Thursday, November 17, 2011

World AIDS Day December 1st

SFSU Present: World Aids Day
When/Where: December 1, 2011
  • 11:00 – 12:00 @ Rosa Parks A
    • Safer Sex Workshop—Sexual Health P.E.A.C.H.
  • 11:00 – 4:00 @ Rosa Parks A–C
    • FREE HIV Antibody Testing—Larkin Street Youth Services
  • 12:05 – 12:20 @ Malcolm X Plaza
    • Moment of Reverence—SKINS
  • 12:30 – 2:00 @ Jack Adams Hall
    • Film:  We Were Here
      From Sundance and Berlin Film Festivals a feature length documentary by David Weissman and Bill Weber.
  • 2:10 – 4:00 @ Jack Adams Hall
    • Panel: 30+ years of HIV and the state of HIV today
      Moderator, Mya Vaughn, Department of Counseling
      • Kenneth Monteiro, Dean of Ethnic Studies, We Were There Too: African American Communities, African American men and HIV
      • Rita Melendez, Chair Human Sexuality Studies, Latino Immigrants who are HIV+
      • Mai Nhung Le, Asian American Studies, HIV and Women of Asian Decent Who Work in Massage Parlors 
      • Peter Ingmire, Department of Biology, HIV and Men Who Have Sex with Men
      • Cecilia Chung, SF Human Rights Commissioner, HIV and Transgender Communities
      • C.S. Gomora, Two Spirit, Ojibwa First Nations, American Indian Studies / English and Gender Studies Student, HIV in Native American Indian Communities
      • Jason Bell, Director of Project Rebound,  HIV in California Prisons
THE SAN FRANCISCO STATE UNIVERSITY AIDS QUILT WILL BE ON DISPLAY ALL WEEK IN THE LOBBY OF THE CESAR CHAVEZ STUDENT CENTER

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

KPFA-FM radio Thurs. Nov. 17, 7p

Valerie Soe and a student from AAS 304 will be on APEX Express, the API arts & culture show on KPFA-FM  this Thursday, Nov. 17. The show is from 7-8p and you can tune in at 94.1 FM, or find the livestream at http://www.kpfa.org/

AMP: Asians Moving Power, Fri. Dec. 2

AAS 304: Community Arts Workshop will be putting on AMP: Asians Moving Power, on Fri. Dec. 2, 7-9p at the I-Hotel Manilatown Heritage Foundation in Chinatown. The show will feature skits, videos, spoken word, dance and other performance pieces dealing with relevant topics in 
the AA community. There will also be a reception with food after the show. Suggested donation $5-15. 

Monday, November 14, 2011

American Indian occupation of Alcatraz Island 11/20

Dear Colleagues and Friends:


You are invited to attend the opening of a multimedia exhibit on the historic American Indian occupation of Alcatraz Island on Sunday, November 20th on Alcatraz Island.

In 2009, in collaboration with native community members, scholars and activists, a group of San Francisco State University and California State University East Bay students and faculty conducted interviews of native scholars and activists and documented the 40th anniversary of the historic 19-month American Indian occupation of Alcatraz Island.  The resulting exhibit was originally shown at the San Francisco State Cesar Chavez Student Center Art Gallery in November 2010 and was subsequently invited by the National Park Service to be installed on Alcatraz Island.

The multi-media exhibit contains photographs of the 40th anniversary occupation celebration; an audio landscape with excerpts from interviews of Alcatraz veterans and native activists; a collage of contemporary and archival footage; contemporary Native American poetry; and original art.  Alcatraz historian Dr. Troy Johnson provides interpretation for what remains an important part of the history of the island and an event that sparked the flame of American Indian activism.  The occupation provided visibility for the many challenges facing America's original peoples and led to victories in civil rights and native sovereignty. 

Alcatraz occupation veterans, American Indian artists, activists and scholars, as well as the students and faculty who created the exhibit will be present at the opening to interact with the public.  The exhibit is sponsored by the Richard Oakes Multicultural Center; American Indian Studies and Cesar Chavez Institute at San Francisco State; the International Indian Treaty Council; the Department of Ethnic Studies at Cal State East Bay; and The Cultural Conservancy, a non-profit indigenous rights organization. We wish to acknowledge the support of the National Park Service and a generous donation from the Service Employees International Union Local 1021 Native American Caucus.
The exhibit is located next to the gift shop in the former Band Practice Room in the cellblock basement on Alcatraz Island.

