A Selection of Mexican Ex-Votos

A Selection of Mexican Ex-Votos - Exhibition

April 12 - October 18, 2024  Gain insight into Mexican religious folk practices through these selections from the Dr. William H. Helfand collection of ex-votos and devotional paintings on medical subjects. The display is located on the main level of the Holman Biotech Commons, outside the Holman Reading Room. 

Penn in Latin America & the Caribbean Conference

Perry World House 38th and Locust Walk | to

The PLAC 3rd Annual Conference - Right, Left, Right: U-Turns and their Impact in  Latin America and the Caribbean - will bring together colleagues and scholars from  multiple disciplines across the University of Pennsylvania regarding social and political shifts in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Jen Manion, Transgender Ways of Thinking, Pedagogy Seminar

Penn LGBT Center, 3907 Spruce St | to

Many gatherings in LGBTQ affirming spaces ask people to state their preferred pronouns when introducing themselves. This conversation will examine the underlying philosophy of gendered language as an organizing rubric and encourage those gathered to grapple with a broader transgender way of thinking and seeing beyond binaries and pronouns.

Harvey Finkle Reception and Panel Discussion

3601 Locust Walk, Ground Level, ARCH Way Art Gallery | to

Photographer Harvey Finkle - exhibition, reception and panel discission documenting the 13 year history of the New Sanctuary Movement of Philadelphia. The Exhibition will be on display as of early September.

Jen Manion, Language, Acts, and Identity in LGBT Histories

History Lounge, College Hall 209 | to

The talk explores how the language scholars use in crafting histories simultaneously reveals and constitutes an epistemology of the LGBTQ past. It will chiefly grapple with how a modern lexicon informed by transgender studies and community practice offers scholars an expansive new way of understanding the lives and histories of a group designated by gay and lesbian historians in the 1970s as “passing women.”

Becoming Who We Are: The Declaration, the Constitution, and the U.S.

The ARCH on Locust Walk, room 108 | to

Kermit Roosevelt, Professor – Penn School of Law speaks as part of the Diversity Lecture Series.

Poverty in the American South, Talk by Dr. Regina Baker

World Cafe Live Upstairs |

Although poverty and uneven development exists throughout the United States, the South has had a disproportionate share of the nation’s socioeconomic problems. For decades, poverty has been the highest and most persistent in that region, and the Great Recession has only worsened the problem.

In this talk, Dr. Regina Baker, assistant professor of sociology, School of Arts & Sciences, will address the reasons for this regional disparity and why, as a nation, Americans should care. Drawing on her research on the South, Dr. Baker will discuss the role of demographic, economic, political and racial factors in understanding poverty in the context of place. She will also touch on the uncertainty of future safety nets for America’s most vulnerable populations in the current political climate.

A Conversation about LGBT Rights: What Challenges Lie Ahead

Penn Bookstore, 2nd floor conference room | to

Guest Speaker: Amber Hikes, Director, Office of LGBT Affairs – City of Philadelphia

Identity & the 2016 U.S. Election

Stiteler Hall Forum | to

A panel of scholars who will engage the Penn community in conversation around: a) the role of identity in shaping the 2016 US presidential election and b) how we might expect issues of identity (e.g., race, immigration, gender, religion, citizenship, among others) to develop under the Trump Administration. Following the panel discussion, program attendees will have the opportunity to engage in a Q&A with the panelists.

Christopher Heaney Talk

Silverstein Forum Room of Stiteler Hall (208 S. 37th Street) | to

As part of LALSIS - Latin American and Latino Studies Speaker Series - a talk by Christopher Heaney, Barra Postdoctoral Fellow at the McNeil Center for Early American Studies.

6th Annual Dolores Huerta Lecture

ARCH 208, 3601 Locust Walk | to

As part of the Latinx Heritage Month, keynote address provided by a leader in the Latinx community that exemplifies the contributions to labor that Latinxs have made in the United States. Speaker: Gabby Rivera, creator of Marvel’s America series and author of "Juliet Takes a Breath."