the United State’s withdrawal from the Paris Climate agreement\, Emblematic’s Greenland Melting – created in collaboration with FRONTLINE and NOVA – provides a rare\, up-close view of icy Arctic scenery that’s disappearing faster than predicted. \n  \nPlease be aware that these experiences address sensitive topics and depict situations which viewers may find triggering\, upsetting\, or difficult to watch.  \nAppointments to view these pieces will take place on November 13th between 10:00 AM – 3:30 PM. \nWhile Nonny de la Peña’s talk is open to all\, limited spots will be available for individual experiences of her virtual reality work. \nTo learn more and request an appointment\, visit https://csw.ucla.edu/VR-request\n\nTHIS IS A FRAGRANCE-FREE EVENT. For the health and safety of all attendees\, please refrain from wearing products that contain fragrances when attending CSW events. Such products include: perfumes\, hair products\, deodorants\, detergents\, etc. For more information\, visit our Events Accessibility Page: https://csw.ucla.edu/event-accessibility. \nIf you require accommodations in order for this event to be accessible to you (e.g.\, sign language interpretation\, large print materials\, etc.)\, please contact CSW at csw@csw.ucla.edu at least two weeks prior to the event. \n\nCo-sponsored by:\n\nSupported by the Estrin Family Lecture Series Fund\nChicano Studies Research Center\nDepartment of Communication Studies\nDepartment of Information Studies\nProgram in Digital Humanities\nDr. Steve Anderson\, Director of the UCLA Transient Media Lab\, School of Theater\, Film\, and Television\nDivision of Social Sciences
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/feminism-senses-nonny-de-la-pena/
LOCATION:Sequoia Room\, Faculty Center\, UCLA\, Los Angeles\, 90024
CATEGORIES:CSW originated,Divisional Publish
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/shutterstock_622572527.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171106T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171106T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170925T185926Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171031T190654Z
UID:7311-1509969600-1509975000@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Ranjani Mazumdar\, "Technological Networks and Obsolescence in Contemporary Bombay Cinema"
DESCRIPTION:A talk by Ranjani Mazumdar \nProfessor\, School of Arts and Aesthetics\, Jawaharlal Nehru University\, New Dehli\, India \nOrganized by the UCLA Center for India and South Asia \nThis paper looks at the role of media and communication technologies in the sensorial imagination of urban spaces in contemporary Bombay cinema. If surveillance practices and their resultant structuring becomes one part of this imagination (No Smoking 2007\, LSD 2010\, Ugly\, 2013)\, we also see the role of the Internet and social media in the framing of spatial encounters in small town India (Masaan 2015). A fascination for ‘obsolete’ technology frames another order of space linked to the recent past (Gangs of Wasseypur 2012\, Miss Lovely 2012\, Dum Lagake Haisha\, 2015)\, while documentary films like John and Jayne (2005) invoke the call centre imagination within a fractured urban subjectivity. Through a framing of the spatial terrain triggered by new media technologies\, the films offer a new geography of the experiential changes unravelling in contemporary India. \n Ranjani Mazumdar is Professor of Cinema Studies at the School of Arts & Aesthetics\, Jawaharlal Nehru University. Her publications focus on urban cultures\, popular cinema\, gender and the cinematic city. She is the author of Bombay Cinema: An Archive of the City (2007) and co-author with Nitin Govil of the forthcoming The Indian Film Industry. She has also worked as a documentary filmmaker and her productions include Delhi Diary 2001 and The Power of the Image (Co-Directed). Her current research focuses on globalization and film culture\, the visual culture of film posters and the intersection of technology\, travel\, design and colour in 1960s Bombay Cinema. \n 
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/ranjani-mazumdar-sense-obsolescence-cinematic-form-surveillance-new-geographies-experience/
LOCATION:Charles E. Young Research Library\, Presentation Room
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/miss-lovely.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171102T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171102T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170925T193033Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170925T193033Z
UID:7322-1509638400-1509645600@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Tiphanie Yanique\, "Belonging: Immigrating into Our Own Country"
DESCRIPTION:A reading by Caribbean feminist and author Tiphanie Yanique. \nYanique will read from her novel Land of Love and Drowning which deals with U.S. imperialism through the lives of three generations of women on St. Thomas. Land of Love and Drowning won the 2014 Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Award from the Center for Fiction\, the Phillis Wheatley Award for Pan-African Literature\, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters Rosenthal Family Foundation Award\, and was listed by NPR as one of the Best Book of 2014. Yanique is also the author of the poetry collection Wife\, which won the 2016 Bocas Prize in Caribbean poetry and the United Kingdom’s 2016 Forward/Felix Dennis Prize for a First Collection. She is also the author of a collection of stories\, How to Escape from a Leper Colony\, which won her a listing as one of the National Book Foundation’s 5Under35.  Her writing has also won the Bocas Award for Caribbean Fiction\, the Boston Review Prize in Fiction\, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers Award\, a Pushcart Prize\, a Fulbright Scholarship and an Academy of American Poet’s Prize. She has been listed by the Boston Globe as one of the sixteen cultural figures to watch out for and her writing has been published in the New York Times\, Best African American Fiction\, The Wall Street Journal\, American Short Fiction and other places. Tiphanie is from the Virgin Islands and is an associate professor in the English Department at Wesleyan University where she is also the Director of the Creative Writing Program. She lives in New Rochelle\, New York with her family.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/tiphanie-yanique-belonging-immigrating-country/
LOCATION:Humanities 193\, UCLA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171027T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171027T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20171017T205307Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171017T205307Z
UID:7554-1509114600-1509123600@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Film Screening and Discussion: Silent Song of the Genjer Flowers
DESCRIPTION:This filmed stage play highlights the perspectives of women activists of Gerwani (Indonesian Women’s Movement) who were political prisoners from 1965\, suffered sexual violence\, and were stigmatized for decades as immoral women in Indonesia. During that time hundreds of thousands of members of the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI) or those considered close to the PKI were murdered and tens of thousands also also imprisoned. Out of this upheaval came the military backed New Order regime\, under General Suharto. \nScholars have argued that the New Order regime legitimized itself through the demonization of female sexuality used to evoke fear of communism in society. The myth of Gerwani as a monster was not only a justification for the mass slaughter and dictatorship but also the removal of women from the political realm. During the New Order era\, women’s role in public areas was allowed as long as it was within the structures defined by the state\, which positioned women as obedient to and dependent on men. Gerwani had been an organization that fought for women’s rights in all areas. The regime’s black slander has erased Gerwani’s real role from our memory. The play offers a counter-discourse by depicting the experience of the five former political prisoners. \nFaiza Mardzoeki is an Indonesian playwright\, director\, producer\, and activist. Since 2002\, she has initiated and produced fourteen theatre productions\, some of which she wrote herself. Of these dramas\, three were published as books in 2017. These are her adaptations of Ib-sen’s A Dolls House\, (Nora) and An Enemy of the People (Subversif!) published by Djaman Baroe and her original play Nyanyi Sunyi Kembang-Kembang Genjer (Silent Song of the Genjer Flowers) published by Ultimus. In addition to theatre\, Faiza is also active in women movements. Between 1997 and 2002 she worked for Solidaritas Perempuan- Women’s Solidarity for Human Rights. She has participated and presented in many international forums of art and women.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/film-screening-discussion-silent-song-genjer-flowers/
