Barnard and Columbia players on the Women’s Lacrosse team partner with Harlem Lacrosse through mentorship, tutoring, and gingerbread house making.
Barnard and Columbia players on the Women’s Lacrosse team partner with Harlem Lacrosse through mentorship, tutoring, and gingerbread house making.
Eight students share how they’re planning to spend winter recess — from movie binges to eating orange jello.
As a photographer and the associate vice president of CARES, Amy Zavadil is well versed in looking at scenarios from multiple angles.
The exhibition that addresses housing segregation and race has inspired community organizers and advocates, teachers and students, and even policymakers such as New York State Senator Cordell Cleare.
The College is excited to immerse students in the world of Indigenous studies with a new interdisciplinary minor.
The recent graduate, who majored in political science and human rights, will spend one year — fully funded — working on a master’s program in Beijing.
In Professor Mark Santolucito’s course Arts and Computing in NYC, Barnard students collaborated with students at FIT for a deep dive into the marriage of creativity and technology.
Professor Manijeh Moradian, author of a new book on Iranian revolutionaries in the U.S., examines the current feminist uprising in Iran.
BC MMUF Alum Inem Richardson ’20 in the recent issue of Barnard Magazine. Since graduation Inem has funded the Thomas Sankara Center in Burkina Faso, where she is on a Fulbright, and gives a nice shoutout to Africana Studies: https://barnard.edu/magazine/fall-2022/revolution-thought-west-africa.
This course is concerned with two interrelated topics: 1) the long, complicated history of voyages to Latin America; and 2) the myriad and evolving ways voyagers to the region have portrayed its landscapes, people, food, festivals, and more. The course will move chronologically from the 15thcentury to the present, with each week devoted to grappling with a type of voyage characteristic of a given era.