Sustainable Space, Sustainable Earth: From Ideas to Action
Dec
6
8:30 AM08:30

Sustainable Space, Sustainable Earth: From Ideas to Action

At the end of the Moon Landing in Context’s 18-month exploration of the historical, social, cultural, political, and policy contexts of the Apollo era, this one day symposium brings together a multidisciplinary group of renowned scholars to illustrate the urgency to focus on space sustainability that is the secure, sustainable, and peaceful use of space for the benefit of planet Earth and all its peoples.

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Moonglow: Project Apollo and U.S. Foreign Relations
Nov
14
7:00 PM19:00

Moonglow: Project Apollo and U.S. Foreign Relations

Dr. Muir-Harmony traces the politics of Project Apollo, from President John F. Kennedy’s call in 1961 to win the battle “between freedom and tyranny” with lunar exploration, to President Richard Nixon’s “Moonglow” diplomatic tour of southeast Asia in 1969, and considers how Apollo-era space diplomacy should inform space policy today.

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 The Future of Space Exploration: An Ethical Perspective
Oct
16
7:00 PM19:00

The Future of Space Exploration: An Ethical Perspective

The Space Age made clear the complicated consequences of living in an interdependent world and gave us dramatic, new perspectives on planet Earth. One was to address the centuries-long legacy of colonialism as decolonization. The other was the role of human activity in changing the physical system of the Earth, altering fundamentally our climate. We are entangled in fraught challenges of our past, present, and future. Dr. Collins invites us to consider how we might make choices as individuals, communities, and nations that resolve the issues before us.

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More Than "Just Uhura":  Understanding Star Trek's Lt. Uhura, Civil Rights, and Space History
Sep
26
7:00 PM19:00

More Than "Just Uhura": Understanding Star Trek's Lt. Uhura, Civil Rights, and Space History

Dr. Weitekamp invites us to explore the impact of Lt. Uhura on American culture and society. Introduced in Gene Roddenberry's original television program in 1966, Lt. Uhura is arguably the most historically significant character of the Star Trek franchise. As a woman of color depicted in popular culture, in a period of tremendous change for African Americans and women in the United States, she both evoked and played against the contemporary historical context.

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Testing Einstein with Lasers and the Moon: The APOLLO Project
May
17
7:00 PM19:00

Testing Einstein with Lasers and the Moon: The APOLLO Project

  • Framingham State University Planetarium (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Dr. Battat will share updates on the precision tests of gravity with the Apache Point Observatory Lunar Laser-ranging Operation (APOLLO) project that uses Apollo-era mirrors left on the lunar surface. The talk is introduced and complemented by a full dome planetarium presentation by Mary MacDonald of the McAuliffe Center.

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Moon Race: The U.S.-Soviet Competition to Put a Human on the Moon
Apr
27
2:00 PM14:00

Moon Race: The U.S.-Soviet Competition to Put a Human on the Moon

In 1957, the first Sputnik propelled the USSR to leadership in space. Shocked, America mobilized to demonstrate its technology surpassed Russia's - a furious, decade-long race ensued. But, it wasn't obvious until the finish line that Neil Armstrong, and not Alexei Leonov, would be first to walk on another world. Join Dr. McDowell in an exciting review of the events that marked a pivotal moment in history.

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Ashley Farmer: The Black Women Intellectuals and Activists Who Revolutionized Black Power
Apr
18
4:30 PM16:30

Ashley Farmer: The Black Women Intellectuals and Activists Who Revolutionized Black Power

Drawing on a vast array of black women's artwork, political cartoons, manifestos, and political essays that they produced as members of groups, such as the Black Panther Party, founded in 1966, and the Congress of African People, founded in 1970, Farmer’s talk shows how black women activists reimagined black womanhood, challenged sexism, and redefined the meaning of race, gender, identity, and Black Power.

