Native Land – Docudrama
Edison Public Library 340 Plainfield Ave, NJ, Edison, New Jersey, United StatesScreening and discussion of the film that marked Robeson’s transition from mainstream cinema to socially progressive filmmaking.
Screening and discussion of the film that marked Robeson’s transition from mainstream cinema to socially progressive filmmaking.
Week of public events at arts and culture institutions across Newark honoring Cudjo Banquante, enslaved Revolutionary soldier and Newark landowner and businessperson
Civil Rights historian, Danielle McGuire, will discuss the origins of the boycott in a decade-long fight led by Black women against racial and sexual violence.
Asian American Studies Panel
Judith Weisenfeld, Professor of Religion and Chair of the Department of Religion at Princeton University, discusses Black Religion in the Madhouse, the first book to expose how racist views of Black religion in slavery’s wake shaped the rise of psychiatry as an established and powerful profession.
Professor Ruha Benjamin leads a discussion about FULL freedom of speech rights. Whose speech is protected? And whose isn't? When is free speech allowed? Under what circumstances? What does it mean for our democracy?
The African American Museum of Bucks County book club will discuss Mikki Kendall's Hood Feminism.
Screening and panel discussion about BORDERLINE is a noteworthy entry in Robeson's filmography and efforts to provide positive representations of Black characters on-screen.
Charles T. Brown, founder and CEO of Equitable Cities, discusses his recently published book, "Arrested Mobility: Overcoming the Threat to Black Movement."
The exhibition in homage to sculptor Selma Burke will feature more than 60 works by African American artists.
Perspectives on the state of critical antiracist education in 2025.
Sons and Daughters of the United States Middle Passage Annual Genealogy and Community Learning Conference