Producer: Jim Kolesar / Williams College Office of Public Affairs and Media Services
Window on Williams – Berkshire Symphony Student Soloist Gala 2019
Williams College students at the Berkshire Symphony Student Soloist Gala included Angela Chan '19 pipa, Erin Kennedy ’19, soprano, Sebastian Black ’19, piano and Jeffrey Pearson ’20, violin.
Window on Williams – 2019 Commencement Speakers
Pres. Mandel…3 Student Speakers…5 Retiring Faculty...Speaker Mary-Claire, geneticist who discovered the breast & ovarian cancer gene, addresses the graduating class at Williams 230th Commencement.
Window on Williams – Ophelia Dahl, 2019 Baccalaureate Speaker
Ophelia Dahl, social justice & healthcare advocate, transforming access to healthcare. Co-founder of Partners in Health, a nonprofit dedicated to healthcare, human rights, and the consequences of social inequality.
Window on Williams – Democracy and Freedom – Disposability, Fugitivity, Resistance
At this conference on Democracy and Freedom Between Past and Future, a distinguished group of panelists examined the theory and practice of two key concepts that have integrally shaped discourses and phenomena from antiquity to our contemporary moment. What is a democracy? What does it mean to refer to a democracy dying or being forged? How are we to understand freedom? Should we link or decouple freedom and slavery? What is the relationship between democracy and freedom? Are democracy and freedom mutually reinforcing or incompatible ideals? To what extent do our interpretations of democracy and freedom impact notions such as statecraft, civil society, family, the individual, groups, and governance? Do conceptions of race, gender, sex, sexuality, class, ability, and nation transform the theoretical frameworks and real-world articulations of the free life and democratic life? Angélica Bernal, University of Massachusetts-Amherst “Democracy, Colonialism, and Indigenous Resistance” Marisa Fuentes, Rutgers University “Refuse Lives and the Failures of Freedom: The Origins of Black Disposability and the Transatlantic Slave Trade” George Shulman, New York University “Fred Moten’s Refusals and Consents: Natality, Commonality, and the Politics of Fugitivity”