Gaston College Multicultural Affairs Committee

Gaston College Multicultural Affairs Committee We provide social and cultural programs and activities that will increase awareness and respect of o

03/29/2021

Student Appreciation Week: March 29-April 2. Visit the businesses during the week on the designated day for free giveaway. You must show your GC Spring 21 Class Schedule. The deadline to request your pizza voucher is Tuesday, March 30. 🔗 in bio.

03/02/2021
Happy Women's History Month
03/02/2021

Happy Women's History Month

Theoretical physicist Shohini Ghose shares five of her favorite facts about women and their contribution to physics.

Dr. Karen Cox discusses her book ‘No Common Ground’ in virtual presentation sponsored by the Gaston College Multicultura...
01/13/2021

Dr. Karen Cox discusses her book ‘No Common Ground’ in virtual presentation sponsored by the Gaston College Multicultural Affairs Committee.
The Gaston College Multicultural Affairs Committee will sponsor a virtual presentation featuring Dr. Karen L. Cox, Professor of History at University of North Carolina at Charlotte, at 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday, January 19, 2021. Dr. Cox will discuss her upcoming book, “No Common Ground: Confederate Monuments and the Ongoing Fight for Racial Justice.” UNC Press will release the book in April 2021.
Cox is an award-winning historian and a Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians. Her first book, “Dixie’s Daughters: The United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Preservation of Confederate Culture,” won the 2004 Julia Cherry Spruill Prize from the Southern Association for Women Historians for the Best Book in Southern Women’s History. A successful public intellectual, she has written op-eds for The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, TIME, Publishers Weekly, and the Huffington Post. Her expertise on Southern history and culture has led to numerous newspapers, radio, and television interviews with media outlets from around the world.
“No Common Ground” traverses the long history of Confederate monuments from the end of the Civil War to the Black Lives Matter protests against them in the summer of 2020. The UNC Press website describes the book as an “eye-opening narrative of the efforts to raise, preserve, protest, and remove Confederate monuments,” and says that, “Karen L. Cox depicts what these statues meant to those who erected them and how a movement arose to force a reckoning.”
Hilary Green, author of “Educational Reconstruction: African American Schools in the Urban South,” considers the book as a “must-read for communities reckoning with their own Confederate landscapes” and reviews it as “[a] timely and necessary work that reframes the story of Confederate memorialization by highlighting the African American voices of dissent who ultimately changed the terms of the debate.”
“The Multicultural Affairs Committee is very excited to host Dr. Cox’s presentation on January 19,” said Judith Porter, Chair of MAC. “She is a renowned scholar of Southern history and culture, and her discussion about her new book is sure to be fascinating.”
For additional information about the presentation, contact Tokura-Gallo at [email protected].
The presentation will be via Zoom:
Topic: Dr. Cox Presentation
Time: Tuesday, January 19, 2021, 12:30 p.m. Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting:
https://zoom.us/j/95742454979...
Meeting ID: 957 4245 4979
Passcode: 588733
About the Multicultural Affairs Committee
The mission of the Gaston College Multicultural Affairs Committee (MAC) is to develop and deliver an array of activities to expose the Gaston College community to diverse cultures. MAC presents a variety of programming on the Gaston College campus throughout the school year. Programs include town hall meetings, movie events, seminars, and musical performances.

12/05/2020

Join Teaching Tolerance for a deep dive into our brand-new Teaching Hard History framework for grades K–5! Participants will learn how our elementary framework centers the stories of enslaved people to teach the history of American slavery in a way that...

10/13/2020

War atrocities are sometimes committed by 'normal' people obeying orders. Researchers from the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience measured brain activity while participants inflicted pain and found that obeying orders reduced empathy and guilt related brain activity for the inflicted pain.

10/12/2020

Matt Shepard died 20 years ago, but his name lives on in stories, on stage, in the law--and in the classroom.

09/18/2020

Governor Roy Cooper has declared September 15 – October 15 as Hispanic Heritage Month in North Carolina. Hispanic Heritage Month recognizes and celebrates the contributions Americans tracing their roots to Spain, Mexico, Central America, South American and the Spanish-speaking nations of the Caribbean have made to American society and culture.

We celebrate the culture and contributions of those with Hispanic and Latino heritage who serve and have served in the Judicial Branch! Look for spotlights throughout the month.

09/10/2020

World Su***de Prevention Day is observed on Sept. 10 every year in order to provide worldwide commitment and action to prevent suicides.
We've compiled mental health resources for you here: https://bit.ly/2ZpluvX

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