Sojourner Truth Lecture: Charlene A. Carruthers, author and filmmaker
February 17, 2026 7–8:30 p.m.
Location
Galileo Hall
240 Platt Blvd.
Claremont, CA 91711
Contact
Judy Borello
juborello@hmc.edu
909.607.2639
Details
The Sojourner Truth Lectureship, established in 1983, honors the achievements and contributions of outstanding African American women in the U.S. and the African Diaspora. Conceived and administered by faculty in the Intercollegiate Department of Africana Studies, the lectureship is sponsored by six of The Claremont Colleges: Claremont McKenna, Harvey Mudd, Pitzer, Pomona, Scripps colleges and Claremont Graduate University. This year, the talk will take place at Harvey Mudd.
Speaker
Charlene A. Carruthers (she/her) is a writer, filmmaker, community organizer, and Black studies PhD candidate at Northwestern University. Her work spans more than 20 years of community organizing across racial, gender and economic justice movements.
A practitioner of telling more complete stories, her work as an artist is to honor ancestors across the diaspora and interrogate ongoing work towards collective liberation. Charlene wrote and directed The Funnel, a short film, which received the Queer Black Voices Award at the 35th Annual aGLIFF Prism Film Festival. Charlene also directed La Salida, a short film co-written by Deivid Rojas and produced by Full Spectrum Features. She is an inaugural Marguerite Casey Presidential Freedom Scholar, 2024 Northwestern University Presidential Fellow and 2024 Center for Racial Justice Fellow at the University of Michigan.
She is the founding National Director of BYP100, a national organization of young Black organizers working through a Black queer feminist lens. In addition to being a highly sought-after speaker, educator and facilitator, Charlene is author of the bestselling book, Unapologetic: A Black, Queer and Feminist Mandate for Radical Movements (Beacon Press). She is an enthusiastic global traveler and believes that food is the best way to learn about people and culture.
This event is for: alumni, faculty, general feed, staff, students, tccs feed: lecture
Community Connections events provide opportunities for HMC faculty, students and staff to cultivate community, foster open conversations and share important information as together we live out our mission and shape the future of the College.
Calendars
Kickstart your career journey by joining us each week for the OCS career and professional development series! From expert panels to hands-on workshops and presentations, each session dives into a new topic designed to help you build skills and confidence for your future.
We’re excited to launch Kudos Recognition Cards as part of our ongoing commitment to fostering a culture of appreciation and engagement at Harvey Mudd College. To celebrate the launch, we invite you to stop by the Kudos Kick-Off Event.
Learn about HMC’s approved study abroad programs and how to study abroad your junior year.
Kickstart your career journey by joining us each week for the OCS career and professional development series! From expert panels to hands-on workshops and presentations, each session dives into a new topic designed to help you build skills and confidence for your future.
Learn about HMC’s approved study abroad programs and how to study abroad your junior year.
This event is designed to help international students tailor their resumes to the U.S. format. We’ll explore key formatting tips and best practices to ensure your resume stands out to employers.
Kickstart your career journey by joining us each week for the OCS career and professional development series! From expert panels to hands-on workshops and presentations, each session dives into a new topic designed to help you build skills and confidence for your future.
The Cabinet is hosting informal coffee breaks in fall 2025 for students, faculty and staff. These coffee breaks will be attended by most of the Cabinet team and will provide an opportunity for the community to share ideas, express concerns and highlight successes.
All are welcome to stop by as schedules allow.
Learn about HMC’s approved study abroad programs and how to study abroad your junior year.
This learning community is for everyone, from those who are already experienced in community engagement to those who are curious about learning more about this high-impact educational practice. Faculty participants will discuss readings, meet with outside speakers, share ideas, and think collaboratively about implementing community engagement into the 5C students’ experience.
Learn about HMC’s approved study abroad programs and how to study abroad your junior year. Discussion of Sea Education Association (SEA) study abroad programs.