LOCATION:10383 Bunche Hall\, UCLA\, Los Angeles\, CA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Silent-Song-of-Genjer-Flowers-y2-csk.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20171027
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171028
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170828T220431Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170922T210250Z
UID:7079-1509062400-1509148799@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:QGrad 2017\, Radical Imaginaries: Scholar-Activism Dismantling the Politics of Hate
DESCRIPTION:UCLA’s QGrad is the oldest\, interdisciplinary queer research conference in the United States. In celebration of the 20th anniversary of LGBTQ Studies at UCLA\, the 2017 QGrad Conference will focus on how LGBTQ Studies and trans and queer art and activism have transformed the world in the last 20 years. How have undocumented\, Black and Brown\, Indigenous\, Afro-Latinx\, Muslim\, Fat\, Disabled\, incarcerated\, Transgender and Gender Non-conforming communities/scholar- activists impacted LGBTQ studies? How are all of us systematically attacked and disempowered under the 45th presidential administration? \nHow have our radical imaginaries fueled everyday resistance and survival? What kinds of problems and paradoxes arise when LGBTQ individuals and communities attempt to bring these imaginaries into being? What is the relationship between\, what theorist Jose Esteban Munoz called in Cruising Utopia\, the “here and now” and the “then and there”– the restrictive present and the expansive future? What utopias can we imagine for our daily dystopia? What tools have Queer scholar activists developed to dismantle the politics of hate? \nFeaturing Keynote Duet: CeCe McDonald and Dr. C. Riley Snorton in conversation!\nMore details and online registration: www.qgradconference.com.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/qgrad-2017-radical-imaginaries-scholar-activism-dismantling-politics-hate/
LOCATION:Bruin Reception Room\, Ackerman Union\, UCLA
CATEGORIES:Divisional Publish
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/QGrad.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171026T121500
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171026T134500
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20171019T225428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171019T225428Z
UID:7564-1509020100-1509025500@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Kathryn Dudley\, "Trusting Mustangs: Feral Ontologies\, Trans-Species Affects"
DESCRIPTION:Kathryn Dudley’s research focuses on embodied knowledge and social trauma under regimes of labor that are marginalized by transformations in global capitalism. Her books The End of the Line: Lost Jobs\, New Lives in Postindustrial America and Debt and Dispossession: Farm Loss in America’s Heartland are community studies\, respectively\, of deindustrialization and the demise of family farm agriculture. Her documentary film Black Land Loss examines African American farmers’ class action lawsuit against the USDA. Guitar Makers: The Endurance of Artisanal Values in North America chronicles the rise of a countercultural lutherie movement in the United States and Canada. Her current work tracks the affects\, materialities\, and temporalities that subtend the postindustrial imaginary. Among other honors\, Dudley received the Margaret Mead Award of the American Anthropological Association and the Society for Applied Anthropology for writing that reaches broadly concerned publics.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/kathryn-dudley-trusting-mustangs-feral-ontologies-trans-species-affects/
LOCATION:352 Haines Hall
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171024T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171024T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170705T211021Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171010T173828Z
UID:6303-1508860800-1508860800@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Breaking the Silence on Hooking Up: A Facilitated Discussion
DESCRIPTION: \nWhat are the risks and rewards of hooking up? Who hooks up\, and when and why? How does hookup culture shape attitudes towards sex and desire? How ubiquitous is hookup culture on campus–and how does it shape the lives of UCLA students? \nCSW invites students\, faculty\, and staff to explore these kinds of questions through a facilitated discussion on Hookup Culture. \nJoin the Conversation\nJoin students from across campus and all walks of life for an open conversation on how sex and power shape your lives. This will be a setting to explore and discuss your concerns and perspectives\, and to find allies and resources to develop strategies for dealing with the complexity of sexual relationships in college. \nAdd your voice to the discussion! Join us as we work together to make sex on campus safer for all. \nHookups and Diversity\nMuch of the conversation around hookup culture on college campuses has focused on students who are heterosexual\, white\, and relatively affluent. We seek to broaden and expand the discussion to represent and include the diverse and realistic composition of college campuses. Together\, we will explore how hookup culture resonates in UCLA’s LGBTQ community and among students of color. In doing so\, we hope to reveal the way intersectional oppressions shape how students experience hookup culture and sex on campus\, and also how some aspects of hookup culture perpetuate heteronormativity and racist beauty standards. \nHow Can You Contribute?\nWe encourage attendees to participate in an open and safe forum to discuss experiences\, research\, and thoughts about hookup culture. Below are initial questions for discussion. We welcome attendees to think about them and share/discuss with friends in advance: \n\nIs hookup culture a feature of the communities within which you associate?\nHow would you characterize some of the reasons hooking up works for your community?\nHow would you characterize some of the challenges of hooking up?\nIs hookup culture good for relationships?\nHow does hookup culture relate to the information that you have learned about consensual sex and the law?\n\nFacilitators\nWe are thrilled to have two distinguished faculty faciliators to guide the conversation: \nLisa Wade is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Occidental College. She is the author of American Hookup\, which explores the emergence and character of the culture of sex that dominates college campuses today. Read an excerpt at TIME. \nVictoria Marks is a Professor of World Arts and Cultures/Dance\, Associate Dean of Academic Affairs for the School of Arts and Architecture\, and Chair of the Disability Studies minor at UCLA. In 2015\, she taught “Desire on Campus\,” a class that invited undergraduate sorority and fraternity members to use Action Conversation methods to explore the social codes of hooking up. As part of the class\, she co-created the short film Unhooked\, a UCLA documentary on hookup culture. We will screen parts of the film as part of the event! View the trailer below: \n\nRSVP Online to attend:\nhttp://www.csw.ucla.edu/hookup-rsvp\nRegistration is free and refreshments will be provided! \nAccessibility Information\nTHIS IS A FRAGRANCE-FREE EVENT. For the health and safety of all attendees\, please refrain from wearing products that contain fragrances when attending CSW events. Such products include: perfumes\, hair products\, deodorants\, detergents\, etc. For more information\, visit our Events Accessibility Page: https://csw.ucla.edu/event-accessibility. \nCSW EVENTS ARE ACCESSIBLE! If you require accommodations in order for this event to be accessible to you (e.g.\, sign language interpretation\, large print materials\, etc.)\, please contact CSW at csw@csw.ucla.edu at least two weeks prior to the event. \nCo-sponsored by:\n\nBacked by Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion\nDepartment of Sociology\nUCLA Campus Assault Resources and Education (CARE) Program\nLGBTQ Studies Program\nHealthy Campus Initiative\nDivision of Social Sciences
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/hookup
LOCATION:Kerckhoff Hall Grand Salon\, UCLA\, Los Angeles
