Nitika Chopra – Speaker “Learning to Thrive with Chronic Illness”
Mary Lyon Hall - Holman Room Norton, MA, United StatesJoin us for Speaker Nitika Chopra as she discusses "Learning to Thrive with Chronic Illness".
Join us for Speaker Nitika Chopra as she discusses "Learning to Thrive with Chronic Illness".
Nina Banks, Associate Professor of Economics and an affiliate of Women's and Gender Studes and Critical Black Studies at Bucknell University, discusses Alexander's analysis of the rise in fascism and racial demagoguery in the U.S. during the 1930s.
Arts@Wheaton presents an interactive screening of Twilight. Audience members are welcome to yell out their favorite lines and come up with some hot takes for an informal talk back after the movie. We'll provide the movie snacks, bring a friend and come enjoy some cheesy vampire romance. This event is for the Wheaton Community only.
Symposium Keynote Talk Celebrating the Memory of Professor Beverly Lyon Clark Nicole Tadgell '91, is an award-winning illustrator of more than thirty picture books, including Annie Astronaut, Follow Me Down to Nicodemus Town and Real Sisters Pretend. Luminous watercolors, tender families, and a wide range of expressive faces characterize her illustrations. Nicole holds a BA degree in Studio Art from […]
Join us for this presentation by Michael Sheehy ’98, a research assistant professor in religious studies and the director of scholarship at the Contemplative Sciences Center, University of Virginia.
Colombian American poet Carlos Andrés Gómez, star of HBO’s Def Poetry Jam and Spike Lee’s #1 box office movie Inside Man with Denzel Washington, will perform his original work.
The Center for Social Justice and Community Impact, in partnership with Safe Zone at Wheaton, invites you to join Hugh Nini and Neal Treadwell, authors of the book "LOVING: A Photographic History of Men in Love, 1850s-1950s" in a discussion and Q&A-style program.
Zibby Jahns will introduce their work Reckoning Place, which was just installed in Everett Courtyard, and talk about their artistic practice.
The Center for Social Justice and Community Impact, in partnership with Safe Zone at Wheaton, invites you to join Hugh Nini and Neal Treadwell, authors of the book “LOVING: A Photographic History of Men in Love, 1850s-1950s” in a discussion and Q&A-style program.
Despite the recent urging of high-profile figures like Pope Francis and Senator Bernie Sanders to establish a “moral economy,” we have not. Free-market advocates hold fast to justifications that amount to variations on the “invisible hand” theory of Adam Smith — that the economy is not a moral space, but one that relies on a […]