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Gov. Sununu kicks off first Common Ground discussion of the year

*Please note: This article is a student blog written by a Kevin B. Harrington Student Ambassador. The Ambassador Program is a unique opportunity for Saint Anselm College students of any major to be involved in supporting the Institute's various events and activities. To learn more about our student ambassadors please visit the NHIOP website.

Governor Sununu speaking at the NHIOP

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Good Trouble: Dream Big, Act Bigger Library Display

This year the College's Dr. Martin Luther King Celebration takes its inspiration from John Lewis' appeal to get in "good trouble." Check out our book display on the main floor of the library (across from the IT Help Desk) and our online display between January 15th and February 29th centered on this year's theme: “Good Trouble: Dream Big, Act Bigger.” The library displays highlight recent acquisitions that address historical and contemporary issues of race and racism.

Read more about the Power of Good Trouble and the March on Washington on the African American History Blog of the Library of Congress website.

Photo of Whitney Young, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., John Lewis, Rabbi Joachim Prinz, A. Philip Randolph, President John F. Kennedy

Event

Game Night with the Monks

March 19, 2024
8:00 pm EDT - 9:00 pm EDT

As part of Benedictine Heritage Week, join your fellow Anselmians for some friendly competition with the monks. Prizes and food will be part of the festivities.

Nun and monk holding staves

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Game Dedication and Recognition of the Christopher Rodgers '93 (#43) Men's Basketball Endowment Fun

November 19, 2022
3:30 pm EST - 5:30 pm EST

Join us immediately preceding the Men's Basketball home opener for an on-court dedication of the game and recognition of the Christopher Rodgers '93 (#43) Endowment Fund.


Saturday, November 19, 2022
3:30 p.m. EST

Event

Gender, Ethics, and the Arts

May 6, 2024
4:00 pm EDT - 6:30 pm EDT

The relationship between ethics and the arts has always fascinated thinkers. Join us on Monday, May 6th, for a discussion about the ethical complexities within artistic creation, consumption, and identity. During this time, our panelists will explore the intersections of gender, ethics, and art, and attempt to answer questions about how gender can and should inform the arts.  

Some key topics that will be addressed:

  1. On the power of art: How can art trouble us? How can art challenge gender? How does our identity inform our choices and understanding of art’s power and ethical dimensions?
  2. On artistic production: Where does gender fit into our understanding of artistic production? What are our barriers to creating art, to making space for a more equitable, accessible, active artistic experience? How do we deal with that and why should we?
  3. On artistic responsibility: What is role of the individual—our personal responsibility as educators, as consumers, as citizens in a democratic, capitalist society—in thinking about how art is *in* our everyday life?

Through these discussions, this event aims to highlight the transformative potential of art in addressing ethical dilemmas and promoting social justice.

Free and open to the public. Refreshments and coffee provided.

Presented by the Diversity and Inclusion Innovation Fund, the Center for Ethics in Society, and the Richard L. Bready Chair in Ethics, Economics, and the Common Good.

Panelists:

Hilary Poriss, PhD, is a Professor of Music and Chair of the Department of Music and the College of Arts, Media and Design at Northeastern University. Her primary research interests are in the areas of 19th-century Italian and French opera, performance practice, diva culture, and the aesthetics of 19th-century musical culture. She has published four books: Gioacchino Rossini’s The Barber of Seville (Oxford University Press), Changing the Score: Arias, Prima Donnas, and the Authority of Performance (Oxford University Press), Fashions and Legacies of Nineteenth-Century Italian Opera (Cambridge University Press), and of The Arts of the Prima Donna in the Long Nineteenth Century (Oxford University Press). Her newest book project, a biography about the nineteenth-century diva Pauline Viardot (1821-1910), will be published by the University of Chicago Press.

Ann Holbrook, PhD, is a Professor of English and Chair of the English and Communication Department at Saint Anselm College. She specializes in twentieth-century British literature and literature by women writers, particularly the prolific journalist and novelist Rebecca West. She has edited and analyzed some of West's posthumously published fiction and published articles on Edna O'Brien, Virginia Woolf, Mary Lavin, Dorothy L. Sayers, Anita Brookner, Henry James, and Edith Wharton. She co-edited the 2022 collection For the Sake of the Song: Essays on Townes Van Zandt, to which she contributed an essay. An avid musician, she sings with several regional bands.

Laura Elizabeth Shea, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Art History at Saint Anselm College who specializes in the history of photography and global and contemporary art. Her work analyzes the production and reception of images that engage with the intersections of race, gender, movement, and memory in American and global contexts.

Tina Philibotte, is the Chief Equity Officer for the Manchester School District. She is also an educator, having taught both Dance and English at Goffstown High School. During this time, she was a finalist for the NH State Teacher of the Year award and a two-time fellow with the National Writing Project. She’s served as a NH Listens fellow since January 2021 and an advisory member to the Endowment for Health’s Race & Equity Series.

Katie Collins is Director of Development at the Capitol Center for the Arts in Concord. An English and Theater graduate of College of the Holy Cross, she has more than 30 years of non-profit development and management experience. Katie has led the successful management of major gifts acquisitions, capital campaigns, grants programs, and corporate giving programs. Katie is also a freelance writer and editor, and an active theatre professional, acting on stage with companies such as theatre Kapow. Her talents have been recognized by the NH Theater Awards who honored her as Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy or Drama in 2013.

Aaron Tolson is an internationally renowned dance professional, choreographer, and show producer. Aaron has appeared on Broadway, toured nationally, directed non-profits dedicated to instructing youth in dance, and taught both in several institutions of higher education as well as prestigious dance schools in NYC.  He starred for six years in Riverdance, co-created and was the assistant producer of Imagine Tap!, and is currently the director of the pre-professional tap company “Speaking in Taps.” In Fall 2024, he will join the Fine Arts Department at Saint Anselm College as a Professor of Practice in Dance.

Close up of a glass mosaic

Event

God Behind Bars: Religion and Incarcerated Persons

September 26, 2024
4:00 pm EDT - 5:30 pm EDT

Location: NHIOP Political Library

Join us for the Centered Conversation Series "God Behind Bars: Religion and Incarcerated Persons" on September 26th, 2024, at 4:00 PM in the NHIOP Politics Library. Engage in a thought-provoking discussion with Criminal Justice Professor Stephanie Morse and Theology Professor Marc Rugani as they explore the intersection of faith and incarceration. Hosted by the Center for the Study of Religion and Public Life, this important dialogue aims to shed light on the role of religion in the lives of incarcerated individuals. Enjoy light refreshments while connecting with others interested in this crucial topic.

NHIOP