CATEGORIES:CSW originated,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171019T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171019T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170914T183119Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170922T210109Z
UID:7188-1508436000-1508443200@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Film Screening: Queens of Syria
DESCRIPTION:Queens of Syria tells the story of sixty women from Syria\, all forced into exile in Jordan\, who came together in Autumn 2013 to create and perform their own version of the Trojan Women\, Euripides’s tragedy about the plight of women in war. What followed was an extraordinary moment of cross-cultural contact across millennia\, in which women born in 20th century Syria found a blazingly vivid mirror of their own experiences in the stories of a queen\, princesses and ordinary women like them\, uprooted\, enslaved\, and bereaved by the Trojan War. \nView the trailer: \n\nCo-sponsored by:\n\nUCLA Center for the Study of Women\nUCLA School of Theater\, Film and Television\nUCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies\nPromise Institute for Human Rights at UCLA Law\nUCLA First Year Experience
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/film-screening-queens-syria/
LOCATION:Northwest Campus Auditoriium\, UCLA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/queens-of-syria.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171019T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171019T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170929T002322Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170929T002322Z
UID:7412-1508428800-1508428800@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Kathleen Sheldon\, "African Women: Early History to the 21st Century"
DESCRIPTION:Kathleen Sheldon will discuss her recently published book\, African Women: Early History to the 21st Century\, a comprehensive study of this expansive story from before the time of records to the present day.  Her book provides a rich background on descent systems and the roles of women in matrilineal and patrilineal systems.  She profiles elite women\, as well as those in leadership roles\, traders and market women\, religious women\, slave women\, women in resistance movements\, and women in politics and development.  The rich case studies and biographies in this thorough survey establish a grand narrative about women’s roles in the history of Africa. \nKathleen Sheldon is an independent historian who is a Research Affiliate with the UCLA Center for the Study of Women.  Dr. Sheldon received her Ph.D. in history from UCLA in 1988 and her M.A. in African Area Studies in 1977.  She is a historian who has primarily written about African women and Mozambique.  Her most recent book is African Women: Early History to the 21st Century.  She also wrote Pounders of Grain: A History of Women\, Work\, and Politics in Mozambique and edited Courtyards\, Markets\, City Streets: Urban Women in Africa. \nOther publications include the second revised edition of the Historical Dictionary of Women in Sub-Saharan Africa (2016; first edition\, 2005) and a special two-part forum on Women and Gender in Africa for the African Studies Review\, co-edited with Judith Van Allen\, that appeared in December 2015 and April 2016. Dr. Sheldon was the editor for women’s entries for the Dictionary of African Biography (2011).  She wrote the articles on Women and African History and Women and Colonialism for Oxford Bibliographies in African Studies\, and is also a senior editor for the online resource\, Oxford Research Encyclopedia in African History. Other publications include “From Frenzied Mobs to Savvy Businesswomen: Researching the History of Market Women in Africa\,” in Changing Horizons of African History (2017); and “Creating an Archive of Working Women’s Oral Histories in Beira\, Mozambique” in Contesting Archives: Finding Women in the Sources (2010). She is an editor on the H-Luso-Africa network\, https://networks.h-net.org/h-luso-africa\, which focuses on the Portuguese-speaking countries of Africa. In addition to her work on African women she published “‘No more cookies or cake now\, “C’est la guerre”’: An American Nurse in Turkey\, 1919 to 1920\,”Social Sciences and Missions 23\, 1 (2010)\, based on a diary kept by her great-aunt\, Sylvia Thankful Eddy. \n  \nCo-sponsored by: \n\nUCLA African Studies Center\nUCLA Department of History\nUCLA Center for the Study of Women\nUCLA Department of Gender Studies\n\n 
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/kathleen-sheldon-african-women-early-history-21st-century/
LOCATION:Bunche 6275\, UCLA Bunche Hall\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171018T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171018T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170926T000037Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170926T000037Z
UID:7335-1508338800-1508349600@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:CrossCheck Live: "Campus Speech: A Right to Speak? A Duty to Listen? An Obligation to Learn?"
DESCRIPTION:In recent years\, both the left and the right have raised concerns about free speech\, censorship\, and academic freedom on college campuses. And media outlets—from the Atlantic to the New York Times to the Chronicle of Higher Education—have weighed in\, offering a range of  views on whether academic institutions are failing their core mission to facilitate the robust exchange of ideas while simultaneously providing a learning environment free of violence\, intimidation\, and harassment.  The standard arguments are loud and well-rehearsed\, but they obscure real tensions—between liberty and equality\, between legality and propriety\, between the right to speak and the right to learn\, and between safe spaces and brave spaces. And our unwillingness or incapacity to address these genuine tensions seriously\, without soundbites or cheap shots\, have made difficult the wise governance of the University. \nA reasoned debate from multiple perspectives is sorely needed. Thus the UCLA Office of Equity\, Diversity and Inclusion offers the Fall’s CrossCheck Live: \nCrossCheck Live\nCampus Speech: A Right to Speak?\nA Duty to Listen? An Obligation to Learn? \nWednesday\, October 18\, 2017\nRoundtable Discussion: 3 pm – 5 pm\nReception: 5 pm – 6 pm \nPauley Pavilion Club\n301 Westwood Plaza\nLos Angeles\, CA 90095 \nRSVP HERE \nPlease join us and our distinguished panelists for a stimulating discussion as we navigate the complexities of free speech and institutional governance\, and ponder the best route forward for college campuses and beyond. Other panelists and commentators to be announced. \nModerators: \n\nJerry Kang\, Vice Chancellor for Equity\, Diversity and Inclusion; Professor of Law and Asian American Studies\, and Korea Times Hankook Ilbo Endowed Chair\, UCLA\nDevon Carbado\, Associate Vice Chancellor for BruinX – Office of Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion; Harry Pregerson Professor of Law\, UCLA School of Law\n\nPanelists: \n\nErwin Chemerinsky\, Dean | Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor of Law\, UC Berkeley School of Law; Co-Author of the Forthcoming Book\, Free Speech on Campus\nSafiya Noble\, Assistant Professor of Communication\, Annenberg School of Communication\, University of Southern California\nGary Segura\, Dean | Morris M. Doyle Centennial Professor of Public Policy\, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs\nEugene Volokh\, Gary T. Schwartz Distinguished Professor of Law\, UCLA School of Law\nZev Yaroslavsky\, Executive Director of the Los Angeles Initiative\, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs and Department of History; Former Member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/crosscheck-live-campus-speech-right-speak-duty-listen-obligation-learn/
LOCATION:Pauley Pavillion Club\, UCLA
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171012T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171012T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170821T221633Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170823T190116Z
UID:7019-1507824000-1507831200@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:For those walking to the border for dear life\, and for those seeking a place of kinship in resistance: A performance and conversation with Merlinda Bobis