I have attached the press release for the event and our postcard.  Please distribute to your contacts.

We hope to see you at the opening which will last from 9:00am to 4:30pm.  SF State students, faculty and special guests can ride on the staff ferry to the island for free on the morning of November 20th.  Meet at Pier 33 at 8:30am.  The exhibit will be housed in the cellblock basement until February 2012 and will then move to another location on the island.

-- Phil Klasky, American Indian Studies

Friday, November 4, 2011

Arab and Arab American Feminisms Panel Event 11/10

Arab and Arab American Feminisms Panel Event

Thurs. Nov. 10th 7pm | 2 Plaza St, SF

This panel will feature a discussion led by contributors to the book Arab and Arab American Feminisms, which explores themes including intersections between gender, sexuality, Orientalism, racism, Islamophobia, and Zionism, and the restoration of Arab Jews to Arab American histories. Arab and Arab American Feminisms opens up new possibilities for placing grounded Arab and Arab American feminist perspectives at the center of gender studies, Middle East studies, American studies, and ethnic studies.

The Panel Event will feature: 
Rabab Abdulhadi, associate professor of Ethnic Studies/Race and Resistance Studies and senior scholar of the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Initiative at San Francisco State University and coauthor of Mobilizing Democracy: Changing U.S. Policy in the Middle East.
Mohja Kahf, associate professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Arkansas. Kahf is a poet, novelist, and activist for the Syrian Revolution, which she tweets for @ProfKahf. Her books include Emails from Scheherezade, The Girl in the Tangerine Scarf, and Western Representations of the Muslim Woman: From Termagant to Odalisque.
Happy/L.A. Hyder,  visual artist, writer and performer, whose activism include speaking about anti-Arab racism at the Dynamics of Color conference on racism in the lesbian community (1989), founding/directing LVA : Lesbians in the Visual Arts (1990-2003), and sharing thoughts on the iconography of family images and the impact of making art at the Arab American Museum's DIWAN conference (2009

Thursday, November 3, 2011

4th Annual Palestinian Cultural Mural Anniversary 11/3

4th Annual Palestinian Cultural Mural Anniversary
Palestine and the Indivisibility of Justice

Thursday, November 3rd
5:00pm - 9:30pm
Jack Adams Hall, Cesar Chavez Student Center, SFSU
1600 Holloway Avenue
San Francisco, CA


The 4th anniversary of the Palestinian Cultural Mural Honoring the Late Professor Edward Said <http://www.sfsustudentcenter.com/about/murals.php#palestinianmural>

Evening Program with members of the "African Heritage" & "Indigenous and Women of Color Feminist" Delegations to Palestine:
Angela Davis * Waziyatawin * Gerald Lenoir * Gina Dent * Melissa Garcia * Rabab Abdulhadi

& Dean Jake Perea * Dean Ken Monteiro * Aimee Barnes * Loubna Qutami * SFSU GUPS leaders * Al-Juthoor

***********************************
Proceeds will benefit the Edward Said Distinguished Lecture Fund. Please send your check to AMED at 1600 Holloway, EP 425, SF, CA 94132, or donate with your credit card online <https://www.applyweb.com/public/contribute?s=sfudonat> Please select "Other" Under About Your Gift and write in AMED/Said Lecture Fund.
For more information, contact amed@sfsu.edu or call (415) 405-2668

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Winter Writing Colloquium 1/19/12

The Committee on Written English Proficiency (CWEP) invites all faculty to a Winter Writing Colloquium on Thursday, January 19,2012, 10:00 -2:00.  Morning coffee and lunch will be provided.

The Colloquium will feature concurrent events: Roundtables (where faculty can share their work teaching writing in GWAR classes) and Workshops (one focusing on the appropriate role of grammar in our response to student writing, and another on using peer response.) Faculty can attend in the morning, afternoon, or both.

RSVP by January 15 to Mary Soliday (Soliday@sfsu.edu) if you plan to attend and if you want to reserve lunch.  Complete details available at:http://wac.sfsu.edu/content/winter-writing-colloquium-january-19-2012