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X-WR-CALNAME:Interdisciplinary Humanities Center UCSB
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Interdisciplinary Humanities Center UCSB
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221103T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221103T181500
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20221027T180207Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221027T180502Z
UID:10000615-1667494800-1667499300@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Alt-Right Media Literacy Series: Memeing their Way into the Mainstream: A Cultural Approach to Understanding the US Far Right
DESCRIPTION:The election of Donald Trump and the eventual J6th attempted insurrection left many people wondering how we got to this point. The answer to that question is multidimensional\, complex\, and nuanced\, and this talk focuses on several pieces that helped generate the current moment. A broad constellation of far-right extremism highly adept at marketing ideas and emotions and far more sophisticated than often understood played a key role in rebranding white supremacy to ensure wider circulation and resonance. But part of the answer to how we got here today requires stepping back to the 1980s and tracing the evolution of how the far right utilized technology to generate and distribute propaganda; cultivate and strengthen social network ties; and eventually produce links to a wide ranging cultural lifestyle complete with merchandise\, housing options\, and dating forums. The result today is a diverse and dynamic cultural landscape of far right extremism where sitting members of Congress now proudly declare themselves “Christian Nationalists” and openly speak at explicitly white supremacists conferences funded by far right social media platforms. \nPete Simi is a Professor of Sociology at Chapman University and member of the Executive Committee for the National Counterterrorism\, Innovation\, Technology\, and Education (NCITE) Center at the University of Nebraska\, Omaha. For the past 25 years\, he has been studying political violence\, hate\, and extremism. His fieldwork has taken him inside white supremacist groups across the United States\, where he has been embedded with racist skinheads\, Klan members\, neo-Nazis\, and anti-government militias. \nRegister here for Zoom attendance link \nFor more information contact: Chelsea Kai Roesch at chelsearoesch@ucsb.edu or visit altrightmedialiteracy.com. \nSponsored by the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center and the University of California Humanities Research Institute
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/alt-right-media-literacy-series-memeing-their-way-into-the-mainstream-a-cultural-approach-to-understanding-the-us-far-right/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Research Support
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Alt_Right_Series_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Chelsea Roesch":MAILTO:chelsearoesch@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221107T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221107T163000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20221018T193304Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221018T195140Z
UID:10000612-1667835000-1667838600@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Discussion: Disability in Latin American and Latinx Contexts
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a discussion on disability in Latin American and Latinx contexts. While disability studies is a diverse and evolving field\, much of the focus has been on exploring disabled bodyminds in the context of the Global North\, often leaving out questions of neoliberalism\, colonialism\, and racialization. This conversation will begin to explore how scholars interested in disability might begin expanding this conversation by including both Latin American and US Latinx perspectives on the bodymind. The conversation will be centered around two readings: the introduction to Libre Accesso: Latin American Literature and Film through Disability Studies and a short story by Ramón García\, entitled “Amor Indio: Juan Diego of San Diego.” \nShanna Killeen will moderate this event. They earned their MA in English from Oregon State University in 2017. They specialize in disability studies and queer studies with a particular focus on neurodivergence\, crip Latinx art and literature\, and aromanticism. Their dissertation\, entitled “Affect Aliens: On Neurodivergent and Aromantic Epistemologies\,” explores affective norms and the ways in which certain kinds of bodyminds come to be pathologized as lacking in affect. Their work turns to the contemporary aesthetic and discursive practices of neurodivergent and aromantic people to ask what this can tell us about affect\, interrelationality\, and care. \nWorks Cited:\nAntebi\, Susan\, and Beth Ellen Jörgensen. “Introduction: A Latin American Context for Disability Studies.” Libre Acceso: Latin American Literature and Film through Disability Studies\, State University of New York Press\, 2016.\nGarcía\, Ramón. “Amor Indio: Juan Diego of San Diego.” Virgins\, Guerrillas & Locas: Gay Latinos Writing on Love\, 1st ed\, Cleis Press\, 1999. \nFor the readings\, please write to: disabilitystudies@english.ucsb.edu \nRegister for the Zoom attendance link here \nSponsored by the IHC’s Disability Studies Initiative Research Focus Group\, Comparative Literature Program\, and Graduate Center for Literary Research