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Judy Norsigian: Our Bodies, Ourselves
Mar
6
7:00 PM19:00

Judy Norsigian: Our Bodies, Ourselves

Begun in 1969, published in 1971, and named by the United States Library of Congress as one of 88 books that shaped America, Our Bodies, Ourselves grew out of the second wave Women’s Movement and brought new perspectives on women, health, and sexuality into mainstream discourse. This joint presentation by co-author of the original book, Judy Norsigian, and Aziza Ahmed, who is familiar with more recent editions of the book, will explore the book’s impact both then and now, as the book celebrates its 50th anniversary.

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From “Fashioning Apollo” to Designing Space Suits for Mars. An Engineering and Socio-cultural Conversation
Feb
28
7:00 PM19:00

From “Fashioning Apollo” to Designing Space Suits for Mars. An Engineering and Socio-cultural Conversation

Dr. Lewis and Dr. Newman will explore the evolution and development of space suits from both engineering and historical and cultural points of view. Panelists will also discuss how challenges of future space missions are changing the design of the suits.

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Focus on 1968
Dec
5
4:30 PM16:30

Focus on 1968

  • Framingham State University Planetarium (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Framingham State faculty will explore the 1968 events that had a major influence on shaping the historical, social, and cultural landscape of the decade 1962-1972, characterized the years of the Apollo program, and still have an impact on today’s world. The conversation will focus on the Vietnam War, social movements, visual arts, and education reforms.

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Earthrise - "The Image That Shared Our World": Film Screening
Nov
29
7:00 PM19:00

Earthrise - "The Image That Shared Our World": Film Screening

Earthrise, a documentary film by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee, tells the story of the iconic image of the Earth taken from space in 1968 on Apollo 8. Told solely by the Apollo 8 astronauts, the film recounts their experiences and memories and explores the beauty, awe, and grandeur of the Earth against the blackness of space.

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1968 and Martin Luther King, Jr.: Race, Class and Disobedience
Nov
27
4:30 PM16:30

1968 and Martin Luther King, Jr.: Race, Class and Disobedience

Come hear Alex Gourevitch, Associate Professor of Political Science at Brown University, discuss the radicalism of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s civil disobedience. King was no moderate. Assassinated while supporting a major strike, King is best seen as part of the 1968 revival of a long tradition of mass law-breaking that we can trace backwards through a hundred years of labor radicalism.

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Free Ourselves - Come Out Everywhere: The Radical Visions of the Gay Liberation Movement
Oct
30
4:30 PM16:30

Free Ourselves - Come Out Everywhere: The Radical Visions of the Gay Liberation Movement

1969: revolution was stirring around the world. In the United States, spurred on by the Anti-war, Women’s, and Black Power Movements, the Gay Liberation Movement was born. Half a century later, the LGBTQ Movement is very different. Come hear activist, author, and Harvard Professor Michael Bronski discuss the forgotten history of Gay Liberation and what it means for us today.

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In Conversation with Joseph Kennedy III
Oct
23
6:30 PM18:30

In Conversation with Joseph Kennedy III

We invite Congressman Kennedy to offer a reflection on President John F. Kennedy’s exhortation “We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.”

How do we channel the same spirit to trigger in us an urgency to tackle the great challenges of our world today? Framingham State University students will lead a conversation that focuses on climate change on topics that range from community resilience to global awareness, from climate refugees to climate justice, and from economic impact to policy action.

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Michael Dixon: The More Things Change, The More They Stay the Same - African American Art After the Civil Rights Movement
Oct
2
5:30 PM17:30

Michael Dixon: The More Things Change, The More They Stay the Same - African American Art After the Civil Rights Movement

This exhibition of Michael Dixon’s current work illustrates recent developments in African-American art by focusing on transformations of racial and interracial identities. Audiences will see how Dixon’s work visually changes from the civil rights era of the Sixties, which emphasized African-American accomplishments and the establishment of rights, to later forms that address self-reflection and individual identity.

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The Moon Together: A Lost Opportunity
Sep
27
7:00 PM19:00

The Moon Together: A Lost Opportunity

Frank White will discuss the little-known fact that President John Kennedy wanted Apollo to be a multi-national mission, not a “space race.” Think of the impact on history if the astronauts on Apollo 11 had been Russian and American. That was President Kennedy’s dream, cut short by his untimely death.  

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