Panel discussion: Myanmar and the Politics of Humanitarianism: Diaspora, Identity, and Advocacy
Explore the transnational nature of humanitarian aid in Myanmar two years after a coup ushered in military rule there.
Explore the transnational nature of humanitarian aid in Myanmar two years after a coup ushered in military rule there.
Join us for a special event in honor of Latine/Latinx Heritage Month. Adael “Ace” Mejía, Worcester’s Youth Poet Laureate, will be at Clark University for a poetry reading and moderated discussion. Mejía is a multifaceted artist, youth worker, and performer of Ecuadorean heritage. He will read from his recent works and share more about his […]
Meet Clark students who have won prize money for their small businesses through Clark Tank. Ask questions and learn how to present the best pitch! Lunch provided by the Clark Food Truck! register here!
Session 1: An Introduction to Digital Humanities Research Clark University facilitators: Eduard Arriaga-Arango, Ph.D. Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Language, Literature, and Culture Matt Malsky, Ph.D. Professor of Music and Director, Higgins School of Humanities In this first session of the Digital Research in the Arts & Humanities workshop series, we will introduce digital humanities […]
Please join us for a conversation about the attacks in Israel on October 7, what is currently happening in Gaza, and what it has to do with us.
Please join us for a conversation about the attacks in Israel on October 7th, what is currently happening in Gaza, and what it has to do with us.
Still from “Jump” (2016), courtesy of Stephen DiRado Join us for a gallery talk celebrating the opening of Applied Motion Studies: Artists and Scientists Consider Movement, a video exhibition curated by Matt Malsky, Director of the Higgins School of Humanities. Special guests will include exhibition contributors and Clark University faculty members Philip Bergmann, Stephen DiRado, […]
To better understand antisemitism and how to address its many manifestations, three scholars will discuss historical antisemitism, how the present form relates to other hatreds, and the efforts that have been made to combat it.
1 April 2024 | 4:30 p.m. | Higgins LoungeDana Commons “Revisiting ‘Neighbors’” Speaker: Jan T. Gross (Norman B. Tomlinson ’16 and ’48 Professor of War and Society, emeritus; Professor of History, emeritus, Princeton University) Professor Jan Gross’ publication of Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland (in Polish in 2000 and in […]
On the 30th anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda, this workshop gathers an international group of scholars to examine the construction of memory and legacy.
Eliana Stanislawski will discuss strategies for increasing educational access for adult refugee learners, developing innovative approaches to virtual learning for adults at all language levels, and challenging the deficit mindset that is pervasive in Adult ESOL and refugee resettlement work.
Volunteers from across campus are invited to participate in the annual cleanup of University Park.
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