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January 27- Feb 2

February 3-9

February 10-16

Events at Smith

Williams-Mystic Info Session
January 27, 2023
Want to learn how one semester can change your worldview? Spend a semester studying away with Williams-Mystic, the coastal campus of Williams College, to investigate pressing world issues through the interdisciplinary lens of America's coasts and oceans. Students of all majors come to the Mystic Seaport Museum from across the country to conduct impactful original research in history, literature, policy, and science. When you're not in the classroom, you will be traveling on expansive and engaging field seminars in various U.S. coastal communities, connecting with stakeholders, scholars, and community leaders in each location. These experiences allow you to study topics like environmental justice, climate change, and food insecurity in an up-close and hands-on way. Learn more at this casual info session. Meet with recent alumni of the program and get your questions answered. You can contact Meg O’Brien (mo10@ williams.edu) and Evan McAlice (em24@ williams.edu) with any questions about the program.
CEEDS, Wright Hall lower level
12:15 pm to 1:10 pm

Paradise Pond: What can sediment (and how we handle it) tell you
January 30, 2023
about a region's history and an institution's values? with Reid Bertone-Johnson, Lecturer in Landscape Studies, Smith College. Part of the Landscape Studies LSS 100 speakers program.
Hillyer Art Complex-Graham Hall
3:05 pm to 4:45 pm

Indigenous and State Politics in Latin America
February 2, 2023
The Mapuche and the Constitutional Assembly in Chile, a distinguished lecture by Dr. Elisa Loncon Antileo, President of the Constitutional Assembly of Chile (2021-2022), with remarks from Professor Manuel Garcia Dellacasa and Professor Javier Puente.
Graham Hall
5:35 pm

Events Off Campus

A Climate Scientist and a Priest Walk into a Webinar: A Conversation
February 1, 2023
How can we build a coalition across multiple spiritual and faith-based knowledge systems to take action on the important environmental issues of today? What are the moral or environmentally theological perspectives on more risky solutions to address climate change (e.g., solar geoengineering), given the less-risky approaches may not be enough to combat the rising global temperature? These and other topics will be discussed by Reverend Sally Bingham and scientist Dr. Peter Frumhoff, followed by some time for Q&A with the audience. This is part of the American Meteorological Society's Committee on Spirituality, Multifaith Outreach, and Science (COSMOS) webinar series: "Finding Common Ground Amongst Science, Spirituality, and Environmentalism". Register for the event below:
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Virtual
2:00 pm

Events at Smith

Towards a Grammar for Experiencing Nature;
February 6, 2023
The Emergence of Cognitive and Perceptual Knowledge of the Environment in Bali, Indonesia with Yancy Orr, Associate Professor, Environmental Science & Policy, Smith College. Part of the Landscape Studies LSS 100 speakers program.
Hillyer Art Complex-Graham Hall
3:05 pm to 4:45 pm

How to Stop Objectifying Trees: Thoughts on Economy, Culture, and Forests
February 6, 2023
- an online event with Katharina Linne, and the first in the "To Understand a Tree" Arts Afield spring public event series curated by Gina Siepel, MacLeish Field Station Artist-in-Residence. Katharina Linne’s research investigates new possibilities for the economic valuation of trees and forests in Europe, advocating for an incorporation of their multifaceted ecological value into economic thinking. Her presentation will explore ways that ingrained cultural stories shape understandings of sustainable forestry, human relationships to trees, and dominant economic paradigms. Katharina examines the historical development of Christianity in Europe, the impacts it had on the relationship of humans to nature, and the ways that shaped the development of forestry. Q&A following the presentation. Sponsored by the Arts Afield program, an initiative of the Center for the Environment, Ecological Design, and Sustainability at Smith College and the Kestrel Land Trust. Email ceeds@ smith.edu for a link to the event.
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Virtual via Zoom
4:30 pm

Notes from the Field - Matthew Ghazarian
February 7, 2023
Matthew Ghazarian (PhD, Columbia University) is currently the Eveillard Postdoctoral Fellow and Lecturer in Environmental Science and Policy at Smith College. His research and teaching focus on the environmental history and political ecology of the Ottoman Empire, and he is currently writing a book manuscript that combines social and environmental history to rethink the communal conflicts that tore apart this multi-ethnic, multi-confessional empire from the mid-nineteenth to early-twentieth centuries. In our "Notes from the Field" forum with Dr. Ghazarian, we will discuss his experiences researching in archives across the Middle East and Europe--from Istanbul to Vienna and Yerevan to Venice--and the challenges posed by researching communities like the Armenians whose archival records have, like them, been scattered and fragmented by war, famine, and forced exile. Co-sponsored by the Lewis Global Studies Center and Middle East Studies. Pizza will be served.
Lewis Global Studies Center
12:15 pm

