Diversity and Inclusion

Decolonizing Europe Lecture | Radically Inclusive Archives - Intersectional Black European Studies Today

The Decolonizing Europe Lecture Series presents the INTERSECTIONAL BLACK STUDIES PROJECT (INBEST), on “Radically Inclusive Archives - Intersectional Black European Studies Today”
Hosted by Professor Fatima EI-Tayeb
Location: HQ Rm 136
Zoom Registration: https://bit.ly/Yale-InBEST
InBEST is a Black queer-feminist collaboration, housed at the TU Berlin (Center for Interdisciplinary Gender

Decolonizing Europe Lecture | France and Whiteness. breaking with the collaboration of race

The Decolonizing Europe Lecture Series presents Houria Bouteldja, founding member of le Parti des Indigènes de la république, on “France and Whiteness: breaking with the collaboration of race”
Hosted by Professor Fatima EI-Tayeb
Location: Luce Hall, Rm 203 (34 Hillhouse Ave.)
Zoom Registration: https://bit.ly/Yale-HouriaBouteldja
Bio:

Decolonizing Europe Lecture | White Enclosures. Racial Capitalism and Coloniality along the Balkan Route

The Decolonizing Europe Lecture Series presents Dr. Piro Rexhepi, Lecturer, Southern New Hampshire University, on “White Enclosures: Racial Capitalism and Coloniality along the Balkan Route”
Hosted by Professor Fatima EI-Tayeb
Location: HQ Rm 136
Zoom Registration: https://bit.ly/Yale-PiroRexhepi
Bio:

Mondays at Beinecke: Revisiting the Past – Imagining the Future with Kevin Repp, Curator of Modern European Books and Manuscripts

A talk in conjunction with the Beinecke Library building-wide exhibition, “Revisiting the Past—Imagining the Future,” on view through July 9.
Kevin Repp, Curator of Modern European Books and Manuscripts, will discuss items he selected for the exhibition.
Zoom webinar registration: https://bit.ly/3kA0uA7

If These Walls Could Sing

This director’s talk and advanced screening of the upcoming film “If These Walls Could Sing,” from Disney Original Documentary, gives exclusive access to the most famous and longest-running studio in the world, Abbey Road Studios. In this personal film of memory and discovery, director Mary McCartney guides us through nine decades to tell the stories of some of the studio’s most iconic recordings — and the people who made them happen. Discussion moderated by Rachel Fine, executive director of Yale Schwarzman Center.

Exhibition Curators' Talk: "Subjects and Objects: Slavic Collections at Yale, 1896–2022"

Please join us to celebrate the opening of “Subjects and Objects: Slavic Collections at Yale, 1896–2022,” which is on view in the Hanke Exhibition Gallery, Sterling Memorial Library.
Curators Anna Arays and Liliya Dashevski will discuss their exhibition and will be available for questions and conversation over light refreshments afterward.
No registration is necessary.
Note: Please see the library’s COVID updates to current public health protocols: https://library.yale.edu/news/covid-library-updates

Windham-Campbell Festival: Choral Performance: Intimate Strangers

A collaboration between Portuguese vocalist-composer Sara Serpa and Nigerian writer Emmanuel Iduma, drawing inspiration from Iduma’s book, A Stranger’s Pose, a unique blend of travelogue, musings and poetry. In a combination of music, text, image, and field recordings collected by Iduma during his travels, Intimate Strangers explores such themes as of movement, home, grief, absence, and desire in what Iduma calls “an atlas of a borderless world.”

My Own Private Ukraine: Utopia and Queer Futurity in Dark Times

The Yale European Studies Council of the MacMillan Center presents Dr. Vitaly Chernetsky, Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Kansas on “My Own Private Ukraine: Utopia and Queer Futurity in Dark Times.”
Location: HQ (Humanities Quadrangle), Rm 136, 320 York St.
Register to attend: https://bit.ly/YaleESC-EventRegistration

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