news & events Archives
2010-11 News & Events
freedom of expression week
Professor Joanne Janssen and the students of her Banned Books course invite everyone to exciting activities in celebration of Freedom of Expression Week.
Special guests: Bangladeshi filmmakers Tareque and Catherine Masud, makers of the Cannes Award-winning The Clay Bird, will be interviewed by Banned Books students on April 10, 5-6 pm, on the 20G rooftop.
The Masuds will then host an hour-long session to show some film shorts and excerpts and discuss their work, starting at 7:30 pm in the 20G basement.
Film screening: The Lives of Others, April 11, 7:30 pm
asian studies monthly seminar
Each month, the Asian Studies major organizes an academic seminar around the work of a faculty member or an AUW guest. This month, we feature Professor Se-Woong Koo, Stanford Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow at AUW.
Date/Time: Thursday, April 7, 11:30 am - 1:00 pm
Location: 20G Café space
"West/East: Imperial Ambition and Ideas of Asia"
Even if "Asia" is a concept as ancient as Greece and Rome, the conception of global geography consisting of the enlightened West and the blighted East can be traced back to the age of imperial ambition. Under the rule of Western civilization Asia was deemed a "dark," "backward," and "spiritual" place in dire need of modernization. "The West" was invented as a bringer of light, and civilization and modernity it was seen to embody were increasingly articulated using the metaphor of radiance in the elite discourse of both metropole and colonial space. The emergent Asian empire of Japan likewise appropriated light as the symbol par excellence of its civilizing capacity. The Chrysanthemum Throne in Tokyo assumed the reign name "Meiji" – the Enlightened Rule – declaring that Japan was the origin of the sun, a source of light equal in brilliance to that of the modernized West. Embedded in such assertion was an idea of Asia as already civilized and alight by Japan, a new regional hegemon.
All are welcome!
T.A.L.E. THIS WEEK: special double presentation
"Why give back?"
Journalist Misha Hussain discusses why he left behind the comfort of Europe to come back and work in his native Bangladesh. We follow Misha's journey from Sylhet, Bangladesh to the east end of London where his family struggled like many other Bengalis to give him an education. However, like an increasing number of British-Bengalis, Misha decided to come back to Bangladesh after completing his studies, and more importantly to give back in an attempt to reverse the "brain drain." In this TALE talk, Misha talks about the living in the west, the importance of knowledge sharing and capacity building, and why Bangladesh and many other South Asian countries need their students now more than ever before.
"Why tell the stories other people don’t tell?"
Photojournalist Amy Helene Johansson worked as a fashion designer for a decade before becoming a photojournalist. Moving to Bangladesh in 2006 to work in the garment sector changed her life. She got to know a country so much more diverse than the media in Sweden had showed her, and she felt the urgency to show people Bangladesh through her eyes.
By showing images of her own as well as other female photographers' work, Amy will also briefly talk about the advantages of being a woman in a male dominated business.
Date: 24 February, Thursday
Time: 5:30 PM
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
auw annual debating festival
The AUW Debate Club extends its invitation for the very first intra-university debating tournament to be held on March 1- 4, 2011. The tournament will feature three rounds with four teams consisting of three members each: one from the Access Academy, one from UG1, and one from UG2. Each batch will compete against their own batch; for example, a UG1 debater will be up against another UG1 debater.
The schedule is as follows:
March 1, 2011 |
|
7:30-8:30 PM |
UG 2 (Team A vs. B)- Round 1 |
8:30-9:30 PM |
UG 2 (Team C vs. D)- Round 1 |
March 2, 2011 |
|
7:30-8:30 PM |
UG 1 (Team A vs. B)- Round 1 |
8:30-9:30 PM |
UG 1(Team C vs. D)- Round 1 |
March 3, 2011 |
|
7:30-8:30 PM |
AA (Team A vs. B)- Round 1 |
8:30-9:30 PM |
AA (Team C vs. D)- Round 1 |
March 4, 2011: Grand Finale (time TBA)
Please join us in making this event a success!
