Bucket List brings to your attention important guest lecturers and special events on campus. Our recommendations for the week are below, followed by a full calendar of events. If you notice any events excluded from the list or have a correction, let us know in the comments or email events@bwog.com.
Recommended
- “Discussion & Film Screening: I Am Not Your Negro.” Tuesday, April 2, 6 – 9:30 PM. Buell Hall, East Gallery. Followed by a discussion with Karim Clesca, the editor, Henry Adebonojo, the cinematographer, and SIPA Students of Color.
- “Power Talk with Anna Holmes.” Wednesday, April 3, 6:30 – 8 PM. Milbank 223 (Ella Weed Room). Registration requested.
- “US Colonialism and the Appropriation of Puerto Ricans’ Bodies, Land, and Freedom.” Thursday, April 4, 11 – 12 AM. Malia Lee Womack.
- “Shakespeare in Translation?” Thursday, April 4 7 PM. Held Lecture Room, Barnard Hall. James Schapiro, John McWhorter, Featuring performances by KCST. Tickets here.
Monday, April 1
- “Implementing the Prespa Agreement between Greece and North Macedonia.” 10 – 11 AM. International Affairs 1219. Georgios Katrougalos; welcome by Alexander Cooley and moderated by David L. Phillips.
- “Human Rights vs. (Sustainable) Development?” 12 – 1 PM. Interchurch Center, 475 Riverside Dr, Room 320C. Adam Metzger.
- “Gender, Technology and Development: A Practitioner’s Perspective.” 1 – 2 PM. International Affairs 801. Savita Bailur.
- “America and the New Protectionism.” 6 – 7:30 PM. Miller Theater. Paul Krugman, Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg, David E. Weinstein, Amit Khandelwal. Registration is now closed.
- “Future of Economic Statecraft: Fireside Chat with Jack Lew.” 6 – 7:30 PM. Low Library, Faculty Room. Jack Lew in conversation with Richard Nephew.
- “The Wilsonian Century: Perspectives on the Treaty of Versailles at 100.” 6 – 9 PM. Butler Library 203. Rashid Khalidi, Erez Manela, Patricia O’Toole.
- “Turgenev Revisited: The Literary Reflection of the Essay “Hamlet and Don Quixote” in Anatoly Lunacharsky’s “The Liberated Don Quixote” and Isaac Babel’s “Red Cavalry.” 6:15 – 7:15 PM. International Affairs, Room 1201. Bettina Kaibach.
- “Born Free and Equal: A Symposium on Journalism and Human Rights.” 4:30 – 6:45 PM. Pulitzer, Joseph D. Jamail Lecture Hall. For a full list of speakers and panels please read here.
- “The Cosmopolitics of Inka Imperial Rule” 6 – 8:30 PM. Schermerhorn 612. Terence D’Altroy.
- “Practicing Caste: On Touching and Not Touching.” 6:30 – 8 PM. Heyman Center Second Floor Common Room. Ben Baer; Bruno Bosteels; Brent Edwards; Anupama Rao, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak.
Tuesday, April 2
- “Uneven Centuries: Turkey’s Experience with Economic Development since 1820.” 6 – 8:30 PM. International Affairs 1501. Sevket Pamuk, introduced by Rashid Khalidi. RSVP here.
- “World Leaders Forum: India at Crossroads.” 6:30 – 8 PM. Shapiro CSPER, Davis Auditorium. Amartya Sen and Prabhat Patnaik, with a moderated discussion by Ruchira Gupta.
- “The Art of the Leningrad Underground.” 6:30 – 7:30 PM. International Affairs 1219. Alexander V. Markov. This talk will be in Russian.
- “Nuestra América: utopía y persistencia de una familia judía.” 6:15 – 8 PM. Heyman Center, Second Floor Common Room. Claudio Lomnitz, Jesús D. R. Velasco, Graciela Montaldo, Norma Elizondo
Wednesday, April 3
- “Enabling a More Inclusive Academy: Achieving Diversity & Excellence.” 5 – 6:30 PM. Buell Hall, East Gallery. Virginia Valian.
- “Cultural Identity, Geography of Encounter & the Politics of Space/Time.” 6 – 8 PM. Low Library, Faculty Room. Jeff Malpas, Rachael Rose, Eduard Andrei, opening remarks by Mona Momescu, introduction by Christopher J. Caes.
- “CU Live: Talent Showcase.” 6 – 8 PM. Miller Theater. Register here (bring your CUID).
- “To Where From Here: Migration Legacies Roundtable.” 6 – 8 PM. The Forum, Lenfest Center for the Arts. Ayana Mathis, Kellie Jones, Farah Jasmine Griffin. Pre-registration required.
- “Human Rights Today: Celebrating 70 Years of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.” 6:30 – 8 PM. Jerome Greene Hall 106. Welcome and Opening Remarks: Gillian Lester, Suzanne Goldberg, Laura Roosevelt, Robert Klitzman. Panelists: Roger Cohen (Moderator), A. Kayum Ahmed, Allida Black, Sarah Cleveland, Lynn Freedman, Tracy Robinson.
