Difficult Dialogue Event Series

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Difficult Dialogueevents arepanel conversations hosted by Boulder's Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA) that bring together people to discuss challenging issues from their own perspectives.The topics chosen for each event are important but can be difficult to discuss. This event offers a space to have these tough conversations.The CHA actively chooses not to record Difficult Dialogues events, given the sensitive nature of topics and questions that may be asked in response to and during the event.

We are committed to fostering productive dialogues in the hopethatmindsand hearts might expand and that mutual respect, understanding, and perhaps self-examination can be fostered by meeting with and listening to each other respectfully. These dialogues are meant to allow us to see each other as human. If you are going to participate,the goal is to develop the capacity of talking about hard issues with as much care for self and others as possible.

The Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA) and Libraries have co-hosted the Difficult Dialogue event series semi-annually since 2019. Since 2022, Grace Commons Church has been a partner for every Fall Difficult Dialogues event.

For 2024, the CHA is co-hosting Difficult Dialogue community conversations (led by a conversation facilitator) with and their series. These are held once a month at Chautauqua's Community House in Boulder, Colorado.

Event Guidelines

ճDifficult Dialogue event seriesbrings together local voices to explore complex topics, fostering mutual understanding and a respectful discourse. Difficult Dialogue events aim to create a space for grappling with tough subjects that people may find difficult or uncomfortable to talk about. These events are not debates but platforms for thoughtful exchange.

Our purpose is to hold dialogues on topics considered difficult, provocative, or controversial, among constituents that may have strong conflicting views.Our objective is NOT to necessarily agree, fix anything, prove anyone right or wrong, or alter anyone’s position.

We are committed to fostering productive dialogues in the hopes that minds and hearts might expand. We ask that you:

  1. Keep an open mind
  2. Be respectful of others
  3. Listen with the intent to understand
  4. Speak your own truth

We expect to experience discomfort when talking about hard things. Remain engaged and recognize that the discomfort can lead to problem-solving and authentic understanding.

Upcoming Difficult Dialogues:

How Do We Reconcile Ourselves to Our Privilege?
December 4, 2024, 6:00pm - 7:30pm at Colorado Chautauqua's Community House
Difficult Dialogues: Community Conversations series (partnered withand their).
Register Here:

A conversation about race, gender, class, and so much more.


Past Difficult Dialogues:

Is that a fact?! Finding facts in a world filled with disinformation
November 13, 2024, 6:00pm - 7:30pm at Colorado Chautauqua's Community House
Difficult Dialogues: Community Conversations series (partnered withand their).
Register Here:

What have facts become in our current information-rich environment? This event is a conversation to look at how we attempt to gain knowledge and what are the social and environmental features that pose a challenge to do this. We want to look at how we come to accept information as fact.

Is this what democracy looks like? - A community discussion about the nature and evolution of democracy in the US
October 2, 2024, 6:00pm - 7:30pm at Colorado Chautauqua's Community House
Difficult Dialogues: Community Conversations series (partnered withand their).

Is American democracy broken, as some commenters suggest, or is it deeply imperiled and potentially on the verge of becoming so, as others do? Given what are frequently received as frustrations with or threats to democracy—of voter suppression, “post-truth” politics, the normalization of political violence, the erosion of democratic guardrails, and the intensification of partisan polarization—must we now be resigned to charting the decline and fall of democratic norms and institutions, viewing each election with anxiety and dread as if it might be our last? Or is it still possible to reinvigorate democratic norms and institutions, and in so doing provide an antidote to such frustrations and threats? This community dialogue aims to explore not only what community members may perceive as threatening to democracy or indicative of its fragility or decline, but also to explore how we got here and where we might go from here, especially with regard to reinvigorating some of the norms and institutions of American democracy.

Difficult Dialogue:Election Year Polarization: Can we stay good neighbors?
September 16, 2024, 6:30pm - 8pm at Grace Commons Church
University Libraries Resources Guide:
The 2024 US presidential election will be held amidst a backdrop of polarization on multiple fronts, including political parties, ideologies, religious affiliations, and global conflicts. The stakes for this election feel high — for civil rights, global peace, and US democracy. Regardless of the outcome, there will be people in our lives who may not agree with the results. The Fall 2024 Difficult Dialogue aims to explore how we can remind ourselves of our common humanity with those we disagree with, and how we can continue to engage in conversation with those who hold different values. Our panelists will discuss how to navigate difficult conversations around politics and polarization, and we invite our audience to share their questions, concerns, and ideas for remaining in fellowship with those whose values may differ from our own.

