Filtering by: Cosponsored Events

May Amnesia Never Kiss Us On The Mouth: A Conversation w/ Ruanne Abou-Rahme + Basel Abbas
Apr
26
12:00 PM12:00

May Amnesia Never Kiss Us On The Mouth: A Conversation w/ Ruanne Abou-Rahme + Basel Abbas

Join us for an online conversation with Palestinian artists Ruanne Abou-Rahme and Basel Abbas. We will discuss their project "May amnesia never kiss us on the mouth" which examines how people are witness to and narrate experiences of violence, loss, erasure, displacement, and forced migration through performance. The conversation will also address Ruanne and Basel’s wider art practice which is at the intersection of performativity, political imaginaries, the body and virtuality.

View “May Amnesia Never Kiss Us On The Mouth” here.

This conversation is the opening event in a series of talks, events and exhibitions jointly organized by the Center for Middle East Studies, Brown and the Middle East Institute, Columbia University to explore art, gender and body politics in relation to the Middle East and its diasporas. This session with Ruanne and Basil is co-sponsored by the Center for Palestine Studies, Columbia University. Read more about the series here.

Panelists
Ruanne Abou-Rahme and Basel Abbas
Nadje Al-Ali
Kathryn Spellman Poots

View Event →
Post-justice, Exceptionalism, and the Normalization of Apartheid
Apr
13
12:00 PM12:00

Post-justice, Exceptionalism, and the Normalization of Apartheid

Join Scientists for Palestine, the Bisan Center for Research and Development and the Center for Palestine Studies for the second session of the Bisan Lecture Series (BSL) with Honaida Ghanim (Birzeit University).

The post-justice concept is introduced here to theorize the normalization of oppression, dispossession, and Israeli Apartheid. Post-justice is a state of indifference in which the distinction between right and wrong, or good and evil is irrelevant to politics. Because post-justice is a product of unequal power relations and rest oriental racism toward the Palestinian, it facilitates colonization and apartheid through various tools that emphasize the “exceptionalism” of the colonizer. Honaida Ghanim draws examples from the ongoing official subjugation of Palestinians, the privatization of colonization in East Jerusalem and mixed cities, settler violence in the West Bank, the enactment of the nation-state law, in parallel to the Israeli international relations expansion.

Speaker
Honaida Ghanim is Director of the Palestinian Forum for Israeli Studies “MADAR” and Visiting Professor at Birzeit University. Read more.

About the Bisan Lecture Series (BLS)
The Bisan Lecture Series aims at the full integration of Palestine into the global learning community. It sponsors discourses on subjects of cultural, scientific, and societal importance by leading research experts and public intellectuals of varied heritage and viewpoints. The interactive webinars are free and open to the public, and recordings of each will be posted soon afterward. The BSL will take place every second Wednesday of the month at 12:00 US Eastern Time / 19:00 Palestine Time / 18:00 Central European Time during the academic year.

The Bisan Center for Research and Development which sponsors the Series and which gives it its name, is a non-governmental, nonprofit, democratic and progressive Civil Society Organization (CSO) that seeks to enhance Palestinian abilities and potentials for building an active civil and democratic community. It is one of the six prominent Palestinian civil society organizations designated as “terrorist organizations” by the Israeli Defense Minister on October 19, 2021. This baseless defamatory accusation targets organizations recognized for their professionalism and competence in the field of human rights through research, exchanges, advocacy and training activities.

For more information about the designation and it’s implications on the work of the six organizations, watch the recording of Conflating Human Rights Advocacy with Terrorism, an event hosted by the Center for Palestine Studies in fall 2021.

For more information about the Series and the Bisan Center for Research and Development, click here.

View Event →
Closing Event for Palestinian Voices Library Display
Apr
1
11:00 AM11:00

Closing Event for Palestinian Voices Library Display

On Friday, April 1st at 11AM, the Empirical Reasoning Center will be hosting a closing event for the Palestinian Voices Library Display in collaboration with the Barnard College Library! This event will feature Nas Abd Elal CC'20, who is an information designer at Visualizing Palestine.

This event will be held in person, in the ERC computer lab in Milstein 102. The event is cosponsored by the Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia.

About the Palestinian Voices Library Display
Co-sponsored by Columbia's Center for Palestine Studies, The Barnard Library's Palestinian Voices display centers and amplifies Palestinian voices in writing, art, and film. The digital display, launched on February 8th on the second floor of the Milstein Center, features a range of works by Palestinian creators, among them documentary film, poetry, graphic novels, oral history, and critical theory. A group of Barnard students, faculty, staff, and community members generously offered recommendations for featured titles on display. Most featured items will continue to be available for checkout from Barnard and other Columbia libraries. The digital display will close on April 10.