Introducing Hopper: On-Campus HPC Infrastructure for Computationally-Intensive Research
Paul Nerenberg, CMC; Jamie Haddock, HMC; Bilin Zhuang, HMC
In this presentation, we will introduce Hopper, a new NSF-funded high-performance computing (HPC) cluster shared by CMC and HMC. We will give an overview of Hopper’s hardware, some examples of current research use cases, and how it fits into the larger ecosystem of HPC resources available to HMC faculty.
Welcome to HMC’s Community Conversations for the fall 2025.
HMC Community Conversations* use conversation guides with a structured format to help people with different viewpoints and experiences build understanding. There will be 3–5 other people in a table group. It is not a debate, and the goal is not to change one another’s opinions. There are Conversation Agreements like “Listen and Be Curious” and “Show Respect and Suspend Judgement” that create the framework for diving into the questions. The questions are designed to draw out our personal experiences rather than opinions around the topic.
The overall purpose is to learn more about the experiences others have around the topic and build a sense of community.
Community Conversations will take place on Tuesdays from 11 a.m. to noon in Shanahan 1480; and each gathering will be on a separate topic. Gatherings will be in person only.
Kickstart your career journey by joining us each week for the OCS career and professional development series! From expert panels to hands-on workshops and presentations, each session dives into a new topic designed to help you build skills and confidence for your future.
Interested in health careers? Join our Pre-Health Community Lunches where we will meet once a month in the Hoch to connect casually, check in with each other, and share announcements. This semester’s lunches will be from 12-1pm on September 24, October 23, and December 4, at different locations in the Hoch. You do not need to attend all lunches, or for the full hour, just drop by when you can!
For this lunch on September 24, will be in the Aviation Room in the Hoch, and Dr. Jay Iinuma will be our guest speaker. Dr. Iinuma is a family physician with his own practice in Southern California!
This event is designed to help students prepare for the in-person career fair on October 1! Learn how to get ready for a career fair, how to make the most of the event, and how to talk to employers about work authorization.
Kickstart your career journey by joining us each week for the OCS career and professional development series! From expert panels to hands-on workshops and presentations, each session dives into a new topic designed to help you build skills and confidence for your future.
This faculty panel will explore “dangerous questions” from a variety of disciplines to understand and respond to challenges facing American universities. The discussion will address the erosion of knowledge and expertise, as well as political forces that may attempt to limit intellectual inquiry and creativity.
Ambereen Dadabhoy, asssociate professor of literature, “What Would Shakespeare Say?”
Anup Gampa, assistant professor of psychology, “Invasive Species: Blaming Dysregulated Plant Neighbors Is a ‘Settler Move’ to Innocence”
Rachel Mayeri, artist and professor of media studies, “What Can Art Do During a Fascist Takeover?”
David K. Seitz, associate professor of cultural geography, “Geography Against Immediacy”
Paul Steinberg, professor of political science and environmental policy, “Creative Politics as a Strategic Response to Authoritarianism”
David Wilson, assistant professor of music, “Sounding (Anti-)Authoritarian: A Few Vignettes”
The K-12 through college CS pipeline is full of barriers and those barriers prevent broader participation in the field. I’ll describe some of my research to try to identify or remove some of those barriers. I hope you will learn a bit more about CS education research and how you can advocate for policies and practices that can broaden participation in CS!
“We don’t want to live in a society in turmoil. In the U.S., 93 percent of people want to reduce divisiveness, and 86 percent believe it’s possible to disagree in a healthy way. Yet with increasing political and social fragmentation, many of us don’t know how to move past our differences. Civil rights scholar john a. powell presents an actionable path through ‘bridging’ that helps us communicate, coexist and imagine a new story for our shared future where we all belong.” (description courtesy of Othering and Belonging Institute)
The Office of Civic and Community Engagement (OCCE) will be hosting a guilt-free book club this fall semester on john a. powell’s book The Power of Bridging: How to Build a World Where We All Belong. Our first gathering is on Friday, Oct. 3.
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