- “War for Peace: Genealogies of a Violent Ideal in Western and Islamic Thought.” 6:15 – 8 PM. Heyman Center, Second Floor Common Room. Murad Idris, Jordanna Bailkin, Ilana Feldman, Jesús R. Velasco, Susan Pedersen.
Thursday, April 4
- “Dismantling Systemic Inequity in Criminal Justice & Health” 8 AM – 4:30 PM. Lerner 555. Registration and agenda here.
- “Whose Freedom, Whose Speech? The Future of Campus Community.” 12 – 2 PM. Pulitzer Hall, Room 300. Noah D. Drezner, Suzanne Nossel, Tanya Hernández, Jason Riley.
- “Book talk on Uneven Moments: Reflections on Japan’s Modern History.” 12 – 1:30 PM. International Affairs 918. Harry Harootunian.
- “Between the Empire and the Nation-State: New Histories of Refugee Regimes in Europe and the Middle East.” 12:15 – 1:15 PM. International Affairs 1219. Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky, Philipp Ther.
- “Book Talk: “Extralegal Groups in Post-Conflict Liberia” 12:10 – 2 PM. International Affairs 1302. Christine Cheng, moderated by Séverine Autesserre.
- “Decolonizing Universalism.” 4:10 – 6 PM. Philosophy 716. Serene Khader.
- “Body Sovereignty & Kids: How We Can Cultivate A Culture Of Consent.” 5:30 – 7 PM. Altschul 202. Monica Rivera.
- “Turkey: Collapse of the Rule of Law.” 6 – 8 PM. Low Library Rotunda. Steven Cook, Dr. Sarah Cleveland, Agnes Callamard, Dr. Alp Aslandogan. Registration required.
- “Women Waging War: A conversation on the distinctive politics of women who participate in violence.” 6 – 8 PM. International Affairs 1501. Co-hosted and moderated by Dr. Nimmi Gowrinathan, Dr. Dipali Mukhopadhyay; Panelists: Dr. Lila Abu-Lughod, Dr. Sonia Ahsan, Others TBA.
- “The Last Poets: Conversation with Christine Otten & Brent Edwards.” 6 – 8 PM. Kent 617. RSVP here.
- “Lydia Ginzburg’s Testimony from Inside the Leningrad Siege: An Unreconciled Memory, an Unwanted Heritage, and a Challenge for Today.” 6:15 – 8:15 PM. International Affairs 1219. Irina Sandomirskaja.
- “Representing Jazz in the 21st Century: A Lecture & Presentation by Prof. Krin Gabbard.” 6:30 – 8:30 PM. Lenfest Center for the Arts, The Forum 315. RSVP required. Email columbiajazzstudies@gmail.com or call 212-851-9270 to secure your seat.
- “Spiritual Nerd Fest.” 7:30 – 9 PM. Pupin 301. Dr. Robert Pollack, = Dr. Nidhal Guessoum, and Dr. Christiana Zenner. RSVP here.
- “West Indians in West Africa: Sketches of an Archaeology of the Back-to-Africa Movement from Nineteenth-Century Liberia.” 6 – 8 PM. Knox 201. Matthew Reilly.
Friday, April 5
- “Religion and the Future.” 8:30 AM. Milbank Hall, 328. Graduate student conference; registration and a full schedule here.
- “China’s Invisible Crisis: How the Urban-Rural Human Capital Divide Threatens China’s Growth and Stability.” 12:15 – 1:15 PM. School of Social Work, CO3. Scott Rozelle.
- “University Senate Plenary | Monthly meeting of Columbia University Senate.” 1:15 – 2:45 PM. Columbia School of Nursing, 7th Floor.
- “Reintegration of the Donbas: Different Perspectives.” 5 – 7 PM. International Affairs, 7th Floor Lindsay Roberts Room. Pavlo Ostrovskyi, Taras Galkovskyi, Elise Giuliano, Olexii Baranovskyi, moderated by Olena Nikolayenko.
- “Film Friday: This Is Home.” 6:30 – 9:30 PM. Pulitzer Hall, Joseph D. Jamail Lecture Room. Q & A afterward with Director Alexandra Shiva; pizza will be served.
- “Empire by its Other Names.” Friday, April 5 – Saturday, April 6. The Heyman Center, Second Floor Common Room. Full schedule here.
- “Mounia Abousaid Memorial Reading Nook Dedication.” 3 – 5 PM. Komoda Room of the Heyman Center for the Humanities. RSVP required.
- “Art, Theft, and Restitution.” 3 – 5 PM. Buell Hall East Gallery. Ariella Azoulay, Souleymane Bachir Diagne, and Brian Wallis, moderated by Marianne Hirsch and Andreas Huyssen. RSVP here.
- “Listening Otherwise In and To Persian Poetry.” 3 PM. Dodge 622. Andrew Hicks
Saturday, April 6
- Bacchanal! SOPHIE will be headlining, with performances by rapper Tierra Whack, electropop artist Rina Sawayama, and student opener DJ and rapper Oswald Fresh.
Ah yes, the celebration of, uh, grapes via Bwog archives