Skip to main content

Design Identities: Edwin Harris

Design Identities will celebrate five Black Design alumni who have been influencers in their fields. Students from each department will conduct one on one interviews with an alumnus in their field to learn about their successes as designers and to encourage the next generation of students, especially BIPOC students, with an introduction to and an…

University Theatre Out Loud: Buffalo Hair by Carlyle Brown

Race, war and history collide in this play, set in 1874, when a group of black troopers captures a black man who has chosen to live among the Cheyenne, and the men must decide between personal and cultural identities. The Out Loud series is a twice-weekly reading of various play scripts with commentary and discussion…

Design Identities: Edwin Harris

Design Identities will celebrate five Black Design alumni who have been influencers in their fields. Students from each department will conduct one on one interviews with an alumnus in their field to learn about their successes as designers and to encourage the next generation of students, especially BIPOC students, with an introduction to and an…

National Coalition Building Institute Workshop: Finding Common Ground: From Conflict to Coalition Building

The National Coalition Building Institute has developed a model for conflict resolution. This model teaches participants skills to handle tough interpersonal and intergroup conflicts. NCBI's workshops examine controversial issues through a positive process. Participants learn to reframe controversial issues into a context where all parties are able to work toward a common solution.

Campus History Series: When MLK and the KKK Met in Raleigh

On July 31, 1966, Martin Luther King Jr. spoke to an integrated audience of close to 5,000 people at Reynolds Coliseum. Meanwhile, a counterprotest was held at Memorial Auditorium, followed by a march of members from two factions of the Ku Klux Klan. W. Jason Miller, professor of English at NC State and author of…

Fulbright US Scholar Program Info Session

The University Fellowships Office will host information sessions for the 2022-23 Fulbright awards cycle starting Feb. 17. If you are interested in applying for the Fulbright awards, you must attend one info session. To attend one of the sessions, please register using the registration form.

Black Connect

The African American Cultural Center is hosting virtual connect/collaborative spaces throughout the semester. You can collaborate and connect with community members and peers while studying, relaxing, playing games and more. Registration is required for each session.

NEDA Week: Sculpting Your Body Image

Join us as we engage in an expressive arts activity and discuss the connection between body image and art. Specific emphasis will be placed on the impact of culture on body image. This event is part of the programming planned for National Eating Disorders Awareness Week.

Women’s Center Spring Book Club: Sing, Unburied, Sing

The Women's Center is excited to announce that the spring book club book is Sing, Unburied, Sing by award-winning author and MacArthur “genius” Jesmyn Ward. The book club will meet once a week for eight weeks beginning in February. A limited number of books will be provided to registrants. To learn more about the book…

Viral* Blackness Exhibit Opening Featuring Scholar-Activist Yaba Blay

Join the Women’s Center and the African American Cultural Center for the Viral* Blackness Exhibit and Zine opening. This opening is dedicated to all participants and those interested in what it means to be Black and experience Blackness in this new decade. Yaba Blay, scholar-activist, content creator, cultural consultant and the creative mind behind #PrettyPeriod…