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/research-focus-group-discussion-disability-in-latin-american-and-latinx-contexts/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Disability Studies Initiative,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/RFG_DisabilitiesStudies_Event.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Disability Studies Initiative":MAILTO:rlambert@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221109T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221109T130000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20221024T201911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221028T183125Z
UID:10000613-1667995200-1667998800@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: Transnational Jewish Tradition and Memory in the Landscapes of Maurice Sendak
DESCRIPTION:This talk examines the role of Jewish folk traditions and memory in the picture books of the late Maurice Sendak (1928-2012)\, with special attention to Sendak’s handling of landscape and natural elements. Sendak’s own biography reflects a move in the 1970s from the urban spaces of Brooklyn and Manhattan to the forested landscape of Ridgefield\, Connecticut. His work speaks to the experience of first-generation children of immigrants in early twentieth-century America\, drawing on a Yiddish-inflected upbringing\, a troubled early consciousness of Nazi Europe and the Holocaust\, inherited memories of destroyed worlds\, and other elements that exceed national boundaries. Moskowitz argues that Sendak’s work values the “wildness” of the natural world\, allegorizing it as a stand-in for the emotional interior of the sensitive human child. \nGolan Moskowitz is Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies at Tulane University\, where he teaches courses on Jewish gender and sexuality\, American pop culture\, Holocaust studies\, and comics and graphic novels. He is the author of Wild Visionary: Maurice Sendak in Queer Jewish Context (2020) and of several publications on intergenerational memory in post-Holocaust family narratives. \nZoom attendance link here \nSponsored by the IHC’s Global Childhood Ecologies Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/research-focus-group-talk-transnational-jewish-tradition-and-memory-in-the-landscapes-of-maurice-sendak/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Global Childhood Media,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Golan_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Global Childhood Ecologies":MAILTO:rachelfeldman@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221110T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221112T183000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20221107T180434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221107T180434Z
UID:10000617-1668096000-1668277800@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Conference: XXV International Colloquium on Mexican Literature: Ciudad y Mujer / Woman and City
DESCRIPTION:This year’s colloquium will place Santa Barbara in the center: its history (as an original town and a colonial city of Spanish migration in past centuries\, as well as Mexican and Central American migration in more recent times); its current situation; the richness of its archives; the attractiveness of its streets. With that in mind\, we will explore how women intervene in urban space and temporality\, and the ways they construct memory and experience. \nFor our congress\, the two themes are integrated into one: woman and the city in history\, culture\, literature\, and in other arts and disciplines\, suggesting innumerable ways of understanding. Therefore\, the presentations and conferences will also address topics on women founders and foundations\, women in transition and on the borders\, indigenous peoples and gentrification\, (un)safe spaces and times for women. \nOurs is an interdisciplinary and inclusive colloquium of an academic and educational nature. It is an event that is not for profit\, and will be free and open to the public in general\, and to the scholarly community and friends of our university. This many years of continuity are proof of an activity that directly connects with the culture and the modern history of Santa Barbara\, home to our institution. \nThursday\, Nov. 10\, 2022: Mosher Alumni Hall UCSB. Friday\, Nov. 11 & Saturday\, Nov. 12\, 2022: BC Forum SBCC \nSponsored by the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center (UCSB)\, Department of Spanish and Portuguese (UCSB)\, Santa Barbara City College\, The Global Latinidades Project (UCSB)\, Division of Social Sciences (UCSB)\, Graduate Division (UCSB)\, Office of the Associate Vice Chancellor for Diversity\, Equity and Academic Policy (UCSB)\, Las Maestras Center for Xicana[x] Indigenous Thought\, Art and Social Praxis (UCSB)\, Latin American and Iberian Studies (UCSB)\, Chicano Studies Institute (UCSB)\, Comparative Literature (UCSB)\, Feria Internacional de la Lectura Yucatán (FILEY / UADY)\, Universidad del Claustro de Sor Juana\, and UC-Mexicanistas
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/conference-xxv-international-colloquium-on-mexican-literature-ciudad-y-mujer-woman-and-city/
LOCATION:Mosher Alumni Hall\, BC Forum SBCC
