In the Early Years: A Photo Retrospective of Clark University, 1893–1914
Jonas Clark Hall, initially known as simply the Main Building, was constructed from 1888 to 1889. Seen here from Main Street, the iron gates of the campus, as well as […]
Jonas Clark Hall, initially known as simply the Main Building, was constructed from 1888 to 1889. Seen here from Main Street, the iron gates of the campus, as well as […]
Join us for a talk with Kirsten Leng, Associate Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Leng's talk also will be streamed live at […]
Join us for a screening of filmmaker Marq Evans’s newest documentary, “ClayDream,” about the “Father of Claymation,” Will Vinton. The screening will be followed by a discussion with Evans.
Please join us for the next installment of our series, Nourishing Teaching, Learning & Research in the Arts & Humanities. These discussions will provide an opportunity for Clark faculty, […]
How do fictional representations relate to the truth historians have established about the past? Focusing on the Holocaust and Holocaust perpetrators, this conversation will examine the chasm between fiction and scholarship.
To celebrate the publication of "The Confessions of Matthew Strong," the debut novel by Professor Ousmane Power-Greene, a faculty panel will examine how the history of racial violence is depicted in fiction.
The final event for the Common Academic Experience will include a facilitated discussion with Damian Duffy and John Jennings, the illustrators who adapted Octavia Butler’s “Parable of the Sower” as a graphic novel.
Our series Nourishing Teaching, Learning & Research in the Arts & Humanities continues! These discussions will provide an opportunity for Clark faculty, staff, and students to engage in conversation around the strategic priorities […]
Professors Kristen Williams, political science, and Danielle Hanley, women’s and gender studies, will be joined by Farida Jalalzai, professor of political science at Virginia Tech, for a discussion about women leaders and institutional power.
The inaugural Albert M. Tapper Lecture in commemoration of Kristallnacht will look at the relationship between early Holocaust memoirs and testimony, and what we can learn about what could and could not be said in 1944.
Join us as we bring together three leading scholars on climate change to present Animal Affects, Absences, and Planetary Politics, our Fall 2022 Symposium on the Environmental Humanities. Cajetan Iheka, […]
**This event is open only to the Clark community.** Join us for the final installment of our series, Nourishing Teaching, Learning & Research in the Arts & Humanities. These […]