DESCRIPTION:Through performance and conversation with Distinguished Professor Sherene Razack\, award-winning poet\, novelist and dramatist Merlinda Bobis reflects on Philippine indigenous values of kinship and the intertwined journey of writer-and-characters in her novels Locust Girl. A Lovesong (2016 Christina Stead Prize for Fiction) and Fish-Hair Woman (2014 Philippine National Book Award)\, and in her new poetry book Accidents of Composition (Spinifex 2017). \nMerlinda responds to the growing climate of conflict in our compromised planet. She hopes that in the border\, there could be accidents of kindness. \n\nFor those walking to the border for dear life\,\nand for those seeking a place of kinship in resistance\nPlease have no fear and\nTake this offered hand\nYour thirst\, your thirst\nIs my only affliction\n—Locust Girl. A Lovesong\nSponsored by \n  \n 
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/walking-border-dear-life-seeking-place-kinship-resistance-performance-conversation-merlinda-bobis/
LOCATION:Humanities 193\, UCLA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Bobis.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171011T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171011T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170828T223447Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170828T224624Z
UID:7084-1507730400-1507735800@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Democratizing Research Access: Overcoming Exclusion from Well-Resourced University Research Libraries
DESCRIPTION:Democratizing Research Access: Overcoming Exclusion from Well-Resourced University Research Libraries\nCSW Research Affiliate Brown Bag\nWednesday\, October 11\, 2-3:30 p.m.\, Rolfe 2125\nRSVP Here: https://uclacsw.submittable.com/submit/93276/free-registration-democratizing-research-access\n  \nStay afterwards for the CSW/Gender Studies Fall Reception in the Rolfe Courtyard at 4pm! Reception Details: https://csw.ucla.edu/event/fall-welcome-reception/\nFor a growing number of scholars\, gaining access to adequate library resources–both books and digital– has become increasingly challenging. The problem of unequal research access is exacerbating larger problems of inequity across academia\, by creating barriers for those working outside of large\, well-resourced universities. This group includes independent scholars\, faculty at under-resourced institutions\, and others occupying positions of “career diversity\,” a contingent likely to expand in the coming years. At this brown bag\, Becky Nicolaides will lead a discussion that explores the nature of the problem and possible pathways toward solutions\, based on her advocacy on this issue as an elected member of the American Historical Association – Research Division. \nBecky Nicolaides is a historian who works as an independent scholar and consultant in Los Angeles. She specializes in U.S. urban and suburban history\, and the history of Los Angeles. She serves as co-editor of the “Historical Studies of Urban America” series published by University of Chicago Press and is co-coordinator of the L.A History and Metro Studies group at the Huntington Library. She is a Research Affiliate at the UCLA Center for the Study of Women and an Affiliated Research Scholar at the Huntington-USC Institute on California & the West. She is currently serving a three-year term in the AHA Research Division. http://tinyurl.com/NicolaidesUCLA
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/democratizing-research-access-overcoming-exclusion-well-resourced-university-research-libraries/
LOCATION:Rolfe 2125
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Democratizing-Research.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20171009
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171014
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20171006T000652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171006T001036Z
UID:7480-1507507200-1507939199@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Disability Awareness Week
DESCRIPTION:October 9-13 is Disability Awareness Week at UCLA! The week’s events include:\nCenter for Accessible Education Open House\nLearn about accessibility resources available through CAE and CAPS\nDATE: Monday\, October 9\nTIME: 11 AM – 1 PM\nLOCATION: A255 Murphy Hall \nUCLA Committee on Disability Open Meeting\nMeet the committee and discuss your accessibility concerns\nDATE: Tuesday\, October 10\nTIME: 2 PM – 4 PM\nLOCATION: 5628 Math/Sciences \nAdaptive Recreation Demos\nExperience wheelchair basketball and hand cycles!\nDATE: Tuesday\, October 10\nTIME: 4 PM – 7:30 PM\nLOCATION: Wooden Center\, Collins Court #1 \n Contact mgarafola@recreation.ucla.edu for accessibility needs \nFilm Screening: SWIM TEAM\nDATE: Tuesday\, October 10\nTIME: 6 PM\nLOCATION: Semel Institute Auditorium\nRSVP: http://tinyurl.com/uclaaslaswimteam \nContact bwilkinson@college.ucla.edu for accessibility needs \nKeynote talk by Jerry Kang\, UCLA Vice-Chancellor of Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion\nDATE:Wednesday\, October 11\nTIME: 12 PM – 1 PM\nLOCATION: Founders Room\, James West Alumni Center \nRoyce and Powell Lights\nEvenings\, Monday\, October 10 to Friday\, October 13\nAll week long Royce and Powell will be lit up to raise awareness! Drop by at night to see the blue and white lights! \n  \n 
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/disability-awareness-week/
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171005T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171005T183000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170919T183213Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170926T173757Z
UID:7279-1507219200-1507228200@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Weaving Generations Together: Opening Reception
DESCRIPTION:Please join us at Powell Library for the opening reception to Weaving Generations Together: Evolving Creativity in the Maya of Chiapas.\n\nThis exhibition explores cultural transmission and learning through children’s play weaving and apprenticeship in the Maya Highland community of Zincantán\, Chiapas\, Mexico. The exhibition sho \nws over one hundred textiles from Zincantán drawn from a research collection spanning from 1943 to the present\, including hand-woven and embroidered ponchos\, shawls\, and huipils in vibrant colors and metallic threads as well as looms and weavings made by children. Maya people wear traditional clothing today and the exhibition demonstrates both continuity and change through the expression of weaving and embroidery. \nThis exhibition is based on a book by Patricia Marks Greenfield. \nMore information on the exhibition’s run can also be found HERE. \n\n\n\n\nCo-sponsored by:\n\nCenter for the Study of Women\nUCLA Library\nOffice of Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion\nAmerican Indian Studies Center\nChicano Studies Research Center\nLatin American Institute\nCenter for Mexican Studies\nFiat Lux\nOffice of Instructional Development
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/weaving-generations-together-opening-reception/
LOCATION:Powell Library Main and East Rotundas\, UCLA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170927T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170927T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20160805T193054Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170801T213938Z
UID:3987-1506510000-1506528000@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:CSW Open House
DESCRIPTION:Welcome\, new Bruins; and welcome back\, continuing UCLA Students!  Drop by CSW during True Bruin Welcome Week Departmental Open House Day!  Come learn about our student award opportunities\, student research projects\, upcoming events\, and other opportunities for students! Meet our staff\, and find out more about what CSW offers to all members of our campus community. \nWe’re looking forward to meeting you! \n 
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/csw-open-house/
LOCATION:Center for the Study of Women\, 1500 Public Affairs
CATEGORIES:CSW originated,Divisional Publish
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/atkinson-01.00406-royce-shapiro-e1422398480167.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170920T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170920T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170511T221114Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170823T195224Z
UID:6010-1505894400-1505916000@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Reproductive Health and the Environment in Los Angeles County: Best Practices for Los Angeles County