auw students win at karate

AUW students at the karate competition in Dhaka, with their instructor, Ms. Maria Chakraborty (second from right)
Eight AUW students competed in the 2011 World Union of Karate Do Federations Fajilatun Nesa 3rd Intercontinental Asia WUKF Karate Championships in Dhaka. They competed with
participants from Bangladesh, Nepal, India, Pakistan, Srilanka, Brazil, and Iran. The students earned
6 Gold, 5 Silver, and 2 Bronze awards. Congratulations!
call for papers
In September 2011, AUW will host an international conference, "Changing Nature of Forced Migration: Vulnerabilites and Responsibilities in South and Southeast Asia." AUW invites submissions based on five themes: (1) Climate change, development and security; (2) Legal and policy frameworks; (3) Coping mechanisms; (4)
Gender dimensions of forced migration and migrant work; and (5)
Politics of belonging, incorporation, settlement and identity.
Go the the conference web page
t.a.l.e. this week: "Works in Progress: A Young Woman’s Tale of Continuing Pursuit and Discovery"
Following her journey through time, places and works, we see how lives lived unseen before us and around us impact our own. Kashfi Mahmud will describe how the arc of her life brought her back to Chittagong to set up an education program for slum children 500 meters from where her grandfather had built a school for underprivileged children half a century ago.
Date: 10 February, Thursday
Time: 5:30 PM
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
T.A.L.E. THIS WEEK: "to photograph is to dream with open eyes"
Why photograph? Why live as an artist? Visiting photographer Claudio Cambon will discuss his 20-year career as a documentary photographer in an effort to convince as many young minds as possible of the purposefulness of engaging in an activity that is difficult, complicated, frustrating, inefficient, unstable, unpredictable, and non-remunerative!
Date: 3 February, Thursday
Time: 5:30 PM
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
t.a.l.e. this week: "balancing act"
Humanities Professor Sangita Rayamajhi will discuss how she balances life on the trapeze of marriage, education, career and children. Her presentation will be a pastiche of memories, a collage of life put together as through the lanes of school, family life, education, through the palace gates, outside the country, inside the country, and finally, AUW.
Date: 27 January, Thursday
Time: 5:30 PM
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
Click here to read Professor Rayamajhi's profile.
auw symposium highlights now available
Click here to read about the recent symposium!

t.a.l.e. this week: SUMITRA SINHA, SENIOR VOIP ARCHITECT, AT&t
This week's guest speaker is Ms. Sumitra Sinha, Senior VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Architect at telecommunications giant AT&T. Ms. Sinha has worked at AT&T for over 20 years. She
is also an adjunct professor of Computer Science Department, Brookdale Community College. Come join us for this special T.A.L.E. session!
Date: 18 January
Time: 9:00 AM
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
"my hope for afghan women"
World Pulse,
a global media and communication network devoted to giving voices to women, published a testimonial letter
by first year undergraduate Parwana Fayyazz, who comes from Ghazni Province in Afghanistan. Parwana's letter is part of a campaign to support the International Violence Against Women Act. In the letter, Parwana describes the situation in Afghanistan, and her hopes for her country's future.
Read Parwana's letter
auw student earns black belt
Sreymom Pol, a second year undergraduate from Cambodia, is the second AUW student to earn a black belt in karate. She received the top grade in her exam at the
Honke Shotokan Karate Do Association. Congratulations to Sreymom!
Read Sreymom's student profile
reading day
The AUW Creative Writing Club
will hold their first Reading Day, entitled "Break Away." They will be joined by an Access Academy teacher as they read aloud their writings, including poetry, fiction, and non-fiction pieces. The entire AUW community is invited to this event!
Date: 23 November
Time: 5:20 pm
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
article by auw faculty and staff
The On Campus with Women section of AAC&U (Association of American Colleges and Universities) has published an article entitled, " Female Education in Bangladesh: Promising Present, Challenging Future," by Professor Faheem Hussain and Ms. Fabiha Naumi, Assistant Director of Student Affairs.
Read the article
tale this week: "bringing science to the masses"
On November 4, AUW Professor Amber Wise will
discuss some of her career highlights, and her adventures with translating science to a wide variety of audiences, including children, undergraduates, elite scientists in academia, policy makers and the general public.
Same time, same place!
t.a.l.e. this week
This week’s TALE is the story of how two young women experienced Croatia and Bosnia and how those experiences led them to AUW. Ms. Katie Rucker’s time studying in Croatia and Bosnia piqued her interest in human rights violations and the ethnic cleansing that happened in her lifetime. Meanwhile, Ms. Kelsey Bristow was inspired to write her university thesis on youth’s unique potential to build peace in Bosnia.
Date: 21 October
Time: 5:30 pm
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
t.a.l.e. this week
Professor Brenda Kranz will discuss the
links between studying the evolution of insect reproductive behavior, how human babies are exposed to heavy metals, implementing quarantine in the Indian Ocean and managing Food Security programs in the Australian desert, and finding her way to AUW.
Click here for Professor Kranz's profile.
Date: 14 October
Time: 5:30 pm
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
t.a.l.e. this week
Professor Shahirah Majumdar, AUW Lecturer in Writing, will talk
about the journeys we take, the stories we tell, and how being a writer is always about trying to better understand the world that we come from.
Click here for Professor Majumdar's profile.
Date: 7 October
Time: 5:30 pm
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
interactive t.a.l.e.!
Dr. Spase Karoski from the Sydney Institute and University of Wollongong in Australia will give a talk entitled, "Towards understanding men." Dr. Karoski will discuss
men’s movements, gender, masculinity, femininity, and power, and encourages participants to bring pen and paper, as this T.A.L.E. will be interactive!
Date: 28 September (Tuesday)
Time: 5:30 pm
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
t.a.l.e. this week
Mr. Alam Khorshed, Director of Bishaud Bangla, will present a talk entitled, "Engineering redefined: a tale of an unwilling engineer." He will tell the story of his twenty years of working as an engineer in the corporate world before eventually pursuing his passion for the arts and culture, language and literature, people and politics, and in the process redefining the whole notion of engineering itself.
Date: 23 September
Time: 5:00 pm
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
auw student article
The Daily Star Campus published an article written by an Umme Mahbuba, an AUW undergraduate. Umme discusses her participation in the United Nations Youth and Students Association of Bangladesh (UNYSAB),
a voluntary youth and student movement for the United Nations that aims to convey the thoughts of the youth about current global issues.
Read the article on the Daily Star Campus
auw founder on newsweek
Newsweek Education, of the U.S.-based magazine Newsweek, interviewed AUW Founder and Acting Vice-Chancellor Kamal Ahmad. Mr. Ahmad discusses his past experience with education, the diversity of our students, and their commitment to giving back to their communities.
Read the article on education.newsweek.com
t.a.l.e. this week
This week's T.A.L.E. is entitled, "Andrea's Adventures with Turtles and Froga," and it's about Prof. Andrea Phillott's experience volunteering as a research assistant in the Great Barrier Reef. Come to her talk to find out more!
Click here for Professor Phillott's profile.
Date: 16 September
Time: 5:30 pm
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
T.a.l.e. this week
This week's T.A.L.E. (Thursday Afternoon Learning Extravaganza) will be a talk entitled, "Neuroscience and society: a tale of two worlds," by Professor Lucina Uddin. She will talk
about regional problems and global solutions, coincidences and consequences, science and society, and ultimately, following your heart and trusting your brain.
Click here for Professor Uddin's profile.
Date: 2 September
Time: 5:30 pm
Location: 20G Cafe/G101
women's health clinic in nepal
Sunita Basnet, a second-year AUW undergraduate, shares her experiences running a one day free health clinic in rural Nepal. Sunita was able to offer the clinic through a grant from the International Women's Health Coalition Young Visionaries 2010.
Read Sunita's report