View Event →
The Virology of Ideas—An Indispensable Pandemic
Mar
9
12:00 PM12:00

The Virology of Ideas—An Indispensable Pandemic

Join Scientists for Palestine, the Bisan Center for Research and Development and the Center for Palestine Studies for the inaugural session of the Bisan Lecture Series (BSL) with George Smith (University of Missouri).

The Virology of Ideas—An Indispensable Pandemic
Abstract: “Ideas” (cultural innovations) are likened to viruses that proliferate through community infection, being subject to massive random variation and ruthless natural selection as they spread. “Variants of interest”—extremely rare cultural Omicrons—emerge unpredictably from global communities; they’re not the intellectual property of individual brains. Individual brains’ contributions depend on their residence in a global “ideosphere”—the cultural analog of an ecological biosphere. Injury to any part of the global cultural community, such as Israel has inflicted in Palestine, is an injury to the entire global community. Liberation from such injuries is a cultural as much as a political and moral imperative.

Speaker
George Smith is Curators’ Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences at the University of Missouri. He is a Nobel Laureate in Chemistry (2018). Read more.

About the Bisan Lecture Series (BLS)
The Bisan Lecture Series aims at the full integration of Palestine into the global learning community. It sponsors discourses on subjects of cultural, scientific, and societal importance by leading research experts and public intellectuals of varied heritage and viewpoints. The interactive webinars are free and open to the public, and recordings of each will be posted soon afterward. The BSL will take place every second Wednesday of the month at 12:00 US Eastern Time / 19:00 Palestine Time / 18:00 Central European Time during the academic year.

The Bisan Center for Research and Development which sponsors the Series and which gives it its name, is a non-governmental, nonprofit, democratic and progressive Civil Society Organization (CSO) that seeks to enhance Palestinian abilities and potentials for building an active civil and democratic community. It is one of the six prominent Palestinian civil society organizations designated as “terrorist organizations” by the Israeli Defense Minister on October 19, 2021. This baseless defamatory accusation targets organizations recognized for their professionalism and competence in the field of human rights through research, exchanges, advocacy and training activities.

For more information about the designation and it’s implications on the work of the six organizations, watch the recording of Conflating Human Rights Advocacy with Terrorism, an event hosted by the Center for Palestine Studies in fall 2021.

For more information about the Series and the Bisan Center for Research and Development, click here.

View Event →
Celebrating Recent Work by Gil Hochberg: Becoming Palestine
Feb
24
6:15 PM18:15

Celebrating Recent Work by Gil Hochberg: Becoming Palestine

In Becoming Palestine, Gil Z. Hochberg examines how contemporary Palestinian artists, filmmakers, dancers, and activists use the archive in order to radically imagine Palestine's future. She shows how artists such as Jumana Manna, Kamal Aljafari, Larissa Sansour, Farah Saleh, Basel Abbas, and Ruanne Abou-Rahme reimagine the archive, approaching it not through the desire to unearth hidden knowledge, but to sever the identification of the archive with the past. In their use of archaeology, musical traditions, and archival film and cinematic footage, these artists imagine a Palestinian future unbounded from colonial space and time. By urging readers to think about archives as a break from history rather than as history's repository, Hochberg presents a fundamental reconceptualization of the archive's liberatory potential.

Attendance and Registration Policy:
This event is organized by The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University and presented byNew Books in the Arts & Sciences. It is cosponsored by the Center for Palestine Studies, the Middle East Institute, MESAAS and the Office of the Divisional Deans in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

The event will take place virtually over Zoom. Registration is required.

Please email 
disability@columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. This event will be recorded. By being electronically present, you consent to the SOF/Heyman using such video for promotional purposes.

Use code E21HCHBG for 30% off book purchase at Duke University Press.

About the Author
Gil Hochberg is Ransford Professor of Hebrew and Comparative Literature, and Middle East Studies at Columbia University and Chair of MESAAS. Her first book, In Spite of Partition: Jews, Arabs, and the Limits of Separatist Imagination examines the complex relationship between the signifiers “Arab” and “Jew” in contemporary Jewish and Arab literatures and cultural imagination. Her second book, Visual Occupations: Vision and Visibility in a Conflict Zone, is a study of the visual politics of the Israeli-Palestinian terrain and the emergence of a “conflict” or the sight of a conflict.

