10/19/19 Black Alumni Council Homecoming

Naintara Ramoo-Goodgame Black Alumni Council HOMECOMING 2019

OCTOBER 19, 2019 AT 8PM – 10PM

High Bar Midtown
346 W 40th
New York, NY 10018

The Black Alumni Council of Columbia University (BAC) and The Columbia Alumni Association (CAA), invite you to join alumni from all Columbia schools and generations for the 2019 Black Alumni Homecoming! This festive evening will be an opportunity for the Black Lion family to come together to celebrate our community, learn how to get involved and have a great time with new and old Columbia friends. The evening includes hors d’ouvres, open bar, music, and dancing. Homecoming attendees will be welcome to stay at High Bar without an additional entrance fee.

CONTACT Columbia University BAC

Save the Date 10/23/19 TOMORROW’S TOMORROW: A SYMPOSIUM IN HONOR OF DR. JOYCE LADNER

TOMORROW’S TOMORROW: A SYMPOSIUM IN HONOR OF DR. JOYCE LADNER
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2019 6:00PM TO 8:00PM

Activism. Scholarship. Leadership: A Public Conversation

Dr. Joyce Ladner
Activist. Author. Sociologist.
&
Dr. Alondra Nelson
President Social Science Research Council

In Conversation

Panel:  Tomorrow’s Daughters

Dr.  LaKisha Simmons
University of Michigan

Dr.  Dawn Dow
University of Maryland, College Park

Dr. Salamishah Tillet
Rutgers University, Newark

Reception and Book-signing

Columbia Journalism School
Pulitzer World Room
2950 Broadway, New York, NY 10027

Source: IRAAS

7/26/19 – Harlem, NY: IRAAS Networking Reception

IRAAS Alumni Council & Friends Harlem Reception

 Friday, July 26, 2019 5:30 to 9:00pm

Cove Lounge, 325 Malcolm X Blvd (between 126th & 127th Streets) New York, NY

Free to attend. Cash bar.

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Cash Bar. Online menu https://www.covelounge.com/courses

Happy Hour specials!

Join professionals from various industries to celebrate summer and share opportunities for the future. Corporate partners will be present at this event through representation of Employee Resource Groups from Amazon and Becton Dickinson (BD) with career information.

Special congratulations to the Class of 2019

Co-Hosts:

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Save the Date 6/1/19 Alumni of Color Reception hosted by Columbia Alumni Association

SAVE THE DATE

Alumni of Color Reception

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3 – 4 PM Sat., June 1, 2019

Schermerhorn Hall, Columbia University

Attend this brief reunion weekend reception for alumni of color under the Schermerhorn Hall tent. Details available soon.

For information please visit the Black Alumni Council of the Columbia Alumni Association

http://bac.alumni.columbia.edu/calendar

Register Now: IRAAS 25th Anniversary Conference – “Free to Be Anywhere in the Universe: An International Conference on New Directions in the Study of the African Diaspora”

Conference 2019-4

Image Credit: Mary Sibande, A Terrible Beauty is Born, 2013

IRAAS 25th Anniversary Conference
“Free to Be Anywhere in the Universe: An International Conference on New Directions in the Study of the African Diaspora” 
Conference dates: Thursday, April 25 – Saturday, 27, 2019 
Free & Open to the Public;
Registration is Required for Admission into The Forum, secured building

Please register at
https://forms.gle/UwknKsWXRF3phc7g8

 


Thursday April 25
Location: The Forum at 125th street 12:00pm – Noon – 2:00pm
Roundtable – From Theory to Praxis, Black Studies Beyond the Academy
This roundtable seeks to connect some of the fundamental work of IAC alums whose grounding in IRAAS has made significant impact of their work outside the academy. It seeks to highlight the social justice, political, governmental, medical, and educational work our alums are doing, especially around race, inequality, and justice. A discussion of past programs and initiatives that continue to influence their current work. 2:00pm – 2:15pm – BREAK 2:15pm – 4:15pm
Intellectual Legacies of IRAAS Scholarship
This session will highlight the leading scholarship by IRAAS alums whose work engages the various fields and subfields of Black/African American Studies. Panelists will connect their work to new paradigms and innovations for the future of Black Studies. It will also highlight the legacy and influence of IRAAS on their current work and placement in the academy.4:15pm – 5:00pm – LOCATION CHANGE Faculty House on Columbia Campus at 116th Street (Amsterdam Avenue & Morningside Drive)
Enter through small Iron gate midblock, next to Jerome Greene Hall. Walk straight back past the Wein courtyard and the Faculty House is on the right 5:00pm – 6:00pm
South African Artist, Mary Sibande Pre-Exhibition Talk 6:00pm – 8:00pm
Mary Sibande Exhibition Opening – Leroy Neiman Gallery, Dodge Hall (Near 116th Street & Broadway gate )