Difficult Dialogue:Reparations
March 20, 2024, 12:30pm - 1:45pm at CASE E390, Center for Teaching & Learning
University Libraries Resources Guide:
How do we repair harm, when the harm is on a national scale? For the March 2024 Difficult Dialogue topic, we will consider how various nations have provided reparations for systemic harm and how we can hold nations, governments, and communities accountable for it.While the US government has made reparations to Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War II, there are still some groups that have not received any form of restitution, such as to enslaved people taken from African nations or to Indigenous nations for stolen land. Other countries have provided restitution for genocide, such as the German government and businesses to survivors of the Holocaust and the Rwandan government to Tutsi survivors of the 1994 genocide. Our panelists will discuss how we as individuals can encourage and support various types of reparations for harmed communities.

How to Have Difficult Conversations with Friends and Loved Ones—including talking about Gaza and Israel
March 27, 2024, 6pm - 7pm at
Difficult Dialogues: Community Conversations series (partnered withand their)
Our third Difficult Dialogue Conversation takes up the topic of how to have difficult conversations with people you care about but may disagree with. Our facilitators, Jennifer Ho and Ami Dayan, believe it is possible to have productive conversations about controversial subjects, so long as all parties enter into the conversation with a sincere willingness to listen and learn rather than simply argue to persuade someone to their point of view. Join usto practice having hard conversations, including on the topic of Gaza and Israel.

Frontier of Free Speech: Are There Boundaries?
February 28, 2024, 6pm - 7pm at
Difficult Dialogues: Community Conversations series (partnered with and their series)
For this second event in the series, we are hosting a community conversation about the First Amendment and freedom of speech. Are there boundaries to what speech can and should be shared publicly? Are there costs to free speech?Unlike past Difficult Dialogues panel events, the Community Conversations series will be small group discussions, limited to 40 individuals.Co-facilitators for this evening include:Michele Moses, Professor and Vice Provost, Boulder andPatrick O’Rourke, COO & adjunct law professor, Boulder.

Why Don't You Think Like I Do? Navigating the Space Between Us
January 31, 2024, 6pm - 7pm at
Difficult Dialogues: Community Conversations series (partnered with and their series)
​As we begin 2024, the CHAand Colorado Chautauqua are hosting a community conversation about how we form opinions, and what happens when we confront opposing views. Unlike past Difficult Dialogues panel events, the Community Conversations series will be small group discussions, limited to 40 individuals.Co-facilitators for this evening include: Karen Ashcraft, Professor of Communicationand Professor Jennifer Ho, CHA Director.

Difficult Dialogue:Antisemitism and Being Jewish in the US
September 13, 2023, 7pm - 8:30pm at Grace Commons Church
University Libraries Resources Guide:
This panel discussion focused on the rise of antisemitism in the last decade — a rise that some might say has never disappeared and has resurfaced with events like the march on Charlottesville, the attack on the Tree of Life synagogue, and recent comments by celebrities. It is hard to know how to talk about antisemitism, and this difficult dialogue engaged with multiple topics as well as what it means to be Jewish today, especially in a multi-religious and multi-racial space such as Boulder county. Among the questions our panelists pondered was: “How does antisemitism manifest in our communities today?", "Are Jews white?", "How is antisemitism different from or similar to to other forms of racism, bias, exclusion, and discrimination?", "Is criticism of Israel antisemitic?"