DESCRIPTION:Free Symposium organized by the Iris Cantor-UCLA Women’s Health Center \nPlenary Session\nEnvironmental Policies of the New Administration that Impact Women’s Health and California’s Response\n\nSymposium Topics\nAddressing the Impact of Poor Air\, Soil\, and Water Quality on Preconception\, Prenatal\, and Children’s Health in Relation to:\n\nGrassroots Advocacy\nApplying Research into Action\nPolicy and Legislative Agendas\n\nINCLUDES NETWORKING LUNCHEON\nContinuing Education: 3 hours for CHES and RNs\n  \nRegister online: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/KNQWXYV\n  \nQuestions? Contact Karen Singh at KTSingh@mednet.ucla.edu\nSi prefiere registrarse en español o necesita servicio de interpretación\, por favor envíe un correo electrónico a Karen Singh: KTSingh@mednet.ucla.edu \n  \nCo-sponsored by: \n\nDavid and Lucile Packard Foundation\nExecutive Advisory Board of the Iris Cantor-UCLA Women’s Health Center\nUCLA Center for the Study of Women\nCounty of Los Angeles Public Health Office of Women’s Health\nBlack Women for Wellness\nPhysicians for Social Responsibility\, Los Angeles\nEsperanza Community Housing\nIDEPSCA\nCalifornia Black Women’s Health Project\nVisión y Compromiso\nCalifornia Latinas for Reproductive Justice\nCalifornia Pan-Ethnic Health Network\nMaternal and Child Health Access\nSouthern California Environmental Health Sciences Center\nDignity Health California Hospital Medical Center\nPhysicians for Social Responsibility San Francisco Bay Area Chapter\nSAJE\nUC San Francisco Obstetrics\, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences\nProgram on Reproductive Health and the Environment
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/reproductive-health-environment-los-angeles-county-community-science-policy/
LOCATION:The California Endowment\, 1000 North Alameda Sreet\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90012\, United States
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170531T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170531T143000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170424T214452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201027T213607Z
UID:5769-1496232000-1496241000@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:CSW Awards Luncheon & Keynote Address
DESCRIPTION:This event is now past. Photo highlights of the 2017 Awards Luncheon are available HERE. \n  \n\nJoin the UCLA Center for the Study of Women for a special end of the year event to honor our student award recipients and the Center’s accomplishments over the past year!\nFEATURING A KEYNOTE ADDRESS\nRise Up! Feminism in the Age of Trump\nBy Katherine Spillar\nExecutive Director\, Feminist Majority Foundation\nExecutive Editor\, Ms. Magazine\n \nWe’ve marched. We’ve rallied. We’ve gone on strike. And we must keep on fighting to protect and advance our rights at this critical political moment.\nKatherine Spillar\, who leads one of the feminist movement’s most influential organizations\, will share lessons and strategies from the field to inform and inspire us as we move forward. \n\nSequoia Room\, UCLA Faculty Center\nCampus Map\nTickets are $20 and non-refundable\nREGISTRATION IS NOW CLOSED\nDeadline to purchase tickets: Friday\, May 19\, 2017\nSelf-pay parking available in Structure 2\n\nAll CSW Events are Fragrance-Free! Learn more information HERE.\nIf you have questions or have RSVP’d but can no longer can attend\, please contact CSW Manager Kristina Magpayo Nyden at kristina@women.ucla.edu. \n\nKatherine Spillar is the Executive Director of the Feminist Majority Foundation and the Feminist Majority\, national organizations working for women’s equality\, empowerment\, and non-violence. One of the founders\, Spillar has been a driving force in executing the organizations’ diverse programs securing women’s rights both domestically and globally since its inception in 1987.  She has played a leading role in national and state level campaigns to win women’s rights legislation\, and leads the organization’s efforts to counter the effects of extremist anti-abortion groups that target women’s reproductive health clinics.  She has been key in the Feminist Majority Foundation’s Campaign to Stop Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan to counter the Taliban’s abuse of women; for this work\, the organization was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002. \n \nSpillar is the Executive Editor of Ms. magazine\, which the Feminist Majority Foundation took over publishing in 2001. Under her oversight\, Ms. has increased its investigative reporting\, winning the prestigious “Maggie Award” for best feature article for its investigation into the network of extremists connected to Scott Roeder\, who murdered Dr. George Tiller. \nSpillar is a trained economist and researcher and a specialist in community organizing.  She speaks to diverse audiences nationwide on a broad range of domestic and international feminist topics and appears frequently on television and radio.  She has appeared on NPR’s Morning Edition\, 60 Minutes\, the Rachel Maddow Show\, NPR’s Fresh Air with Terri Gross and Tell Me More with Michel Martin\, the O’Reilly Factor\, CNN\, ABC Nightly News\, CBS News\, NBC\, FOX\, the Tavis Smiley Show\, Politically Incorrect\, and Hannity & Colmes. \n 
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/csw-awards-luncheon-2017
LOCATION:Sequoia Room\, Faculty Center\, UCLA\, Los Angeles\, 90024
CATEGORIES:CSW originated
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170526
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20170527
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170118T234258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170511T205937Z
UID:4759-1495756800-1495843199@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Forms of Power and the Power of Forms: Annual Comparative Literature Grad Student Conference
DESCRIPTION:This year’s UCLA Comparative Literature Graduate Conference will explore the many ways in which form colludes and contends with\, is created by and creates\, power. From epic poetry to the English sonnet to the novel\, literary forms have conspired with power to produce political identities and practices of domination. Indeed\, one might argue that certain forms were produced by and in the service of power in the first instance. Likewise\, writers and artists have mobilized (literary) form as a site for remix and resistance. Representation—literary\, visual\, or aural—necessarily involves structures of reading\, seeing\, and hearing that hyperlink to powerful modes of knowing and their rebellious detractors.\n\nKeynote speaker: Michelle M. Wright\, Professor of African American Studies and Comparative Literary Studies\, Northwestern University
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/forms-power-power-forms-annual-comparative-literature-grad-student-conference/
LOCATION:Royce 306
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170525T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170525T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170504T004650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170504T004650Z
UID:5967-1495728000-1495728000@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Afterland: Poetry of Mai Der Vang
DESCRIPTION:Mai Der Vang is the author of Afterland (Graywolf\, 2017) which received the Walt Whitman Award winner from the Academy of American Poets. Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Poetry\, Virginia Quarterly Review\, New Republic\, and elsewhere. Her essays have been published in the New York Times\, the Washington Post\, and the San Francisco Chronicle\, among others. Mai Der’s work has also been anthologized in Troubling Borders: An Anthology of Art and Literature by Southeast Asian Women in the Diaspora. As an editorial member of the Hmong American Writers’ Circle\, she is co-editor of How Do I Begin: A Hmong American Literary Anthology. Mai Der has received residencies from Hedgebrook and is a Kundiman fellow. She earned her Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of California\, Berkeley\, along with a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing/Poetry from Columbia University. She lives in Fresno\, California. \nDATE: May 25\nTIME: 4:00 PM\nLOCATION: Public Affairs 2270 \nCo-sponsors: Southeast Asian Campus Learning Education and Retention\, UCLA Department of English\, Center for Southeast Asian Studies\, Asian American Studies Center\, Department of Asian American Studies\, Department of Community Programs Office & Writing Success Program\, Center for the Study of Women
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/afterland-poetry-mai-der-vang/
LOCATION:Public Affairs 2270\, UCLA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Mai-Der-Vang.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170524T154500
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170524T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170518T172148Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170518T172148Z
