Calendar
The collection presented here is a small sample of the many photographs comprising the text Black in White America published by the J. Paul Getty Museum originally in 1968 and recently reprinted in 2010. These photographs were printed with special permission from the family of Leonard Freed. The text featured on the walls of the gallery is from Ta-Nehisi Coates’ 2015 bookBetween the World and Me published by Spiegel & Grau, NY.
This exhibition is presented in collaboration between the Department of Art, Art History, and Design, the College of Social Science, and the MSU Law School.

March Alumni Profile: Meet Carmen Durham, a new MAFLT graduate who has been teaching Spanish and English in various schools and universities in the U.S. for several years. Carmen is interested in pursuing a doctorate where she can focus on her research interests in language as a tool for building identity within community, the effects of media and technology on language learning and the incorporation of cultural elements in a language classroom. To read more about her work in these areas, check out her portfolio here: http://mafltportfolio.weebly.com/ and her contributions to this year’s “Teaching with Tech” etext: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/704237
Carmen’s Portfolio

Now Available! The next edition of Teaching with Tech arrived on March 1. Go to Teaching with Tech 2016 And view our annual collections here:

Join us for the 2nd annual Global Digital Humanities Symposium at MSU! Registration is free and open to the public. Find out more, including the program and registration info at msuglobaldh.org.
Dr. Justus Nieland and Dr. Lyn Goeringer will present a workshop for Citizen Scholars students exploring the implications of infrastructure. ‘Infrastructure’ is a term that, most broadly, refers to the internal framework discernible in any technology system, government, business organization, or community. This workshop will engage artistic intervention as a form of social and political knowledge production, and call attention to the interplay between social and political decision-making and the support systems upon which it relies, including the natural environment. There will be some recommended reading for this workshop, which will be available in early March. You must attend the films as well as the workshop to receive credit for the workshop.
http://filmstudies.cal.msu.edu/events/broad-underground-film-series/
This is a great opportunity to engage in a dialogue about recent and past violence from different perspectives.
Introduction and discussion will be lead by graduate students of the Romance and Classical Studies Department.
Food and refreshments will be provided. Remember, this is a free event and open to the public!
No one to talk to in Korean? Frustrated about speaking Korean?
Come join us for an hour of conversation in Korean. ALL LEVELS are welcome! We will talk about these plus other topics in Korean.
Free and Open to the Public 3/2, 3/16, 3/23, 3/30 (Every Thursday in March except 3/9) at WH A201 and WH A236
Sponsored by the Korean Program, the Council on Korean Studies and the Asian Studies Center
Contact: ospark@msu.edu
The Graduate Student Association of the Romance and Classical Studies Department officially announces its Second Annual TROPOS Film Series.
We would like to ask you to share and encourage your students (graduate and undergraduate) to attend this film series. It is a great opportunity to engage in a dialogue about recent and past violence from different perspectives.
Introduction and discussion will be lead by graduate students of the Romance and Classical Studies Department.
Food and refreshments will be provided. Remember, this is a free event and open to the public!
See flyer for more information.

In association with the Michigan State University Department of Art, Art History, and Design’s Visiting Artist & Scholar Lecture Series, (SCENE) Metrospace is excited to announce it’s newest exhibition Untitled Body Drawings and Paintings by Dana Saulnier. The paintings and drawings of Saulnier explore permeable boundaries between figure and ground, evoking transience and uncertainty. Saulnier is a Professor of Painting at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio and is represented by First Street Gallery, New York, NY.
This exhibition culminates with a free public lecture on Thursday, March 16 at 6pm in 107 S. Kedzie Hall, MSU.
For more information about Dana Saulnier visit: http://www.danasaulnier.com/
Additional sponsors for this exhibition include the College of Creative Arts, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, the Lillian Orlowsy and William Freed Roundation Grant, and the Provincetown Art Association and Museum. All images are courtesy of the artist.