CATEGORIES:All Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Colloquium-on-Mexican-Literature_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Jakob Romine":MAILTO:jakobromine@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221110T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221110T180000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20221108T225716Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221108T230811Z
UID:10000618-1668099600-1668103200@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Talk: Un Llanto Colectivo: a PerformaProtesta
DESCRIPTION:Join via Zoom here \nThis talk will be an examination of the llanto (wail/scream) as political performance praxis through reflecting on the collective work of Cherríe Moraga\, Celia Herrera Rodríguez and approximately twenty-five artists to stage a “PerformaProtesta\,” Un llanto colectivo\, at San Diego immigrant detention centers following the separation of migrant families during the summer of 2018. It discusses this “llanto space” as an alternative to the politics of recognition and representation\, and the different ways via which it instantiates a refusal of these modalities. \nDr. Jade Power-Sotomayor is a Cali-Rican educator\, scholar and performer who works as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Theatre and Dance at UC San Diego. Engaging with discourses of embodiment and embodied practices of remembering and creating community\, her work focuses on the fluid reconstitution of Latinx identity ultimately produced by doing and not simply being. Overall\, she seeks to promote an in-depth engagement with Latinx performance-making as a framework for taking up the most salient issues of our time: colonialism\, anti-Blackness\, xenophobia\, economic disparity\, patriarchy and misogyny\, queer and transphobia\, ableism and mental health access\, climate catastrophe and environmental justice. More than just including historically occulted voices as a form of ethnographic encounter\, she looks to these instances of performance for what they reveal about the structures of power and social dynamics that have shaped the world we collectively share. Her research interests include: Latinx theatre and performance\, dance studies\, nightlife\, eco-dramaturgies\, epistemologies of the body\, feminist of color critique\, bilingualism\, and intercultural performance in the Caribbean diaspora. \nDr. Power-Sotomayor is currently working on a monograph called ¡Habla!:Speaking Bodies in Latinx Dance and Performance in which she theorizes her concept of “embodied code-switching” across distinct “Latinx” social dance spaces. Foregrounding how each of these dancings (bomba\, son jarocho\, perreo and Zumba) mark blackness within Latinidad\, the book focuses on how dancers strategically navigate and move amongst different embodied codes of belonging and peri-linguistic valences of meaning-making\, especially those encountered by Latinxs in relationship to dominant US culture. In 2021\, her essay “Corporeal Sounding: Listening to Bomba Dance\, Listening to puertorriqueñxs”won the Sally Banes Publication Prize from the American Society for Theatre Research and her essay “Moving Borders and Dancing in Place: Son jarocho’s Speaking Bodies at the Fandango Fronterizo” received the Gertrude Lippincott Award from the Dance Studies Association. She also recently co-edited a special issue of CENTRO Journal for Puerto Rican studies called “Puerto Rican Bomba: Syncopating Bodies\, Histories\, Geographies” and collaborates on the Bomba Wiki project\, a crowdsourced online bomba archive. Publications can be found in TDR\, Performance Matters\, Latino Studies Journal\, Latin American Theatre Review and The Oxford Handbook of Theatre and Dance. Dr. Power-Sotomayor also works as a dramaturg\, and co-directs and performs with the San Diego group Bomba Liberté. She is grateful to her many teachers and students for gifting her a lifelong experience of learning. \nJoin via Zoom here \nCosponsored by the University of California Office of the President Multi-campus Research Programs and Initiative Funding\, the UC Humanities Research Institute\, the UCSB Interdisciplinary Humanities Center\, Department of Theater and Dance\, and Colloquium in Dance\, Theater\, and Performance Studies
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/talk-un-llanto-colectivo-a-performaprotesta/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Research Support
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Screen-Shot-2022-11-08-at-3.03.18-PM.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Ninotchka D. Bennahum":MAILTO:bennahum@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221115T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221115T180000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20220902T203010Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220916T201436Z
UID:10000603-1668529800-1668535200@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Humanities Decanted: Hollywood’s Embassies