UID:6063-1495640700-1495652400@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Bloodless: A VR Documentary Film by Gina Kim
DESCRIPTION:“Bloodless” is a ten-minute VR film that deals with camp town comfort women for US army stationed in South Korea since the 1950s. The film traces the last living moments of a real-life sex worker who was brutally murdered by a US soldier at the Dongducheond Camptown in South Korea in 1992. Portraying the last hours of her life in the camp town\, the VR film transposes a historical and political issue into a personal and concrete experience. This film was shot on location where the crime took place\, bringing to light ongoing experiences at the 96 camp towns near or around the US military bases.\nA Crayon Film production\, Written and Directed by Gina Kim\, Produced by Jiyoung Kang and Seonah Kim \nArtist Talk: 5-7PM on Wednesday\, May 24th\, 2017 at Darren Star Screening Room \nVR Viewing Experience (RSVP Only): 3:45-5PM on Wednesday\, May 24th\, 2017 at Melnitz Hall TV3 \nPlease RSVP to Sharon Choi (shasung.choi@gmail.com) for VR viewing experience. \nThis project was sponsored by Dankook University Graduate School of Cinematic Content (BK 21 Plus)\, Venta VR\, UCLA Center for the Study of Women\, UCLA The Center for Korean Studies\, UCLA Institute of American Cultures\, UCLA Asian American Studies Center
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/bloodless-vr-documentary-film-gina-kim/
LOCATION:Darren Starr Screening Room\, UCLA School of Theater\, Film\, and Television\, Los Angeles\, 90095
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Bloodless_flyer_final2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170504
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20170506
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20160602T203649Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170503T215700Z
UID:3465-1493856000-1494028799@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Chemical Entanglements: Gender and Exposure
DESCRIPTION:May 4-5\, 2017\nUCLA\nFREE and OPEN to the public!\nREGISTRATION NOW OPEN!\nThis symposium will convene a group of scholars\, scientists and community based researchers\, artists\, documentarians\, and policy makers to assess the gendered impacts of (primarily endocrine-disrupting) chemicals on human populations. By marshaling a variety of perspectives—laboratory\, ethnographic\, epidemiological\, and narrative\, this transdisciplinary collaboration will seek to explore how gender has made a difference in the public’s knowledge with regard to the cumulative effects of environmental toxins. Speakers will use methods from across scholarly disciplines to assess the way gendered patterns of exposure contribute to illnesses. Attendees will have the opportunity to meet researchers\, community organizers\, artists\, and innovators who are changing the way we approach: \n\nReproductive justice\, maternal health\, and endocrine disruption\nUrban oil drilling in Los Angeles\nIncome inequality\, environmental health\, and environmental justice\nExposure to indoor air pollution in homes and workplaces\nPesticides\, flame retardants\, and birth defects\nMultiple Chemical Sensitivity\, Toxicant-Induced Loss of Tolerance\, and exposure illness\nToxic personal care and cleaning products\nTraining the next generation of environmental innovators and advocates\n\nTravel Grants are available for non-UCLA graduate students and independent scholars to attend the Symposium! If you would like to apply\, please visit our Travel Grants page. \nAll CSW Events are Fragrance-Free! CSW is dedicated to creating a safe and accessible space for everyone who participates in our events and programs. For information on our fragrance-free initiative and details on requesting accessibility accommodations\, please visit our Event Accessibility page. \nSign-language interpretation will be available at Florence Williams’s keynote address on May 4 at 4pm in the Charles E. Young Research Library Main Conference Room. \nVideo of conference presentations will be made available on CSW’s YouTube channel following the event\, and we will also be live-tweeting the proceedings for those unable to attend — follow the hashtag #CECSW to stay connected! \nSCHEDULE OF EVENTS AVAILABLE HERE\nWe are thrilled to be welcoming Keynote Speaker Florence Williams!\n\n\nFlorence Williams is a contributing editor at Outside Magazine and a freelance writer for the New York Times\, New York Times Magazine\, The New York Review of Books\, Slate\, Mother Jones\, High Country News\, O-Oprah\, W.\, Bicycling\, and numerous other publications. She is also the writer and host of the new Audible Original series\, Breasts Unbound. \nA fellow at the Center for Humans and Nature and a visiting scholar at George Washington University\, her work focuses on the environment\, health\, and science. In 2007-2008\, she was a Scripps Fellow at the Center of Environmental Journalism at the University of Colorado. \nHer first book\, BREASTS: A Natural and Unnatural History  (W.W. Norton 2012)\, received the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in science and technology and the 2013 Audie in general nonfiction. It was also named a notable book of 2012 by the New York Times. \n\nWe are excited to welcome our Panel Session Speakers:\nKarim Ahmed (National Council for Science and the Environment) \nJesse Cohen (Canaries) \nMartha Dina Arguello (Physicians for Social Responsibility) \nDavid Crews (University of Texas at Austin) \nNourbese Flint (Black Women for Wellness) \nKim Fortun (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) \nAndrea Gore (University of Texas at Austin) \nLiza Grandia (UC Davis) \nTyrone Hayes (UC Berkeley) \nmark! Lopez (East Yard Communities for Environmental Justice) \nShahir Masri (UC Irvine) \nTeresa Montoya (New York University) \nPeggy Munson (Artist\, Writer\, Activist) \nAna Soto (Tufts University School of Medicine) \nFor a compiled list of the Speaker Biographies and Abstracts\, please visit the CE Speaker Bios and Abstracts page. \nREGISTER TODAY! \n\nCo-sponsored by:\n\nUCLA Luskin Endowment for Thought Leadership\nUCLA Council on Research Trans-Disciplinary Seed Grant\nUCLA Office of Interdisciplinary & Cross Campus Affairs\nUCLA Social Sciences Dean’s Faculty Opportunity Fund\nEnvironmental Health Sciences\nCenter for Occupational & Environmental Health\nInstitute for Research on Labor and Employment (IRLE)\nInstitute for Society and Genetics\nIris Cantor-UCLA Women’s Health Center\nLaboratory for Environmental Narrative Strategies (LENS)\nLabor Occupational Safety and Health Program (LOSH)\nMuriel C. McClendon\, Social Sciences Equity Advisor (Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion Office)\nPaul Barber\, Life Sciences Equity Advisor (Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion Office)\nSchool of Nursing\nUCLA Division of Social Sciences\nCharles E. Young Research Library\nLGBT Campus Resource Center\nBacked by Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion\n\nGet Involved:\nJOIN OUR WORKING GROUP: Faculty and graduate students from across disciplines meet quarterly to discuss issues related to gender and exposure. Learn how to join here. \nJOIN OUR UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT GROUP: Undergraduate students can volunteer or receive research credit to conduct original research\, participate in awareness campaigns\, shape policy recommendations\, and contribute to educational videos. Learn how to join here.  \nREAD OUR BLOG: The Chemical Entanglements blog features reports from the field\, interviews\, film reviews\, and more! Read our latest updates here.\n \nWRITE FOR THE BLOG: We want your contributions to the Chemical Entanglements blog! Find out more here. \nSHARE THE AIR: One simple way that you can reduce your exposure to toxic chemicals–and help safeguard the health of those around you–is by using fewer fragranced products in your everyday life. Learn more about CSW’s Share the Air initiative.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/chemical-entanglements-gender-exposure/
LOCATION:UCLA\, 330 De Neve Dr.\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:CSW originated
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/CEbannerrev1500x433.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170428
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20170430
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170315T001114Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170414T213605Z
UID:5130-1493337600-1493510399@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Southeast Asian Cinemas Research Network (SEACRN): Promoting Dialogue Across Critical and Creative Practice