Difficult Dialogue:Abortion
March 22, 2023, 12pm - 1pm MT on Zoom (virtual)
University Libraries Resources Guide:
In 2022, we witnessed the end to fifty years of legal protections for the right to abortion care as a result of the United States Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. The court concluded that the constitution does not protect a right to abortion and returned the right of states to regulate abortion. Months after the case, several states have invoked total or near-total bans on abortion, the devastating social, political, and economic impacts of which we are only beginning to understand. Millions of citizens have lost access to abortion care and those already facing discriminatory barriers are disproportionately disadvantaged by the loss of this fundamental right.This panel featuredindividualsdiscussing how talking about abortion can be difficult, and how the recent overturning of Roe v. Wade makes conversation about this topic even more fraught. This was not a debateabout being pro-life or pro-choice;this event was simply to discuss thedifficulty of talking about abortion.

Difficult Dialogue: Being Black in Boulder & "This is [Not] Who We Are" Film Screening
October 27, 2022, 5:45pm - 9pm at Grace Commons Church
""is a documentary film exploring the gap between Boulder's progressive self-image and the lived experiences of its Black citizens. The film braids the lived experiences of Black characters ranging in age from 12 to 78. Some stories are searing, while others are hopeful. The film seeks to open a space for dialogue among Boulderites and about cities like Boulder, overwhelmingly white, wealthy, and conflicted about issues of diversity, inclusion, and equity. After the film screening, we hosted a group of paneliststo lead a discussion about issues of race, class, and the community.

Difficult Dialogue: Making Mistakes, Making Amends
January 25, 2022, 12:30pmMT on Zoom (Virtual)
The Spring 2022 Difficult Dialogues saughtto address what it means to make a mistake and then to repair the harm (unintentional or intentional) that happens when we make mistakes with our friends, peers, co-workers, family, or on social media. We sometimes use an expression that may be anti-trans, ableist, racially insensitive, sexist— sometimes without knowing or understanding. We may do things that cause others harm, and we don’t understand what’s happening until we get called out. So what do we do when we get called out? How do we rectify the harm and move forward? This eventfeaturedPatricia Gonzalez, Assistant Dean for Inclusive Practices;Jessica Ladd-Webert, Director of the Office of Victim Assistance; andElias Sacks, Director of the Program in Jewish Studies. The event was moderated byTyler Keyworth, Assistant Director of Restorative Justice & Conflict Resolution.

Difficult Dialogue: Saying No, Slowing Down
Fall 2021
The Fall 2021 Difficult Dialogues centered aroundholding space for saying no to holding a formal event and practicing the theme of slowing down by simply acknowledgingthe difficulty of telling someone that you are too exhausted to take on additional labor and to also take time to slow down and take time for oneself.

Difficult Dialogue: Power
February 10th, 2021, 12pm MT on Zoom (Virtual)
This eventexamined the different ways that power impacts the lives of people at Boulder and the different types of power dynamics that affect us – that make it hard to advocate for various issues and that are often difficult to talk about. ճpanelists for this event includedGwendalynn Roebke, undergraduate student;Sarah Fahmy, graduate student;Chantal Baca, staff, andErika Randall, chair and professor. The moderator wasJanet Ruppert, who wasalso a graduate student.

Difficult Dialogue: Unpacking Whiteness
September 9, 2020, 12pm MT on Zoom (Virtual)
What is “whiteness,” and how do concepts like “white privilege” and “white supremacy” contribute to anti-Black racism and systemic racism? Where do we see whiteness on campus (what does it mean to say that Boulder is “so white”)? How can we engage the Boulder community about these issues, and how can white people address and combat white privilege and white supremacy in our classrooms, our departments, and the campus at large? Our faculty panelists (who all identify as white) discussed how they “unpack whiteness” and what that phrase means to them in their efforts to be anti-racism educators and allies. This eventfeatured Max Boykoff from Environmental Studies, Sam Flaxman from Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Bethy Leonardi from Education, and Phaedra Pezzullo from Communication.

Difficult Dialogue:How to Talk Race
March 3, 2019, 12pm - 1pm at Norlin Library E260 classroom (2nd floor)
This event featured a panel of specialists who shared how they talk about race, especially focusing on how to talk about race in and out of the classroom and how to respond to issues of racism when they impact our campus community (such as the anti-black incident earlier in Fall 2018).John-Michael Rivera(Writing Program) moderated thediscussion withSam Flaxmann(Ecology and Evolutionary Biology), Tiara Na’puti (Communication), andCeleste Montoya(Women and Gender Studies).