Due to the storm, Barnard College closed at 4pm Friday, for non-essential personnel. “Essential personnel" include staff in Facilities, Public Safety and Residence Halls.
Friday evening and weekend classes are cancelled but events are going forward as planned unless otherwise noted. The Athena Film Festival programs are also scheduled to go forward as planned but please check http://athenafilmfestival.com/ for the latest information.
The Barnard Library and Archives closed at 4pm Friday and will remain closed on Saturday, Feb. 9. The Library will resume regular hours on Sunday opening at 10am.
Please be advised that due to the conditions, certain entrances to campus may be closed. The main gate at 117th Street & Broadway will remain open. For further updates on college operations, please check this website, call the College Emergency Information Line 212-854-1002 or check AM radio station 1010WINS.
3:12 PM 02/08/2013

Sponsored by The Barnard Center for Research on Women.
Before the outbreak of World War II, Barnard’s Committee on Instruction met monthly to discuss practical academic concerns, and to debate the essential components of an undergraduate liberal arts education. But in the early 1940s the Committee’s conversations underwent a marked shift, as the Second World War increasingly intruded on the requirements and routines of college life. This talk by Karen Seeley, Lecturer in Anthropology at Columbia University, will examine Barnard College’s response to this “total war.” Based on her research in the College archives and elsewhere, Dr. Seeley will discuss the Barnard’s attempts to mobilize students to contribute to the war effort, as well as the war’s implications for a sheltered women’s college.
Karen Seeley’s interests lie at the intersections of psychology and anthropology, and her interdisciplinary training informs her approach to research and teaching. She is a Lecturer in Anthropology at Columbia University, where she teaches courses such as “Trauma,” “Psychoanalysis, Colonialism and Race,” and “The Bomb”; she also teaches “Cultural Psychology” at Barnard College. Dr. Seeley is the author of Cultural Psychotherapy: Working with Culture in the Clinical Encounter, which critically examines Western psychotherapies and proposes new modes of practice for intercultural treatments. Her recent book, Therapy after Terror, explores New York City psychotherapists’ clinical work after 9/11. She currently is conducting research on women’s friendships.



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