DESCRIPTION:A two day symposium featuring screenings of short films and roundtable discussion. \nFeatured filmmakers:\nThi Nguyen Trinh (Hanoi Doclab\, Vietnam)\, Anocha Suwichakornpong (Thailand)\, Nia Dinata (Kalyana Shira Films\, Indonesia)\, Shireen Seno (Philippines) \nFeatured scholars:\nBrian Bernards\, Peter Bloom\, Arnika Fuhrmann\, Gaik Cheng Khoo\, Mariam Lam\, Philippa Lovatt\, Cheng-Sim Lim\, Bliss Cua Lim\, Sudarat Musikawong\, and Fatimah Tobing Rony
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/southeast-asian-cinemas-research-network-seacrn-promoting-dialogue-across-critical-creative-practice/
LOCATION:Darren Starr Screening Room\, UCLA School of Theater\, Film\, and Television\, Los Angeles\, 90095
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170426T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170426T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170118T235620Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170407T183024Z
UID:4763-1493222400-1493229600@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Dissident Friendships: Feminism\, Imperialism\, and Transnational Solidarity
DESCRIPTION:This talk focuses on the ways that feminist scholars have negotiated the complicated\, conflicted\, and contradictory terrain of friendship. It offers fresh perspectives on feminists’ invested\, reluctant\, and selective uses of the nation; reflects on how the arts contribute to conversations about feminism\, dissent\, resistance\, and solidarity; and unpacks the details of transnational dissident friendships. \nFeaturing the editors of Dissident Friendships: Feminism\, Imperialism\, and Transnational Solidarity \nElora Halim Chowdhury \nUniversity of Massachusetts\, Boston\nAssociate Professor and Chair of Women’s and Gender Studies Department\, College of Liberal Arts Affiliate faculty\, Asian Studies Department; Asian American Studies Program\nAffiliated Researcher\, Consortium on Gender\, Security and Human Rights \nLiz Philipose \nIndependent Scholar\nLiz Philipose is an educator whose research focuses on consciousness\, the human condition in modernity\, and potential catalysts for social transformation. Her interests have taken her into academic work and a tenured professorship in the fields of feminist philosophy\, international politics\, and cultural studies.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/dissident-friendships-feminism-imperialism-transnational-solidarity/
LOCATION:Rolfe 2125
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/dissident-friendships.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170421T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170421T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170215T180027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170303T194552Z
UID:4951-1492776000-1492781400@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:CSW Research Affiliate Brown Bag: "Polar Environmental Discourses: Film\, Politics\, and Oil in the Anthropocene\," Lisa Bloom
DESCRIPTION:Polar Environmental Discourses:  Film\, Politics\, and Oil in the Anthropocene \nBring your lunch and join CSW Research Affiliates for a brown bag research presentation! \nRSVP ONLINE \nTaken from a book project titled Polar Aesthetics in the Anthropocene: Imagining Climate\, Lisa Bloom brings together issues in critical climate change scholarship to examine aspects of feminist and environmentalist polar art in the work of Brenda Longfellow. Focusing on oil drilling in the Alaskan Arctic\, this paper invites us to think about how conventional narratives about oil production and consumption\, science\, gender\, and race\, as well as attitudes towards nature\, technology\, and the wilderness are being reimagined through interactive documentaries in the early 21st century. \nLisa Bloom is the author of Gender on Ice: American Ideologies of Polar Expeditions (University of Minnesota Press\, 1993)\, the first critical book on the Arctic and Antarctic in the US written from a feminist and postcolonial perspective. Her other books include an edited anthology titled With Other Eyes: Looking at Race and Gender in Visual Culture (University of Minnesota Press\,1999) and Jewish Identities in U.S. Feminist Art: Ghosts of Ethnicity. (Routledge\, London\, 2006). She is currently a Research Affiliate at the Center for the Study of Women at UCLA. Her forthcoming book is titled: Imagining Climate: Art and Visual Culture of the Polar Regions in the Anthropocene.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/csw-research-affiliate-brown-bag-polar-environmental-discourses-film-politics-oil-anthropocene-lisa-bloom/
LOCATION:Rolfe 2125
CATEGORIES:CSW originated
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Lower-Platform2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170414
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20170415
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170215T014838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170407T183032Z
UID:4947-1492128000-1492214399@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:"Contexts of Crisis: Danger\, Opportunity\, and the Unknown\," History Graduate Students Association Conference
DESCRIPTION:Keynote Speaker: Robin D.G. Kelley\, Professor and Gary B. Nash Endowed Chair in U.S. History\, Department of History\, UCLA
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/contexts-crisis-danger-opportunity-unknown-history-graduate-students-association-conference/
LOCATION:Young Research Library\, UCLA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170413
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20170415
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20160718T234330Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170407T183038Z
UID:3855-1492041600-1492214399@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Disability as Spectacle
DESCRIPTION:Keynote Addresses:\nROSEMARIE GARLAND-THOMSON\, Professor of English & Bioethics at Emory University \n\nDJ KURS\, Artistic Director for Deaf West Theatre \n\nKAREN NAKAMURA\, Robert and Colleen Haas Distinguished Chair in Disability Studies and\nProfessor of Anthropology at the University of California\, Berkeley\n \n\nUCLA’s Disability Studies program announces a two-day conference on Disability as Spectacle (April 13-14\, 2017).  Disability’s representation in current popular culture\, academic discourse\, and political rhetoric raises important questions about how disability is depicted and which disabilities are excluded or rendered invisible in this new cultural landscape.  How does our current moment’s heightened awareness of disability produce benefits and/or disadvantages in other social\, political\, or economic spheres? The conference theme encourages scholars\, practitioners\, artists\, and activists to think critically about disability’s representations and invites them to share ideas about the future of disability rights and Disability Studies as this historically marginalized community continues to make advances in mainstream culture. \nThis conference aims to stimulate a discussion around how society constructs\, reacts\, and embraces or rejects visible and invisible disabilities in the public sphere.  As representations change in popular and political culture\, scholars\, practitioners\, artists\, and activists will need to confront a changing milieu in which (some) disabilities are de-stigmatized while others are prevented from participation. \nThe film and television industry’s role in disability’s changing status makes Los Angeles an ideal location to reflect upon disability as spectacle.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/disability-as-spectacle/
LOCATION:Luskin Conference Center
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170410T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170605T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20170407T181831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170407T183401Z
UID:5588-1491845400-1496691000@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Scope Lab Workshops
