Homegoing: The Technology of Living Data and Black Public Mourning in the Age of COVID-19

A lecture by Professor Kim Gallon (Purdue University) Registration is required. Please click here. Thursday, December 10, 2020 3:00pm-5:00pm (PST) Kim Gallon is an Associate Professor of History. Her work investigates the cultural dimensions of the Black Press in the early twentieth century. She is the author of many articles and essays as well as...

Connecting the Dots: Data Narratives of Migration, a virtual talk Roopika Risam

Roopika Risam; Digital Humanities Speaker   Event location: Zoom event   Please register here.     Abstract With the prodigious amount of data about contemporary migration currently available through sources like the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, migration has been subject of numerous data visualizations. Rhetorical and technical choices made in these visualizations have...

A conversation with Diane Ratican, author of Why LA? Pourquoi Paris?

Event Date: Monday, March 1, 2021, 3pm PST Event Location: Zoom event Please RSVP below Abstract For the first time, the cities of Los Angeles and Paris are illustrated in parallel. A one-of-a-kind collectible art book, travel guide and personal journey that compares and contrasts the history, culture, architecture, fashion, cuisine and daily life of...

Symposium in Homage to Michel Jeanneret (1940-2019)

Organized by Jean-Claude Carron (Research Professor, UCLA) Please register here for the symposium on Zoom   This symposium convened to honor Michel Jeanneret (1940-March 2019) will memorialize the critical and creative achievements of one of the pillars of early modern studies today. We will bear witness to his pioneering contributions to the current critical discourse on French...

Photography on Tilt | a virtual lecture by Professor Kalani Michell

Zoom

In 1968, Frank Walter returns to his native Antigua after years in Europe, where he devoted time to speculative genealogical family trees, and opens a portrait studio. Having heard tales of his German lineage, he didn’t anticipate being seen in Europe as only Black, rather than mixed, and contemplates how to materialize this complex history. Upon his...

Alienated Awareness: Mindfulness Paradigms of Modernist Aesthetics | a virtual lecture by Professor Michael Subialka

Zoom

Is modern alienation necessarily a source of dehumanized angst? In this presentation I examine a perhaps unexpected way in which mindfulness practices and theory can serve as a paradigm of modernist aesthetics. This different paradigm helps us reconceive the nature and function of alienation (and it cognate forms – estrangement, distance, etc.) in modernist literature...

Humanities Dialogues Spring Quarter 2021

You are invited to participate in a series of meetings, where you will discover how words/concepts essential to the human experience across cultures have acquired different meanings in different languages due to specific historical, social, political, and cultural contexts. At each meeting, you will have the opportunity to discuss one word/concept drawing upon your life...

Of Bridges: a Poetic and Philosophical Account by Thomas Harrison | Book Launch

Zoom

In conversation with Professors Marjorie Perloff of Standford and Christy Wampole of Princeton. A rich compendium of literary, architectural, and musical figurations, Harrison's Of Bridges gives a panoramic account of diverse meanings of bridges in seemingly unrelated times and places, questioning why they are built and where they lead. It examines bridges of thought and...

Humanities Welcome

Zoom

*Update* At this time, given a variety of factors, we are moving the Humanities Welcome online to a webinar. While it is unfortunate that we won’t be able to meet in person, we hope you will still join us for our exciting speakers. We will also have information on your free swag to pick up on campus....