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a dialogue between Ross Melnick (Film and Media Studies) and Charles Wolfe (Film and Media Studies) about Melnick’s new book\, Hollywood’s Embassies: How Movie Theaters Projected American Power Around the World. Refreshments will be served. \nBeginning in the 1920s\, audiences around the globe were seduced not only by Hollywood films but also by lavish movie theaters that were owned and operated by the major American film companies. These theaters aimed to provide a quintessentially “American” experience. Outfitted with American technology and accoutrements\, they allowed local audiences to watch American films in an American-owned cinema in a distinctly American way. \nIn a history that stretches from Buenos Aires and Tokyo to Johannesburg and Cairo\, Melnick considers these movie houses as cultural embassies. He examines how the exhibition of Hollywood films became a constant flow of political and consumerist messaging\, selling American ideas\, products\, and power\, especially during fractious eras. Melnick demonstrates that while Hollywood’s marketing of luxury and consumption often struck a chord with local audiences\, it was also frequently tone-deaf to new social\, cultural\, racial\, and political movements. He argues that the story of Hollywood’s global cinemas is not a simple narrative of cultural and industrial indoctrination and colonization. Instead\, it is one of negotiation\, booms and busts\, successes and failures\, adoptions and rejections\, and a precursor to later conflicts over the spread of American consumer culture. A truly global account\, Hollywood’s Embassies shows how the entanglement of worldwide movie theaters with American empire offers a new way of understanding film history and the history of U.S. soft power. \nRoss Melnick is Professor of Film and Media Studies at UC Santa Barbara. He is the author of American Showman: Samuel “Roxy” Rothafel and the Birth of the Entertainment Industry\, 1908–1935 (Columbia\, 2012) and coeditor of Rediscovering U.S. Newsfilm: Cinema\, Television\, and the Archive (2018). \nSponsored by the IHC’s Harry Girvetz Memorial Endowment
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/humanities-decanted-hollywoods-embassies/
LOCATION:McCune Conference Room\, 6020 HSSB\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Harry Girvetz Memorial Endowment,All Events,Humanities Decanted
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Melnick_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Interdisciplinary Humanities Center":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221117T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221117T170000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20221115T191328Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221116T225749Z
UID:10000621-1668697200-1668704400@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Talk: Anti-Racist Paradoxes
DESCRIPTION:In this talk\, Dr. Luis Martín Valdiviezo Arista will analyze some current discourses in the political and educational spheres that confront inequalities and injustices derived from racism that despite their best intentions\, are nevertheless still based on racist assumptions. \nDr. Valdiviezo Arista earned his EdD in Social Justice Education and his MEd in International Education at UMass-Amherst. Previously\, he received his License in Philosophy and Bachelor in Humanities at Pontificia Universidad Católica de Peru (PUCP) in Lima city. Based on intercultural\, decolonial and critical education approaches\, his research focuses on ethnicity\, gender\, social class\, and formal education in Perú and Latin American societies. He is in charge of courses in Ethics and Philosophy of Education at PUCP. He is a member of the International Network of Intercultural Studies-PUCP\, which promotes\, together with the Peruvian Network of Universities\, the adoption of intercultural policies and programs in Peruvian universities. Recently\, he was a consultant for the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Culture\, and trained and advised a group of PUCP graduate students who implemented a literacy course for minors in a detention center in Lima\, Peru. He is as well a member of the Latin American Network of Intercultural Studies and Experiences (recognized by UNESCO) that integrates researchers and activists from Mexico\, Brazil\, Colombia\, Uruguay\, Chile\, Nicaragua\, Argentina and Peru. Likewise\, he is a member of the Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of African Diaspora Teachers Training\, promoted by the Afro-Peruvian NGO Center for Ethnic Development (CEDET) located in Lima\, Peru. Currently\, he is Visiting Scholar in the Center for Latin American & Caribbean Studies at Brown University. He is offering the undergraduate course Andean-Caribbean Dialogues of Negritude and doing research on the representations of women\, indigenous people\, and Afro-descendants in textbooks for primary education in Peru. His most recent book is Educación\, Negritud e Interculturalidad. Ensayos en tiempos de neoliberalismo\, pandemia y bicentenario en el Perú (2021). He has also published articles and book chapters on the educational situation of Afrodescendants and Indigenous Peruvians in academic journals and publishers of Latin America and Europe. In 2020-2021\, he was the Custer Visiting Scholar of the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) at Harvard University. He has written three novels and numerous short stories\, some of which have obtained recognition in national and international contests. He comes from a Peruvian family with Afro-descendant\, Amazonian\, Andean\, and Hispanic roots. \nSponsored by the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center\, Department of Spanish and Portuguese\, Gevirtz Graduate School of Education\, Latin American and Iberian Studies Program\, Department of Black Studies\, Department of History\, and Silvia Bermudez.
