Save the date! WOMS Open House 3/3 & WMH!
Please mark your calendars for Tuesday, March 2 for the Women’s Studies Program Open House. Come share good conversation, games, music, food, and drink as we kick off Women’s History Month and a full roster of events. In DMH238A from 3-6pm. Also mark your calendars for these events throughout the month:
3/2 Women’s Studies Open House, 3-6pm DMH238A
Please join us for conversation, games, music and refreshments with faculty and friends of the Women’s Studies program.
3/3 Chicanas in the Movimiento – 6-8pm Mexican Heritage Center, 1700 Rock Ave, San Jose
Featuring local activists Elisa Marina Alvarado, Shirley Trevino, Martha Campos, Tamara Alvarado, moderated by Teresa Castellanos. Part of the MAIZ series on 40 Years of the Chicano Movement in San Jose
3/3 Film Screening of Arusi: Persian Wedding, followed by Q&A with Director Marjan Tehrani, 7pm Eng189
Marjan Tehrani’s second feature documentary explores the complex and troubled relationship between America, the country of Tehrani’s birth and Iran
Co-sponsored with the Student Association of Middle Eastern Studies
3/6 “Womyn Unite” – International Women’s Day Marcha, 11am
March begins from Roosevelt Park (Santa Clara & 19th) to Biblioteca Latinoamericana, Festival continues from 1-4pm. Sponsored by South Bay International Women’s Day Network & Cihuatl Tlatocan
3/11 Women’s Studies Alumni Panel, 10:30-11:45 MLK 255/257
Come learn how SJSU Women’s Studies alumni are making change in local communities with Noemi Teppang, Lindsey Mansfield, and Margie Strubel.
3/17 Sex & Love in the Bay Area with Sexologist Carol Queen, 1:30 – 2:45 ENG189
Carol Queen is a writer, educator and cultural sexologist with a Ph.D. in human sexuality. She is founder of The Center for Sex and Culture, a non-profit sexuality education center and directs Continuing Education at Good Vibrations, the women-owned, worker-owned sex toy shop in San Francisco.
3/17 7pm Literary Reading with Laleh Khadivi, The Age of Orphans, 7pm MLK Schiro Room, Steinbeck Center, 5th floor
Khadivi’s first novel begins a trilogy that follows the lives of three generations of Kurdish men as they grapple with landlessness, migration and national identity. Sponsored by the Student Association for Middle Eastern Studies
0 comments
Kick things off by filling out the form below.
Leave a Comment