The Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America unveiled “Alchemy,” the latest addition to its Imagining Social Justice Art Exhibit series, on Sept. 19. The exhibition features a collection of artworks portraying various interpretations of societal transformation.
CSREA's New Book Talk series highlights new and notable work in the study of race, ethnicity, and indigeneity from scholars both internal and external to Brown.
These funds are used in many ways–from one-time investments that improve individual courses, to larger initiatives that facilitate collaborative innovation between departments and institutions.
This Spring, the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America is proud to welcome a new cohort of seven Artistic Practitioner Fellows. United by a shared focus on race, ethnicity, and indigeneity, fellows critically engage with lost and buried stories, experiences of race and migration, Black feminisms, and public art through film, printmaking, sonics, and the written word.
For the second year running, the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America at Brown partnered with the Office of the Provost on the pioneering Race & … in America webinar series, a systematic investigation of the foundational and enduring effects of anti-Black racism in America.
Each participant brings with them a wealth of knowledge, experience, and enthusiasm that infuses the Center with new ideas. During the season, this cohort will meet in weekly seminars to workshop their ongoing research projects through shared dialogue and critical review, in addition to their varied roles on campus.
Each year, the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America hosts a cohort of Practitioner Fellows--a skilled group of artists, media makers, and writers whose work focuses on race, ethnicity, and indigeneity in the United States.
Last month, leadership from the Centering Race Consortium (CRC) gathered at Brown to discuss their goals related to the execution of the shared $4M Andrew Mellon Foundation Grant.