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/anti-racist-paradoxes/
LOCATION:Gevirtz Graduate School of Education\, Room 1217\, Gevirtz Graduate School of Education\, UC Santa Barbara\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events
ORGANIZER;CN="Evelyne Laurent-Perrault":MAILTO:evelauper@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221207T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221207T130000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20221114T182610Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221118T211355Z
UID:10000620-1670414400-1670418000@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: Leah Goldberg's Psychogeographical Mapping of Hebrew Children's Culture
DESCRIPTION:This talk examines the comparative representations of the Mizrahi immigrant and the Holocaust refugee through the motif of the child immigrant to Israel in the mid-20th century through the work of Leah Goldberg (1911-1970). A prolific modernist poet\, author\, playwright\, literary translator\, and comparative literary critic who chaired the Department of Comparative Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem\, Goldberg’s focus upon dislocation and language in her work for both adults and children is informed by the forced migrations that she experienced both as a child during World War I and as an adult during World War II. In this talk\, Feldman reevaluates Goldberg’s contributions to Hebrew modernism and children’s literature with special focus upon how her fiction collapses the border between the literary landscapes and geographical ones\, defamiliarizing and democratizing the haunting landscapes of her childhood as well as new spaces of Israeli toponymy\, in particular the liminal spaces that connect Jerusalem and Tel Aviv to migrant camps and children’s communities on the Kibbutzim. Feldman interprets Goldberg’s handling of these topics through the lens of psychogeographical mapping\, or charting the “specific effects of the geographical environment\, consciously organized or not\, on the emotions and behavior of individuals” (Debord 1955) – arguing that Goldberg’s impulse to explore the effects of geographical space upon her child subjects signals a particularly modernist resistance to nationalist-Zionist narratives. \nRachel Feldman is a doctoral candidate in Comparative Literature at UC Santa Barbara\, where she is finalizing her dissertation\, “The Mother Tongues and Multilingual Specters of Modern Hebrew Children’s Literature\,” which explores how a new constellation of authors – linguists\, translators\, poets\, and artists – turned to multimodal children’s literature and children’s systems in order to reconcile major sociolinguistic ideological concerns\, particularly in negotiating modern Hebrew as a their new “mother tongue” in light of its persistent role as a “heritage language.” The dissertation argues that these authors’ development of a discrete yet radically polyphonic modern Hebraist writing aimed at an intergenerational and multilingual audience employed children’s genres to discretely promote counter-hegemonic ideas about Hebrew heritage language learners. Feldman is a UC President’s Dissertation Year Fellow and Max Kade Fellow 2022-2023\, a co-convener of the IHC Global Childhood Ecologies Research Focus Group and a graduate organizer of the upcoming 26th International Research Society for Children’s Literature (IRSCL) Congress 2023\, “Ecologies of Childhood\,” to be hosted August 12–17 by UC Santa Barbara\, in collaboration with Stanford University. \nZoom attendance link here \nSponsored by the IHC’s Global Childhood Ecologies Research Focus Group \nPhoto Credit: Anna Riwkin-Brick\, 1950
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/leah-goldbergs-psychogeographical-mapping-of-hebrew-childrens-culture/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Global Childhood Media,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Psychogeographical-Mapping-of-Hebrew-Childrens-Culture_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Global Childhood Ecologies":MAILTO:saraweld@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230111T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230111T173000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001132
CREATED:20221205T170813Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221214T182958Z
UID:10000403-1673452800-1673458200@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: Consensus without Collaboration? The Future of Emotion Research from the Perspective of History
DESCRIPTION:In recent years\, multiple disciplines have converged on a biocultural understanding of human emotion\, sensation and experience\, but knowledge production in disciplinary silos remains. This talk is about the discipline of history’s positionality in this budding\, if unwitting\, consensus among social neuroscientists\, social psychologists\, transcultural psychiatrists\, neurophilosophers\, and social scientists. Positioning history as a bridge builder\, it nevertheless outlines the significant obstacles to genuine transdisciplinary collaboration. \nRob Boddice (Ph.D.\, FRHistS) is Senior Research Fellow at the Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence in the History of Experience\, Tampere University\, Finland. He is the author/editor of 13 books\, including Knowing Pain: A History of Sensation\, Emotion and Experience (Polity Press\, 2023)\, Humane Professions: The Defence of Experimental Medicine\, 1876-1914 (Cambridge University Press\, 2021) and A History of Feelings (Reaktion\, 2019). A leading scholar in the history of emotions\, his revised and fully updated second edition of The History of Emotions is forthcoming from Manchester University Press. \nZoom attendance link here \nSponsored by the IHC’s Emotions in History Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/consensus-without-collaboration/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Emotions in History,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Boddice_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Emotions in History RFG":MAILTO:yzuo@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230124T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230124T173000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20221201T002642Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230201T171024Z