Events Off Campus

Black Earth Wisdom: Afro-Ecological Survival Strategies
February 9, 2023
a Green Sabbath event with Leah Penniman. Ecological humility is part of the cultural heritage of Black people. While our 400+ years immersion in racial capitalism has attempted to squash that connection to the sacred earth, there are those who persist in believing that the land and waters are family members, and who act accordingly. In Black Earth Wisdom, Leah Penniman weaves together the lessons from today’s most respected Black environmentalists, those who have cultivated the skill of listening to the lessons that Earth has whispered to them. Together, we embark on a sensory journey through Black ecological thought. Leah Penniman is a Black Kreyol farmer, author, mother, and food justice activist who has been tending the soil and organizing for an anti-racist food system for 25 years. She currently serves as founding co-ED and Farm Director of Soul Fire Farm in Grafton, New York, a Black & Brown led project that works toward food and land justice. Register for the event at the link below:
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Virtual via Zoom
3:00 pm

Events at Smith

"Into the Glasshouse" Exhibit
February 10, 2023
In a collaboration between the Susan Montgomery's drawing and studio art foundations classes and the botanic garden, the Lyman Church Gallery is hosting "Into the Glasshouse" from January 20 to June 8, 2023. The exhibit "uses plants as the point of departure for student drawings and sculptures made from branches, roots, and other natural materials." Read more about the exhibit on the website created for the project, and stop by Lyman Plant House to see the exhibit or the opening reception on February 10, 2023, 4:30-6:30 pm.
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Lyman Church Gallery
4:30 pm to 6:30 pm

Geothermal Project Tour
February 13, 2023
Have you been wondering what that construction going on outside is? Have you ever been inside a Smith building in the summer and wondered when we'll install AC? Have you ever wanted to know what the college is doing to combat climate change? Come find out the answers to these questions and more on one of our student-run Geothermal Project Tours! Rain date is 2/14 at the same time. Open to all in the Smith community.
Meet at the Elm St entrance to the Campus Center
12:15 pm to 1:00 am

The Quarantine Atlas: Mapping Global Life Under Covid-19
February 13, 2023
with Laura Bliss, 2022-2023 Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT. Part of the Landscape Studies LSS 100 speakers program.
Hillyer Art Complex-Graham Hall
3:05 pm to 4:45 pm

Braiding Sweetgrass
February 15, 2023
Robin Wall Kimmerer is a mother, scientist, decorated professor and enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. She is the author of Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants, which has earned Kimmerer wide acclaim. Her first book, Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses, received the John Burroughs Medal for outstanding nature writing. In 2015, Kimmerer addressed the general assembly of the United Nations on the topic of “Healing Our Relationship With Nature.” Kimmerer is a Distinguished Teaching Professor of Environmental Biology at the State University of New York and the founder and director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment, whose mission is to create programs that draw on the wisdom of both indigenous and scientific knowledge for our shared goals of sustainability.
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Carroll Room
5:00 pm

STEM & Health Professions Career Fair
February 16, 2023
Meet with recruiters from corporate and non-profit organizations to discuss a broad range of internships, full-time jobs and graduate/professional school opportunities. This fair is FREE to students, and over 30 organizations are expected to attend. Hosted by the Lazarus Center for Career Development.
Campus Center Carroll Room
3:30 pm to 6:00 pm

Events Off Campus

Climate Justice Video Shorts
February 10, 2023
*Masks are recommended. As part of a class on the sociology of climate change taught by Vanessa Adel at Smith College, students completed a digital video project in which they were asked to connect the dots between their everyday lives, culture, politics, and the environment to consider what the climate crisis means for them. A sample of these shorts will be on view to inspire audiences to consider the relationship between the way we think about the environment, the economy, and society; and our approaches to addressing the multiple and overlapping crises of climate change, biodiversity loss, and social and environmental injustice.
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CLICK Workspace, 9 1/2 Market Street Northampton, MA, 01060
6:00 pm to 8:00 pm