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Event

Frederick Douglass Colloquium

November 8, 2024
6:00 pm EST - 8:00 pm EST

We invite you to participate in the upcoming Frederick Douglass Colloquium, hosted by the Center for Ethics in Society and facilitated by Philosophy Professor Tom Larson and Br. Thomas Lacourse. This event promises a weekend of thoughtful study, reflection, and engaging conversations about Douglass’s pivotal works on the abolitionist movement. Students will read nearly 100 pages of The Essential Douglass in preparation for this colloquium.

  • November 8th: 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm Dinner and Discussion
  • November 9th: 9:00 am - 1:30 pm

 

Session 1: Lessons from Slavery
Session 2: Justifications for the Use of Force
Session 3: Constitution of the United States and Patriotism
Session 4: The Good Life

 

Students will enjoy dinner on Friday night, lunch on Saturday, a free copy of The Essential Douglass, and a $150 stipend. The colloquium will extend beyond traditional classroom discussions, featuring interactive conversations with peers from different majors and class years.

We hope to see you there!

Apply here (Deadline: 11:59pm on Sunday, October 20)

Frederick Douglass Colloquium

Event

Frederick Douglass Colloquium

November 9, 2024
9:00 am EST - 1:30 pm EST

We invite you to participate in the upcoming Frederick Douglass Colloquium, hosted by the Center for Ethics in Society and facilitated by Philosophy Professor Tom Larson and Br. Thomas Lacourse. This event promises a weekend of thoughtful study, reflection, and engaging conversations about Douglass’s pivotal works on the abolitionist movement. Students will read nearly 100 pages of The Essential Douglass in preparation for this colloquium.

  • November 8th: 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm Dinner and Discussion
  • November 9th: 9:00 am - 1:30 pm

 

Session 1: Lessons from Slavery
Session 2: Justifications for the Use of Force
Session 3: Constitution of the United States and Patriotism
Session 4: The Good Life

 

Students will enjoy dinner on Friday night, lunch on Saturday, a free copy of The Essential Douglass, and a $150 stipend. The colloquium will extend beyond traditional classroom discussions, featuring interactive conversations with peers from different majors and class years.

We hope to see you there!

Apply here (Deadline: 11:59pm on Sunday, October 20)

Frederick Douglass Colloquium

Event

"Our Fire is Stronger Than Your Bombs" - An exhibit of Ukrainian graphic artists’ response to war

May 1, 2023
4:00 pm EDT - 5:30 pm EDT

Cover art for our fire is stronger than your bombs

The New Hampshire Institute of Politics is pleased to offer a special program to mark the one-year anniversary of the start of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine. The program features an exhibition of war posters by contemporary Ukrainian illustrators, living and working in Ukraine, sometimes, with no power, water, cell signal, or Internet connection.

Lada Kolomiyers, Veronika Yadukha, and Hanna Leliv, three scholars and translators currently at Dartmouth College, will present a selection of translations they have been working on over the past year. The poetry reading will be performed to the music accompaniment by Joe Deleault and Don Davis.

Program Participants:

Lada Kolomiyets is a Habilitated Doctor of Philology in Translation Studies and Full Professor of the Department of Translation Theory and Practice at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Currently, she is a Harris Visiting Professor at Dartmouth College.

Veronika Yadukha is an art curator of Ukraine's annual literary and translation festival TRANSLATORIUM and a member of VERBatsiya, a collaborative translation group. Currently, she is a graduate student in the comparative literature program at Dartmouth College.

Hanna Leliv is a literary translator from Lviv, Ukraine. A former Fulbright fellow at the University of Iowa's Literary Translation Workshop, she is now a Leslie Center Faculty Fellow at Dartmouth College.

Joe Deleault is an award-winning international performer, composer, and session pianist. His recent projects include work with academy award-winner Ernest Thompson, filmmaker Ken Burns and StoryFirst. Joe recently won the 2022 Telly Award.

Don Davis plays saxophone, clarinet, flute, and percussion. He studied composition and saxophone at Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA. Don teaches woodwinds at The Manchester Community Music School.

Light refreshment will be served.

In partnership with the Gregory J. Grappone ‘04 Humanities Institute at Saint Anselm College and the Leslie Center for the Humanities at Dartmouth College, and New Hampshire Humanities.

This event is made possible by a grant from New Hampshire Humanities.

New Hampshire Humanities logo
Our fire is stronger than your bombs poster

Event

“What Climate Change Means to Me” Photography Exhibition

May 1, 2023
12:00 am EDT

May 9, 2023
12:00 am EDT

Location Information:
Goulet Reading Room

Contact Information:
Theresa Dabruzzi, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biology
tdabruzzi@anselm.edu
(603) 641-7159

Additional Information:
This photography exhibition will display the assignments and climate change research of students from the Biology department’s Conversation Management and Policy course. Generally, most think of climate change and its effects as being far away or as a thing that will starve the polar bears, but climate change happens much closer to home. Students’ photographs capture what climate change looks like to them and how it is affecting their lives.

person holding a globe

article

#AnselmianFall Photo Contest

We invite you to capture campus moments with your cameras by participating in our 2021 Fall Photo Contest, hosted by the Office of College Communications and Marketing (CCM).

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Event

"Hear Our Prayer O, Lord" - Choir Spring Concert

March 29, 2025
7:30 pm EDT - 9:00 pm EDT

Join the Saint Anselm College Choir for their Annual Spring Concert!

     When:        March 29, 2025

     Time:          7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

     Where:       Abbey Church

Spring Choir Concert 2025

Event

Is Housing a Right or a Commodity?

April 15, 2025
5:30 pm EDT - 6:30 pm EDT

Is housing a human right or a commodity? 

Join the Center for Ethics and the Initiative for Housing Policy and Practice for a dinner and discussion in the President's Dining Room, where Elissa Margolin, Director of the Initiative for Housing Policy and Practice, will lead the conversation. 

This event is open to all students and members of the campus community.
 

Register Here

Is Housing a Right?