UID:10000397-1674576000-1674581400@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Humanities Decanted: Jody Enders\, Translating Medieval Farce
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a dialogue between Jody Enders (French and Italian) and Leo Cabranes-Grant (Spanish and Portuguese\, Theater and Dance) about Enders’ two new edited and translated volumes of medieval French comedies. Refreshments will be served. \nTrial by Farce: A Dozen Medieval French Comedies in Modern English (University of Michigan Press\, 2023)\nIn Trial by Farce\, prize-winning theater historian Jody Enders brings twelve of the funniest legal farces to English-speaking audiences in a refreshingly uncensored but philologically faithful vernacular. Newly conceived as much for scholars as for students and theater practitioners\, this repertoire and its familiar stock characters come vividly to life as they struggle to negotiate the limits of power\, politics\, class\, gender\, and\, above all\, justice. Through the distinctive blend of wit\, social critique\, and breathless boisterousness that is farce\, we gain a new understanding of comedy itself as form of political correction. In ways presciently modern and even postmodern\, farce paints a different cultural picture of the notoriously authoritarian Middle Ages with its own vision of liberty and justice for all. Theater eternally offers ways for new generations to raise their voices and act. \nImmaculate Deception and Further Ribaldries: Yet Another Dozen Medieval French Plays in Modern English (University of Pennsylvania Press\, 2022)\nIn the sacrilegious world of Immaculate Deception\, the third volume in a series of stage-friendly translations from the Middle French\, twelve engagingly funny satires target religious hypocrisy in that in-your-face way that only true slapstick can muster. There is literally nothing sacred. Why this repertoire and why now? The current political climate has had dire consequences for the pleasures of satire at a cultural moment when we have never needed it more. It turns out that the proverbial Dark Ages had a lighter side; and France’s over 200 rollicking\, frolicking\, singing\, and dancing comedies—more extant than in any other vernacular—have waited long enough for their moment in the spotlight. They are seriously funny: funny enough to reclaim their place in cultural history\, and serious enough to participate in the larger conversation about what it means to be a social influencer\, then and now. Rather than relegate medieval texts to the dustbin of history\, an unabashedly feminist translation can reframe and reject the sexism of bygone days by doing what theater always invites us to do: interpret\, inflect\, and adapt. \nJody Enders is Distinguished Professor of French at UC Santa Barbara and Director of The Public Speaking Initiative. \nSponsored by the IHC’s Harry Girvetz Memorial Endowment
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/humanities-decanted-jody-enders/
LOCATION:McCune Conference Room\, 6020 HSSB\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Harry Girvetz Memorial Endowment,All Events,Humanities Decanted
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/HD_Enders_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Interdisciplinary Humanities Center":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230202T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230202T180000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20221201T003650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230216T213243Z
UID:10000399-1675353600-1675360800@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Roundtable Discussion: Isaac Julien's Once Again...(Statues Never Die)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a discussion with Isaac Julien about his process of creating Once Again… (Statues Never Die). Commissioned by the Barnes Foundation on the occasion of its 100th Anniversary in 2022\, Julien’s immersive\, black-and-white\, five-screen\, on-site video installation Once Again… (Statues Never Die) brings to light the relationship between Dr. Albert C. Barnes\, who was an early U.S. collector and exhibitor of African material culture\, and the famed African American philosopher and cultural critic Alain Locke\, known as the “Father of the Harlem Renaissance.” A reception will follow. \nDiscussants will include Mark Nash\, Professor at UC Santa Cruz\, and Jeffrey Stewart\, Distinguished Professor and MacArthur Foundation Chair in Black Studies and Interim Vice Chancellor for Diversity\, Equity\, and Inclusion at UCSB. Susan Solt\, Distinguished Professor of Theater Arts at UC Santa Cruz\, will moderate. \nAttendees will receive a link to the complete film. \nTo learn more about Once Again… (Statues Never Die) and to view a trailer\, visit https://www.barnesfoundation.org/whats-on/exhibition/isaac-julien-statues-never-die \nSir Isaac Julien KBE RA is Distinguished Professor of the Arts at UC Santa Cruz\, where he also leads the Isaac Julien Lab together with Arts Professor Mark Nash. Julien is the recipient of The Royal Academy of Arts Charles Wollaston Award 2017. Most recently\, he was awarded a Kaiserring Goslar Award in 2022\, and was granted a knighthood as part of the Queen’s Honours List in 2022. \nSponsored by the IHC’s Hester and Cedric Crowell Endowment and the UCSB Office of Diversity\, Equity\, and Inclusion \nImage: An installation view of Isaac Julien’s Once Again… (Statues Never Die) at the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia. Photo: Henrik Kam. Courtesy of the artist