About the Speakers
Nadia Abu El-Haj is Ann Whitney Olin Professor in the Departments of Anthropology at Barnard College and Columbia University, Co-Director of the Center for Palestine Studies, and Chair of the Governing Board of the Society of Fellows/Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University. Abu El-Haj has published two books: Facts on the Ground: Archaeological Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning in Israeli Society, which won the Albert Hourani Annual Book Award from the Middle East Studies Association in 2002, and The Genealogical Science: The Search for Jewish Origins and the Politics of Epistemology.

Gayatri Gopinath is an associate professor of Social and Cultural Analysis and director of the Center for the Study of Gender and Sexuality at New York University. Gopinath is perhaps best known for her book Impossible Desires: Queer Diasporas and South Asian Public Cultures, which received article-length reviews in a number of journals.

Brian Larkin is the Director of Graduate Studies and a Professor of Anthropology at Barnard College, Columbia University. His research focuses on the ethnography and history of media in Nigeria. Most broadly he examines the introduction of media technologies into Nigeria—cinema, radio, digital media—and the religious, political, and cultural changes they bring about. Larkin is the author of Signal and Noise: Media Infrastructure and Urban Culture in Nigeria and, with Lila Abu-Lughod and Faye Ginsburg, co-editor of Media Worlds: Anthropology on New Terrain.

Debashree Mukherjee is Assistant Professor at MESAAS at Columbia University. Dr. Mukherjee has published in various academic journals and anthologies, and is a core editor with the peer-reviewed journal, BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies. Trained as a filmmaker, she has worked in Bombay’s film and television industries on projects such as Omkara (dir. Vishal Bhardwaj, 2006). Committed to the missions of public and digital humanities, Dr. Mukherjee has curated exhibitions such as “Maya Mahal” (film ephemera from the Priya Paul collection, 2013) and “A Cinematic Imagination,” (production stills from the Josef Wirsching archive, 2017) and is actively involved with the online film annotation platform www.indiancine.ma. 

View Event →
Generic Specificities: A lecture by Elias Anastas + Yousef Anastas of AAU ANASTAS
Feb
7
12:30 PM12:30

Generic Specificities: A lecture by Elias Anastas + Yousef Anastas of AAU ANASTAS

Join GSAPP and CPS for Generic Specificities: An online lecture by Elias Anastas and Yousef Anastas, co-founders of AAU ANASTAS with a response by Ziad Jamaleddine, Assistant Professor at GSAPP and co-founder and partner of L.E.FT Architects.

Born into a family of architects, Elias and Yousef Anastas graduated from Paris with masters degrees in architecture and both worked there for a while. Elias returned to Bethlehem after winning a competition for a music conservatory while Yousef graduated from Paris with a second Masters in structural engineering. They founded Local Industries in 2012, a community of bold artisans and designers dedicated to industrial furniture-making, and SCALES in 2016, a research department that is constantly enhanced by linking scales that are usually opposed. Their studio’s work brings together architecture practices, furniture making, research projects and cultural initiatives. 

Their most recent works include Qamt, acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, Radio alHara–a community-based online radio, the Hebron courthouse project, and Stonematters–experimentation-based research onto the possibilities of stone use in contemporary architecture. They are also about to launch The Wonder Cabinet in Bethlehem, a cultural endeavor to create an art production platform bringing together artisans and artists. 

Founded in 1979, AAU Anastas is a wholly-owned Palestinian architectural and engineering practice with offices in Bethlehem and Paris. Thinking of a project as a process is the only common thread running through their work. Beginning the thinking of a project at the opposite end of the planning spectrum, from the bottom up, helps AAU Anastas merge into the deep understanding of local knowledge, and capacities of widening or subverting the initial end result to new uses. They consider the process as a means of minimizing energy consumption between design and realization. Working directly with factories and artisans enables the designers to optimize the energy consumption in function of the resources available and the ambitions. AAU Anastas believes that sustainability is no excuse for sacrifices. Instead, research is a synonym of ambition for a more sustainable, more comfortable, and more interactive design.

Organized by Columbia GSAPP and co-sponsored by the Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia University. Free and open to the public. Virtual events hosted on Zoom Webinar do not require an account to attend, advanced registration is encouraged.

GSAPP is committed to providing universal access to all of our virtual events. Please contact events@arch.columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs.

This event content is equivalent to 1 AIA/CES total learning credit, 1 total credit earned. AIA. Please contact events@arch.columbia.edu for more information.

View Event →