Friday April 26
Location: The Forum at 125th street 10:00am – 11:45am
Genealogies of Black Studies
This session examines distinct and overlapping genealogies of Black Studies. It brings together leading scholars who work in different iterations of Black/African American Studies. Panelists will draw upon their pathbreaking scholarship to speak about trajectories of Black Studies in their own subfields. 11:45pm – 1:15pm
LUNCH BREAK 1:15pm – 3:00pm
Diasporic Politics
What are the emerging forms of social solidarity and activism now taking shape across the African diaspora in the wake of neoliberal economic policies, trans-border migrations, climate change and un/natural disasters, and the rise of white, ethno-nationalisms in North America and Europe? How do we think the concepts of African diaspora and Black World while attending to the differing spatial scales at which diasporic communities are imagined, and the varying interests and projects that they serve? 3:00pm – 3:15pm
BREAK 3:15pm – 5:00pm
The Theoretical Turn
The significance of “theory” has long been a question for scholars who locate themselves in relationship to the interdisciplinary field of African American and African Diaspora Studies. At the same time, one could argue that black studies constitutes a theory of the modern world, and of how to produce knowledge in the wake of modernity’s central contradictions (i.e. of slavery and freedom). That said, in recent years Black Studies has been enlivened by engagements with a variety of theoretical resources that have yielded multiple trajectories (i.e Afro-Futurism, Afro-Pessimism, Black Performance, Black Queer studies, to name just a few). This panel is charged with assessing the resources and weighing the prospects for future work within what some have referred to as a novel “theoretical turn” in Black Studies. 5:00pm – 6:30pm
DINNER BREAK 6:30pm – 8:15pm
Plenary Keynote


Saturday April 27
Location: The Forum at 125th street 10:00am – 11:45am
Black Urban Life
Scholars in this transdisciplinary panel will explore the multivalent socio-spatial contours of Africa and the African Diaspora, in particular how black agency, politics, humanity and mobility across the topographies formed in the wake of colonialism, enslavement, capitalism, and liberal democracy impact life in the black world. In addressing the nuanced spaces of communal, urban, national, and planetary life, panelists will also consider how to best understand the productive spatio-temporal possibilities of new black imaginaries, cartographies of resistance and refusal, and diasporic community building. 11:45pm – 1:15pm
LUNCH BREAK 1:15pm – 3;00pm
Global Black Feminisms
Concepts of black feminism have informed and helped to reshape fields of academic study as well as political organizing. The proposed panel seeks to present a historical sweep of black feminist thought and practice. Participants might consider a number of questions including, but not limited to the following: How do historical legacies of race, gender and justice shape mass incarceration today? How have black women intellectuals participated in shaping black political thought? How have their participation in global freedom struggles furthered the liberator’s vision of those movements, including what we conventionally understand as movements for Civil Rights? In what ways do contemporary forms of racial and gender inequality influence professional occupations? How has a black feminist framework informed contemporary black cultural production?3:00pm – 3:15pm – BREAK 3:15pm – 5:00pm
Imagining Freedom
This panel considers socio-spatial imaginaries and the active visualization, definition, and construction of artistic freedoms. What roles do literature; music, the visual arts and popular culture play in imagining and articulating trans-diasporic expressions of subjectivity, experience and memory? How do we today theorize the conditions of possibility for an African Diasporic aesthetic, while attending to cultural, historical and geopolitical differences?5:00pm – 6:30pm –

DINNER BREAK 6:30pm – 8:15pm
Closing Keynote Performance
Source: Institute for Research in African-American Studies
758 Schermerhorn Extension
Mail Code 5512
Columbia University
1200 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10027

Telephone: 212.854.7080 Fax: 212.854.7060
E-mail: iraas@columbia.edu

3/14/19 Columbia Undergraduate Creative Writing Department Tongo Eisen-Martin

8PM Thursday, March 14, 2019

501 Dodge Hall, Columbia University

Refreshments provided
Biography:

Tongo Eisen-Martin was born in San Francisco and earned his MA at Columbia University. He is the author of someone’s dead already (Bootstrap Press, 2015), nominated for a California Book Award; and Heaven Is All Goodbyes (City Lights, 2017), which received a 2018 American Book Award, a 2018 California Book Award, was named a 2018 National California Booksellers Association Poetry Book of the Year, and was shortlisted for the 2018 Griffin International Poetry Prize. In their citation, the judges for the Griffin Prize wrote that Eisen-Martin’s work “moves between trenchant political critique and dreamlike association, demonstrating how, in the right hands, one mode might energize the other—keeping alternative orders of meaning alive in the face of radical injustice … His poems are places where discourses and vernaculars collide and recombine into new configurations capable of expressing outrage and sorrow and love.”

Eisen-Martin is also an educator and organizer whose work centers on issues of mass incarceration, extrajudicial killings of Black people, and human rights. He has taught at detention centers around the country and at the Institute for Research in African-American Studies at Columbia University. He lives in San Francisco.