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/roundtable-discussion-isaac-julien/
LOCATION:McCune Conference Room\, 6020 HSSB\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hester and Cedric Crowell Endowment,All Events,Other Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Julien_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Interdisciplinary Humanities Center":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230208T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230208T131500
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230118T004509Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230120T200648Z
UID:10000627-1675857600-1675862100@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: The Trials and Tribulations of Bambi and the Inscrutable Felix Salten\, Lover of Animals
DESCRIPTION:This talk follows Jack Zipes’ recent publication of his new translation of Felix Salten’s Bambi (1923). Zipes’ research for this book demonstrates that Bambi was essentially a Jew\, as were all the animals in the forest\, and that he and they had to spend their lives avoiding pogroms in the forest and learning to deal with loneliness. Salten wrote other books\, such as Fifteen Rabbits (1928) and Bambi’s Children: The Story of a Forest Family (1939)\, which reflect upon the conditions Jews faced in Europe when anti-Semitism was commonplace. In addition\, Zipes shall also discuss Hugo Bettauer’s Vienna without Jews (1923) and Artur Landberger’s Berlin without Jews (1924) in light of the fact that such constant pogroms were preparing the way for the Holocaust. There is a connection\, Zipes believes\, between the joyful killing of animals in the forest and the ways that Jews were murdered during the first half of the twentieth century. \nJack Zipes is Professor Emeritus of German and Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota. In addition to his scholarly work\, he is an active storyteller in public schools and has worked with children’s theaters in Europe and the United States. Much of his early work has been devoted to the Brothers Grimm and German-Jewish culture. In 2019\, he founded his own publishing house called Little Mole and Honey Bear and has published Deirdre and William Conselman’s Keedle the Great\, or All You Want to Know about Fascism (2020)\, Tistou\, The Boy with the Green Thumbs of Peace (2022)\, and Rolf Brandt\, Hilarious and Haunting Fairy Tales (2022). More recently\, Zipes has published a new translation of Felix Salten’s The Original Bambi: The Story of a Life in the Forest (2022) with illustrations by Alenka Sottler and Buried Treasures: The Political Power of Fairy Tales (2023)\, a collection of essays on significant writers and illustrators who have been neglected. He is currently working on an anthology of European Jewish literature and has reissued his book\, The Operated Jew and The Operated Goy. \nZoom attendance link here \nSponsored by the IHC’s Global Childhood Ecologies Research Focus Group and the Department of German and Slavic Studies \nImage: HUNT / cycle Bambi Vienna\, sketch by Alenka Sottler with photo from Österreichische Nationalbibliothek Kartensammlung
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/research-focus-group-talk-the-trials-and-tribulations-of-bambi-and-the-inscrutable-felix-salten-lover-of-animals/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Global Childhood Media,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/Zipes-Bambi_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Global Childhood Ecologies":MAILTO:saraweld@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230208T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230208T180000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230103T224517Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230130T232025Z
UID:10000623-1675872000-1675879200@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Award: Luis Leal Award for Distinction in Chicano/Latino Literature
DESCRIPTION:The annual Luis Leal Award for Distinction in Chicano/Latino Literature will be presented to Cherríe Moraga on February 8 in the McCune Conference Room of the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center. The award is given to a Chicano/Latino writer who has achieved national and international recognition. Cherríe Moraga is one of the most accomplished poets\, playwrights\, and writers in the United States. She is the author of numerous publications\, including This Bridge Called My Back\, co-edited with Gloria Anzaldua; Loving in the War Years; The Last Generation; and The Native Country of the Heart. Moraga has won numerous awards for her writings. She is a Professor of English at UCSB and Co-Director of Las Maestras Center for Xicana Thought\, Art\, and Social Practice. \nSponsored by the Chicano/Latino Research Group; the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center; Office of the Chancellor; Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor; Office of the Vice Chancellor for Diversity\, Equity\, and Inclusion; Equal Opportunity & Discrimination Prevention Office; Luis Leal Endowed Chair; Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies; Chicano Studies Institute; Educational Opportunity Program; Department of Spanish and Portuguese; and Latin American and Iberian Studies
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/award-luis-leal-award-for-distinction-in-chicano-latino-literature-2023/
