Graduate And Professional

A roundtable discussion with Robin D.G. Kelley, Derecka Purnell, and Garrett Felber
Moderated by Elizabeth Hinton

An exhibition of work by MFA artists at the Afro-American Cultural Center
Opening March 17, 6–8PM
Exhibition on view: March 17 – April 21, 2022

Professor Daphne Brooks will discuss her new book “Liner Notes for the Revolution: The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound” (Harvard UP, 2021) which explores more than a century of music archives to examine the critics, collectors, and listeners who have determined perceptions of Black women on stage and in the recording studio. Online, free and open to all with pre-registration. Online, free, and open to all with registration.

Join us for the launch of the Yale IPCH Public Talks: a series dedicated to exploring global perspectives and critical developments that impact cultural heritage preservation. In this inaugural event, this distinguished expert panel will contextualize the highly anticipated John Randle Centre for Yoruba History and Culture within the economic, social, and cultural landscape of Lagos, the most populous city on the African continent.

Join the Yale African American Affinity Group for a National Work & Family Month Discussion with Camille J. Cooper, Ed.D. Camille will discuss the benefits of having a healthy work and family life balance. Today, our families come in all shapes and sizes. Between work, family, and personal life, we all face many responsibilities every day. Which is why finding a healthy balance among them all is so important.

The Black Panther movement played a pivotal role in New Haven during the 1970 May Day Rally. This student-curated exhibit explores the roles of the Black Panthers and Yale in creating a successful protest movement, representing the varying positions and perspectives that Yale affiliates and Black Panther organizers brought to the table in their disparate but related fights for justice and fairness.

Before Oprah, before Arsenio, there was Mr. SOUL! Join the Afro-American Cultural Center and YSC for a screening of the award-winning documentary followed by a discussion with writer/director and former New Haven resident Melissa Haizlip and Yale Professors Thomas Allen Harris and Daphne A. Brooks. The topic will be “Making the Archive Public: Radical History in Public Television.”

Join us online for a free Indie Lens Pop-Up screening of the documentary CODED BIAS, followed by a discussion with filmmaker Shalini Kantayya and computer scientist Joy Buolamwini of the MIT Media Lab.

Join this live information session that will explore the many features that make up the Yale Parent Network. Some of the topics to be discussed include, but are not limited to: what’s happening in our community via the Dashboard, how to get to know other Yale parents, how to ask questions and get answers from our community, how to live more economically with the classifieds section. All of these, and more, will be part of this session. You don’t want to miss! A Zoom link will be sent to you in advance of the session.

Join this live information session that will explore the many features that make up of the Yale Parent Network. Some of the topics to be discussed we will discuss include, but are not limited to, • See what’s happening in our community via the Dashboard • How to get to know other Yale parents • How to ask questions and get answers from our community • How to live more economically with the classifieds section All of these, and more, will be part of this session you don’t want to miss! A zoom link will be sent to you in advance of the session.

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