Source: Poetry Foundation

2/5/19 Private Tour Posing Modernity at Wallach Gallery

 

Join Black Alumni Council and CAA Arts Access for a private evening tour of The Wallach Art Gallery’s current exhibition Posing Modernity: The Black Model from Manet and Matisse to Today.

Tues., Feb. 5 | 6 PM | $15

FEBRUARY 05, 2019 AT 6PM – 8PM

The Wallach Art Gallery

615 W 129th St
New York, NY 10027
United States

Fellow Black alumnus Denise Murrell ’14GSAS, the exhibition curator, will discuss her work. Dr. Murrell, a former finance and consulting executive with a Harvard MBA, was recently featured in Columbia News, discussing the exhibition. She has also memorialized the work in a popular book by the same title.

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The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery is located in the Lenfest Center for the Arts on Columbia’s new Manhattanville campus, 615 West 129th Street (enter on 125th Street, west of Broadway).

A reception follows the tour and discussion. Register for tickets today online via Eventbrite.

This program is co-sponsored by the Black Alumni CouncilCAA Arts Access, a program of the Columbia Alumni Association, and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Visitor Information

The Wallach Art Gallery is located in the Lenfest Center for the Arts on Columbia University’s Manhattanville campus, 615 West 129th Street (enter on 125th Street, west of Broadway).

Transit Directions

The No. 1 subway line serves the Columbia neighborhood. The Manhattanville campus subway stop is the 125th Street station.

Four bus lines (M4, M5, M104 and Bx15) have stops close to the Manhattanville campus.

You may park on the street or use the local parking garages.

Parking

University Garage is located at 532 West 122nd Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Ave.

Riverside Church Parking Garage is located on 120th Street between Claremont Avenue and Riverside Drive.

Questions?

Please contact us at alumniarts@columbia.edu

Harlem, NY 12/1/18 – Toy Drive Supporting NYC Administration for Children Services

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Toy Drive 2017 collection for 100 items to support New York City Administration for Children Services. Representatives from New York City Administration for Children’s Services, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.; Amazon – Black Employee Network, New York; Brown University – Inman Page Black Alumni Council, New York and Columbia University – Institute for Research in African American Studies Alumni Council.

The Institute for Research in African American Studies Alumni Council of Columbia University invites you join us

Saturday, December 1, 2018 7PM

Solomon & Kuff Rum Hall – 2331 12th Ave, New York, NY 10027@ 133rd St

Bring unwrapped toys, educational items, posters, blankets, diverse dolls and gifts to support children and young adults up to 22 years old.

For dinner reservations contact 212.939.9443

  • Cash Bar Specials
  • $30 + tax & tip: per hour unlimited top shelf open bar
  • $15 + tax & tip: per hour unlimited appetizers

In 2017 executives in attendance hailed from Amazon Black Employee Network, Sirius XM Black Employee Network, HSBC Bank, State University of New York (SUNY) Suffolk County Community College, City University of New York (CUNY) Brooklyn College, New York City Department of Youth and Community Services, New York City Parks Department, Rustic Tavern, NFL Network, Goldman Sachs, General Electric, Citizens Financial Group, JP Morgan Chase, and many more organizations.

NYC ACS

Tyler James, Director of Workforce Development at New York City Administration of Children’s Services coordinated the successful 2017 toy drive to support over 100 youth. Attendees shared “It is such an honor to support our youth and build new community ties at the same time.”

The collaboration is hosted by

Tonight 10/20/18 Black Alumni Council Columbia University Homecoming

BAC_Banner

The Black Alumni Council of Columbia University (BAC) and The Columbia Alumni Association (CAA), invite you to join alumni from all Columbia schools and generations for the 2018 Black Alumni Homecoming!

This festive evening will be an opportunity for the Black Lion family to come together to celebrate our community, learn how to get involved and have a great time with new and old Columbia friends.

The evening includes hors d’ouvres, open bar, music, and dancing at High Bar, a rooftop lounge in midtown Manhattan on the 37th Floor of the Double Tree by Hilton Hotel, Times Square West on 40th Street near 9th Avenue. BAC Homecoming attendees will be welcome to stay at High Bar without an additional entrance fee.

Undergrad Students: $45
Recent Alums (’08-’18)/Grad Students: $55
Alumni and Guests: $60

At the Door

Undergrad Students: $55
Recent Alums (’08-’18)/Grad Students: $65
Alumni and Guests: $75

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*Note: Due to Columbia’s alcohol policy, only those 21 and over may attend. 

Make arrangements to attend alumni festivities at Columbia Alumni Homecoming under the tent (11:00 AM – 2:00 PM at Columbia Baker Athletics Complex). Be sure to come by the BAC table under the tent. And don’t forget to root for the Lions at the Columbia Football game against Dartmouth (1:30 PM kick-off).

Source: http://bac.alumni.columbia.edu/bac_homecoming_18