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Event

Identity Unbound: Tell Your Story With Zines

April 10, 2024
6:00 pm EDT - 7:30 pm EDT

Do you want to share your story, but are not sure how to do it? 

Join us for a presentation by nationally recognized creator of bilingual zines, Yeiry Guevara. In addition to reviewing what zines are and how to make them, Yeiry will share with you her personal experience creating bilingual zines (Spanish / English) as an expression of her intersecting and multiple identities.

After her presentation, you will have an opportunity to create a zine of your own.

What are Zines?

A zine, short for fanzine or magazine, is a self-published work of original or appropriated texts or images. Zines are created to enable people, often from marginalized communities and without access to mainstream publishing systems, to share their stories. Zines empower individuals and communities to help shape the public narrative and foster self-representation to challenge biases, make visible silenced voices/stories/narratives, and promote equity and inclusion.

Learn more about zines at Geisel Library.

Program funded by the Diversity & Inclusion Innovation Fund. 

Sponsored by Geisel Library and Goffstown Public Library

Identity Unbound: Tell Your Story With Zines

Event

How are policymakers improving access to lower-cost homes?

April 19, 2024
10:00 am EDT - 11:30 am EDT

Join housing experts from The Pew Charitable Trusts to discuss their latest research on policy changes that are improving housing supply and affordability.

The discussion will examine how policymakers across the country are effectively addressing housing shortages, soaring costs, and limited access to financing. In particular, the event will cover multiple topics at the heart of current housing policy debates, including rents and effects on housing costs, public opinion, homelessness, parking, accessory dwelling units and manufactured housing. 

Key sitting in a lock with keychain sticking out

Event

Women in the Public Square: Political and Civic Engagement

April 3, 2024
6:00 pm EDT - 7:30 pm EDT

Join us in commemorating 50 Years of Women's Education at Saint Anselm College during a special event at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics: "Women in the Public Square: Political and Civic Engagement."

There will be a reception following the presentation.

RSVP: nhiop@anselm.edu

Speakers: 
Dr. Christine Gustafson 
Professor, Politics Department, Saint Anselm College

Dr. Sheila A. Liotta 
Vice President Academic Affairs, Saint Anselm College  

Senator Donna Soucy ’89 
New Hampshire Senate Minority Leader

Senator Sharon Carson 
New Hampshire Senate Majority Leader

Courtney Tanner ‘11
Senior Director Government Relations, Dartmouth Health

Students taking a selfie at the 2020 Democratic Debate

Event

Bookmark Series: “War Fronts Home Fires: A WWII correspondent's remarkable coverage, his wife's indomitable spirit”

March 19, 2024
5:00 pm EDT - 6:30 pm EDT

New Hampshire author and journalist Joe McQuaid will join the Institute to present a true New Hampshire story about his parents and World War II, with War Fronts Home Fires: A WWII correspondent's remarkable coverage, his wife's indomitable spirit.

As a World War II newspaper correspondent, B.J. McQuaid covered American and British front lines from the frozen Aleutian Islands of Alaska, to the steaming jungles and seas of the South Pacific, at Tarawa and Guadalcanal and then to Europe from D-Day forward in France, Belgium, Holland, and Germany.

B.J. interviewed Sir Bernard Law Montgomery during the Battle of the Bulge and went toe-to-toe with U.S. Third Army General George S. Patton. He interviewed and got the names of frontline soldiers and sailors, providing a link to their families back home in towns and cities across the United States. His stories ran in more than 80 American newspapers through the Chicago Daily News Service.

He was separated from his wife, Peg McQuaid, and two small children for three years. Peg kept the Home Fires burning back in New Hampshire, providing for herself and their two small children. She dealt with food, oil, and gasoline rationing while writing faithfully and regularly to her husband overseas.

Theirs is a story of love, of sacrifice, and of hope. Even 80 years after D-Day in Europe, it will still resonate with many Americans.

Books may be purchased in advance at your local bookseller or online. 

Free and open to the public.

U.S. soliders in a landing craft approaching a beach on D-Day