Category Archives: Events

Cambridge Forum current event schedule

Normalizing Denial

The climate science debate is heating up

Bill McKibben, author, educator, founder of 350.org
Dr. Gretchen Goldman, Research Director, Center for Science and Democracy
Tim DeChristopher, climate activist
Rev. Mariama White-Hammond, minister and Boston-based activist
Moderated by Wen Stephenson, author and writer, The Nation

Co-sponsored by Cambridge Climate Research Associates

Recorded January 11, 2017

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/CF-CLIMATE-DENIAL-1.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum NORMALIZING DENIAL – Part 1] [audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/CF-CLIMATE-DENIAL-2.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum NORMALIZING DENIAL – Part 2]

Loneliness in the Digital Age

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Loneliness may be one of the most urgent issues facing American society. In this 2-part forum, we attempt to unravel some of the causes of this pernicious condition and consider the ways to ward off, or at least alleviate, the curse of loneliness.

Recorded December 7, 2016

With the help of four great minds from different disciplines, we consider why loneliness is a such a growing sociological phenomenon in our hi-tech, super-wired world. Neuroscientific research seems to suggest that our brains are indeed wired to connect, but they prefer human rather than digital interaction.  So what constitutes true friendship and can a device ever substitute for the power of human touch?

Our panel includes Dr. Terry Freiberg, a social psychologist and author of Four Seasons of Loneliness; Dr. Amy Banks, a psychiatrist at Wellesley Centers for Women and author of  Wired to Connect: The Surprising Link between Brain Science and Strong, Healthy Relationships;  Alex Pentland, who directs the MIT Connection Science and Human Dynamics Labs and co-author of a recent study in the journal PLOS , Are you Your Friends’ Friend? Poor Perception of Friendship Ties; and Alexander Nehamas, Princeton philosopher and author of the book On Friendship.

Listen to Loneliness in the Digital Age, part 1 & part 2

Forever Young

Cambridge Forum Forever Young 2016

Cambridge Forum celebrates the legacy and future of folk music as it marks its 50th anniversary.

Recorded 11/16/2016 

Music and memories from the early days of the Harvard Square folk scene to the current state of the Americana genre.

Betsy Siggins, raconteur extraordinaire, recalls her early days at the legendary Club 47 in Cambridge when Joan Baez performed. Folklorist Millie Rahn joins the conversation, along with live music from  multi-instrumentalist and songwriter, Jake Armerding.

Back in the late ’60s, Club 47 was the place to play for folk musicians in the Boston area and all the greats performed there, including Maybelle Carter, Doc Watson, and Muddy Waters.  The space eventually morphed into today’s Club Passim, which has given rise to some of the top musicians in the folk world, like Shawn Colvin and Suzanne Vega.

The music scene has changed greatly over the past 50 years, when Cambridge Forum first captured the spirit of the times. But Harvard Square and Club Passim continue to turn out fresh and exciting talent, that reflect many influential trends in today’s music industry. In the tradition of the Club 47 legends, musician Jake Armerding embodies the consummate, hard-working troubadour. He hails from a Massachusetts family of musicians, in which he honed his songwriting skills, while also becoming an accomplished fiddle, mandolin, and guitar player.

Joan Baez and Bob Dylan on stage at Club Passim, when it was known as Club 47. Courtesy of Passim.
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For those interested in brushing up on the what’s been happening on the folk scene over the last few decades, here’s a *short* bibliography courtesy of  folklorist Millie Rahn.

Baby, Let Me Follow You Down: The Illustrated Story of the Cambridge Folk Years, by Eric von Schmidt and Jim Rooney. Originally published 1979; updated and republished by the University of Massachusetts Press, 1994.

Between Midnight and Day: The Last Unpublished Blues Archive by Dick Waterman; preface by Bonnie Raitt; introduction by Peter Guralnick. Thunder’s Mouth Press, 2003. Bluegrass: A History by Neil Rosenberg. University of Illinois Press,1985.