DESCRIPTION:Scope Lab is a workshop series focused on exploring code as a creative medium with which to understand and represent diverse perspectives. These studies are framed by the questions: “Whose perspectives are represented?”\, “Who has access to the tools to learn and express themselves?”\, and “How do we design tools and projects that are more inclusive?”. Each workshop will consist of hands-on programming exercises\, a lecture and discussion\, and projects developed collaboratively. We will be using a software platform called p5.js\, which is an open source JavaScript framework that makes creating visual media with code on the web accessible to artists\, designers\, educators\, and beginners. For questions or to sign up\, please write to scopelab@p5js.org.\n\nWHO IS SCOPE LAB?\nScope lab workshops are free and open for all UCLA students. Workshops may be attended on a drop-in basis\, but we do encourage students to come to the entire series. No prior coding knowledge is necessary\, all levels of experience are welcomed and encouraged. \nScope Lab is led by Lauren McCarthy\, Assistant Professor in the Design Media Arts Department and Miriam Posner\, Director of the Digital Humanities Program\, with Graduate Researchers Stalgia Grigg and Christina Yglesias. Collaborating groups and departments include UCLA Computer Science\, VoidLab (a feminist student collective in the Design Media Arts Department)\, UCLA Arts Software Studio\, and the NYU Ability Project. \n\n\nThe workshops will occur biweekly on Monday evenings\, from 5:30-7:30pm at the Broad Art Center\, room 3261A (New Mars). \nApril 10 | Uncertainty and Experimental Data Visualisation\nMiriam Posner (Digital Humanities) and Lauren McCarthy (Design Media Arts) \nApril 24 | Experimental Language Design\nAlessandro Warth (Computer Science) \nMay 8 | Feminist Artistic Strategies in Online Spaces\nVoidLab \nMay 22 | Multiperspectival Experimental Data Visualisation\nMiriam Posner (Digital Humanities) and Lauren McCarthy (Design Media Arts) \nJune 5 | Designing for Accessibility and Disability \nClaire Kearney-Volpe (NYU Ability Project) \n\n\nFURTHER READING\nCatherine D’Ignazio\, Lauren Klein\, Feminist Data Visualization\nShaka McGlotten\, Black Data\nJohanna Drucker\, 3DH Visualizations\nJohanna Drucker\, Humanities Approaches to Graphical Display\nMimi Onuoha\, Missing Data Sets\nMushon Zer-Aviv\, If Everything is a Network\, Nothing is a Network\nMelissa Gregg\, Inside the Data Spectacle\nKim Gallon\, Making a Case for the Black Digital Humanities  \n\n\nScope Lab is supported by a grant from the UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture and the UCLA Center for the Study of Women.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/scope-lab-workshop-uncertainty-experimental-data-visualisation/
LOCATION:3261A Broad Art Center\, UCLA\, UCLA\, Los Angeles
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/scopelablogo.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170406T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170406T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20160624T193356Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170808T174828Z
UID:3616-1491494400-1491501600@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Black Milk: Colonial Foodways and Intimate Imperialism
DESCRIPTION:  \nAll CSW events are Fragrance-Free. Learn more about our event accessibility policy. \n  \nPart of Dishing: Food\, Feminism\, and the Way We Eat. Video now available on YouTube!\n \nA talk by Diana Garvin\, PhD in Italian Studies\, Cornell University \nThis talk will use original Italian and Ethiopian sources to examine breastfeeding in the colonial marketplace as a key plank in the social construction of race and racism in the colonies.  Specifically\, I will examine the Italian Fascist regime’s propagandistic newsreels and unpublished photographs of Ethiopian markets in Addis Ababa\, Harrar\, Quórum\, and Asmara in relation with postcolonial oral histories and architectural studies of these spaces. \nWhile breastfeeding represented a significant arena of political struggle over the care and nourishment of future generations in the colonies\, contemporary historical studies rarely examine this practice as a primary component of imperial foodways. This stance builds on Kyla Wazana Tompkins’ assertion that food confuses physical borders between the self and racial others.  My talk contributes an intersectional approach to the discipline by using breastfeeding in the marketplace to investigate the Fascist regime’s twinned seizure of food and women’s bodies\, a mode of cultural erasure that bell hooks refers to as “eating the other.” \nInterweaving the voices of vendors\, customers\, architects\, and government officials in this image-based study of Ethiopian marketplaces not only helps to untangle the filmic decisions and techniques that directors used to construct race and racism through mass media\, but also offers a more cohesive portrait of women’s daily lives in Italian East Africa under Fascism.  Ultimately\, I contend that the marketplace provided a powerful symbolic arena for forming\, shaping\, and perpetuating the racial thinking that defined Ethiopian and Italian people\, markets\, and foodways in terms of black and white. \nDiana Garvin holds a PhD in Italian Studies from Cornell University. Her dissertation\, “Feeding Fascism: Tabletop Politics in Italy and Italian East Africa\, 1922-1945\,” draws on Gender Studies\, Colonial Studies\, and Material Culture Studies and analyzes food as the physical evidence of power negotiations between individual women and the State in Italy and in former Italian East Africa (modern-day Ethiopia\, Eritrea\, and Somalia). Garvin conducted her research at over 25 museums and archives\, including the Archivio Diaristico Nazionale\, the Biblioteca Gastronomica\, the Archivio Barilla\, and the Archivio Centrale dello Stato. Garvin’s work has been supported by the AAUW American Fellowship (2015)\, the Julia Child Foundation Scholarship (2014) and the AFS Sue Samuelson Award for Foodways Scholarship (2013). Thanks to the support of the CLIR Mellon Fellowship\, she spent the 2015-2016 academic year conducting research in Italy for her second project on colonial foodways and East African women’s domestic work in Italian homesteads. \nGarvin’s research has been published in Critical Inquiry and the edited volumes\, Doing Research To Improve Teaching And Learning\, Representing Italy through Food\, Communicating Italian Food\, and Food and Material Culture: Proceedings of the 2013 Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery. In addition to her publications\, Garvin directed the conference\, “The Language of Food: Exploring Representations of the Culinary in Culture\,” at Cornell in 2012. Prior to her graduate work at Cornell\, Garvin taught at the Johns Hopkins SAIS Associazione Italo-Americana in Bologna\, Italy\, and at the Université François Rabelais in Tours\, France. In 2006\, she received her A.B. in Romance Studies (Italian\, French\, Spanish) from Harvard University. \nHer favorite Italian proverb is “O mangi questa minestra o salti dalla finestra\,” – “Eat this soup or jump out the window.” \n  \nCo-sponsored by:\n\nUCLA Division of Social Sciences\nUCLA Healthy Campus Initiative\nUCLA Department of History\nUCLA Food Studies Graduate Certificate Program\nUCLA Center for European and Russian Studies\nIris Cantor—UCLA Women’s Health Center\nUCLA Department of Italian
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/black-milk-colonial-foodways-intimate-imperialism/
LOCATION:Charles E Young Research Library Conference Room
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170406T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170406T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T163508
CREATED:20161123T210942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170317T004214Z
UID:4531-1491487200-1491494400@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Kathryn Everly\, "The Modern Woman Soldier and Gender Crisis during the Spanish Civil War"
DESCRIPTION:Kathryn Everly is Professor of Spanish Literature and Culture at Syracuse University. She published Catalan Women Writers and Artists: Revisionist Views from a Feminist Space with Bucknell University Press in 2003 and History\, Violence\, and the Hyperreal: Representing Culture in the Contemporary Spanish Novel with Purdue University Press in 2010. She received the Florence Howe Award for feminist scholarship in a foreign language field awarded by the Women’s Caucus for the Modern Languages Association\, as well as a research grant from the Program for Cultural Cooperation between Spain’s Ministry of Culture and United States Universities.  She has published several book chapters and articles in various journals including Letras peninsulares\,  Hispanic Journal\, and Catalan Review.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/kathryn-everly-female-militarization-revolution-spanish-civil-war-photography-film/
LOCATION:Lydeen Library\, 4302 Rolfe Hall\, UCLA
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Everly.png
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR