Reverse Engineering as a Curriculum Development Process by Michael Boezi
May 6, 2025 FREE SEMINAR NOV 13, 2025: In this conversation between Anne Cecil and Dr. Reham El-Morally, they discuss the practice-based pedagogy of starting with current trends and deconstructing their influences – not only to build connections between the past and present but also to encourage students to reflect on how historical cycles, subcultures, and innovations influence contemporary identities and cultural narratives.
What the United States Can Learn from Postwar Czechoslovakia by Miriam Potocky Rafaidus
April 30, 2025 by Miriam Potocky Rafaidus | Today, as I watch troubling developments unfold in the United States, I can’t help but feel history knocking—not softly, but insistently. The parallels between the collapse of Czechoslovak democracy in 1948 and the democratic backsliding occurring in the U.S. under the Trump administration in 2025 are unnerving.
The Ongoing Epidemic of Violence Against American Indian and Native Women & Girls by Lara and Lisa Neel
April 23, 2025 Violence against American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) women is ongoing in the U.S. – and it's personal for Lara Neel and Lisa Neel. On February 13, 1872, their grandfather’s great-grandmother was murdered. Today, they use their historic dressmaking work to tell a woman-focused, Cherokee-centered story that has relevance today.
El Salvador and U.S. Policy Then and Now: Memoirs and the Present by David Hinkley
April 9, 2025 In 2025, Kilmar Abrego Garcia was wrongly deported from the U.S. to El Salvador, where torture is systematically practiced to this day. Lifelong activist David Hinkley shows how urgent it is that outrage inspires a new generation to join and lead the fight.
The Construction of Latinidad Within Speculative Fiction by Michael Boezi
March 25, 2025 FREE SEMINAR JUN 18, 2025: In this conversation between Dr. Gabriel A. Cruz and Dr. Chris McAuley, they explore how contemporary speculative fiction constructs Latinidad in ways that advance humanizing depictions of Latinx people, as well as those cases where narratives reinforce reductive understandings about Latinidad.