Cambridge, Club 47, and the 1960s Folk Revival,” chapter by Millie Rahn in A City’s Life and Times: Cambridge in the Twentieth Century. Published by the Cambridge Historical Society, 2007.

Country Music, U.S.A. by Bill C. Malone and Jocelyn R. Neal. Originally published 1968; University of Texas Press, 1985.

In It for the Long Run: A Musial Odyssey by Jim Rooney. University of Illinois Press, 2014.

The Face of Folk Music: Essential Portraits from America’s Folk Music Revival. Photographs by David Gahr; text by Robert Shelton. The Citadel Press, 1968.

The Folk Revival: Beyond Child’s Canon and Sharp’s Song Catching,” chapter by Millie Rahn in American Popular Music: New Approaches to the Twentieth Century. University of Massachusetts Press, 2001.

Films

Festival!, by Murray Lerner. The Newport Folk Festivals 1963-1966. Produced by the Newport Festival Foundation, 1967.

For the Love of the Music: The Club 47 Folk Revival by Ezzie Films & Blue Star Media, 2012.

A Manifesto Against Parenting

ALISON GOPNIK discusses her book The Gardener and the Carpenter: What the New Science of Child Development Tells Us About the Relationship Between Parents and Children.

Recorded October 12, 2016

Listen to A Manifesto Against Parenting

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/CF-PARENTING.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum RWANDAN WOMEN RISING – Part 1]

Gopnik is a professor of psychology and philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley. An internationally recognized leader in the study of children’s learning and development, Gopnik writes the “Mind and Matter” column for The Wall Street Journal and is the author of The Philosophical Baby and coauthor of The Scientist in the Crib

Democracy Now! Covering the Movements Changing America

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Democracy Now!’s Amy Goodman joined us on her national speaking tour to celebrate 20 years of the daily, independent, global TV/Radio news hour and the release of her most recent book, Democracy Now!: Twenty Years Covering the Movements Changing America.

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Returning to the Cambridge Forum, Amy talks about  the most pressing issues facing our democracy today, the 2016 presidential election, and reflects on the past twenty years of covering the heroes at the forefront of movements for change in America.

Recorded May 10, 2016

Watch the video!

Listen to Democracy Now – Part 1

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/CAMFORUM-DEMOCRACY-1.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum Democracy Now – Part 1]

Listen to Democracy Now – Part 2

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/CAMFORUM-DEMOCRACY-2.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum Democracy Now – Part 2]

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All About Bees

Bee in flightWhat is killing our honey bees? Can we save them?

Cambridge Forum examines the plight of  honey bees with the help of Noah Wilson-Rich from Best Bees and apiarist David Hackenberg  of Buffy Bees from Lewisburg, PA. If you care about the future of food and want to learn more about how to ensure the survival of our precious honey bees, please plan to attend. hackenbergNoah Wilson-Rich headshot

Bees don’t just make honey, they pollinate a third of our food supply. But bee colonies are disappearing at an alarming rate in the US.  In addition to being ecologically essential, bees are highly social and complex creatures that are vulnerable to a barrage of attacks ranging from parasitic mites to pesticides and herbicides.

Recorded April 27, 2016  bee1 Coming soon on the WGBH Forum Network

Listen to All About Bees – Part 1

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/CAMFORUM-ABOUT-BEES-1.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum ALL ABOUT BEES – Part 1]

Listen to All About Bees – Part 2

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/CAMFORUM-ABOUT-BEES-2.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum ALL ABOUT BEES – Part 2]


ROTTEN REPORTAGE – Do We Have the Media We Deserve?

The bulk of mainstream media in the U.S. is now owned by a handful of corporations that continue to gobble up smaller outlets and independent presses. Some say that we have created a perfect echo chamber and that the plurality of a free press is just a sad joke. Turning on the TV or scrolling through the headlines offers only the illusion of choice.

So is the media monopoly almost complete? Is there any cause for optimism in the new journalistic market place?   In its pre-election coverage, does the national press corps reveal its true colors?

Cambridge Forum invited a panel of journalists and experts drawn from the Internet, academia, and NPR to discuss the state of journalism in America today.

  WGBH Forum videocast

Listen to Rotten Reportage – Part 1 recorded 3/09/2016

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/CAMFORUM-ROTTEN-1.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum Rotten Reportage – Part 1]

lonnieOur speakers include Lonnie Isabel.  Isabel teaches at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. Isabel spent 25 years in the newspaper business, covering or directing the coverage of several presidential campaigns including the fabled 2000 election. He also ran the coverage of Hillary Clinton’s run for Senate, the impeachment of Bill Clinton, and just about every major national and international story of his generation. He has covered each national political convention since 1984.
Isabel has worked for Newsday, the Boston Globe, Boston Herald and Oakland Tribune. After leaving Newsday as deputy managing editor in 2005, Isabel joined the newly-created CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, where he started the International Reporting Program that has trained more than 75 journalists to cover international issues, and the International Journalist-in-Residence program that brings an endangered, targeted or threatened journalist each year to study and work at the school. He started at Columbia last year.  He is co-author of a book to be released this summer, “Think/Point/Shoot: Media Ethics, Technology and Global Change”.

Peter S. Goodman is the Global Editor-In-Chief of the International Business Times, where he supervises more than 200 journalists across worldwide editions. goodman1He was previously Executive Business and Global News Editor for the Huffington Post, where he oversaw business, technology and international reporting while writing a column that earned a Loeb award for commentary. Goodman was the National Economic Correspondent for the New York Times during the Great Recession. There, he played a central role in “The Reckoning,” a series of stories on the roots of the 2008 financial crisis, which won a Loeb and was a finalist for the Pulitzer prize.  Goodman is the author of Past Due: The End of Easy Money and the Renewal of the American Economy.

Sam Fleming is Director of News and Programming at WBUR. He’s responsible for supervising a staff of 75, including news managers, producers, reporters, writers, editors, hosts and production staff.   flemming1Under his direction, WBUR’s News Department has garnered more than 50 national and local awards recognizing the quality and depth of its news coverage. Fleming first worked at the station in 1981 as a general assignment reporter. In 1992, he became WBUR’s News Director, a position he held until 2004. In that role he oversaw the breadth, depth and daily workings of the news produced at WBUR and helped to manage the content of daily broadcasts in their diverse forms.

Reclaiming Conversation

CF: Reclaiming Conversation

turkle2Most conversations today involve distracted people looking at their phones and not their partners. This, according to Sherry Turkle, is leading to a “crisis of empathy” at work, at home and in our public life. Turkle is Professor of the Social Studies of Science and Technology at MIT, and spent four decades studying the relationship between people and technology. Her current research indicates that the decline in thoughtful face-to-face dialogue constitutes an epidemic and that in moving from “conversation to mere connection”, we are losing our humanity.

Recorded 2/3/16 

Sherry Turkle is Professor of the Social Studies of Science and Technology in the Program in Science, Technology, and Society at MIT and the director of the MIT Initiative on Technology and Self.

Her newest book Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age (Penguin Press, October 2015), is a call to action. “It is not an anti-technology book but a pro-conversation book!” according to Turkle, which illustrates how fleeing from conversation undermines our relationships, creativity, and productivity.

Listen to Reclaiming Conversation featuring Sherry Turkle recorded at Cambridge Forum 2/03/2016:

CF: Reclaiming Conversation

Immigrant Struggles, Immigrant Gifts

immigrant strugglesAre current policies adequate for today’s immigrant experience?   How is modern immigration different from that of previous generations?

By examining the immigrant experience of various ethnic and religious groups throughout U.S. history, the book Immigrant Struggles, Immigrant Gifts demonstrates that the same patterns of native resistance, immigrant struggles and contributions have occurred over and over again. This panel discussion features historian Deborah Dash Moore, Constitutional Law expert William Ross, and policy analyst Alex Nowrasteh of the Cato Institute.  Recorded on October 8, 2014

Watch “Immigrant Struggles” on YouTube here.  Presented in collaboration with the Immigrant Learning Center

Read the Immigrant Learning Center blog.