LOCATION:McCune Conference Room\, 6020 HSSB\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Sub-Units
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/LealAward2023_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Chicano/Latino Research Group":MAILTO:garcia@history.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230213T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230213T161500
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230124T002715Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230124T003331Z
UID:10000628-1676300400-1676304900@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Seminar: Care and Disability
DESCRIPTION:In her 1982 work\, In a Different Voice\, Carol Gilligan outlined a new manner for women to think about moral values and practices\, and put forward the concept of care\, which has recently been at the core of a new ethics. The ethics of care centers our social relations on vulnerability\, dependency\, and interdependence. In this session of the Disability Studies Initiative\, we will discuss works that address the limit of individual autonomy and the place of disability in the philosophy of care: Eva Feder Kittay’s “The Ethics of Care\, Dependence\, and Disability” (2011) and Laura Davy’s “Philosophical Inclusive Design: Intellectual Disability and the Limits of Individual Autonomy in Moral and Political Theory” (2015). Please write to: disabilitystudies@english.ucsb.edu to get the readings. Catherine Nesci will moderate the discussion. A Professor of Comparative Literature and French Studies at UC Santa Barbara with courtesy appointment in the Departments of Germanic & Slavic Studies and Feminist Studies\, Nesci works at the interface of gender and literary urban studies in modern and contemporary French and Western literatures. Her main scholarly interests include urban genres (flânerie\, detection\, Noir\, the underworld\, the popular novel\, literary cartographies); gendered cityscapes\, gendered embodiments; care\, remediation\, and literature; memory studies; Shoah & genocide studies; disability studies. \nRegister for the Zoom attendance link here \nSponsored by the IHC’s Disability Studies Initiative Research Focus Group\, Comparative Literature Program\, Graduate Center for Literary Research\, Disabled Students Program\, and Commission on Disability Equity
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/care-and-disability/
LOCATION:Early Modern Center\, 2510 South Hall (Hybrid)\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Disability Studies Initiative,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/RFG_DisabilitiesStudies_Event.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Disability Studies Initiative":MAILTO:rlambert@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230216T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230216T171500
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20220812T205755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230224T193936Z
UID:10000601-1676563200-1676567700@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:TMI Talk: The Climate Infowhelm
DESCRIPTION:Climate infowhelm is the experience of feeling overwhelmed by too much information about the environmental crisis. Heather Houser will discuss how infowhelm feels\, sounds\, and looks in various media and how contemporary art manages environmental knowledge and provides new ways of understanding environmental change. Audience Q&A will follow. \nHeather Houser is the Mody C. Boatright Regents Professor in American and English Literature at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author of Ecosickness in Contemporary U.S. Fiction: Environment and Affect (2014)\, Infowhelm: Environmental Art and Literature in an Age of Data (2020)\, as well as numerous academic and public articles. Learn more at heatherhouser.com. \nSponsored by the IHC’s Too Much Information series and the IHC Idee Levitan Endowment \nImage: Crop from cover of Infowhelm
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/tmi-talk-heather-houser/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Too Much Information,Idee Levitan Endowment,All Events,IHC Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Houser_Event-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Interdisciplinary Humanities Center":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230217T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230218T183000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230113T202208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230120T001145Z
UID:10000624-1676622600-1676745000@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Sal Castro Memorial Conference on the Chicano Movement and the Long History of Mexican American Civil Rights Struggles
DESCRIPTION:The Sal Castro Memorial Conference on the Chicano Movement and the Long History of Mexican American Civil Rights Struggles will focus on the Chicano Movement of the late 1960s and 1970s as a seminal period in Chicano history on the struggle for civil rights and community empowerment. Papers will also include earlier Mexican American civil rights struggles and the continuation of such struggle after the Chicano Movement. This will be the 6th bi-annual Sal Castro Conference named after one of the major figures of the Chicano Movement especially in the area of educational justice. The conference will also include a special symposium on the second day on the Work and Legacy of Professor Mario T. Garcia in connection with his recent retirement after 47 years at UCSB\, affiliated with both Chicana and Chicano Studies and the History Department. Various speakers will address his scholarly contribution in the areas of Leadership and Civil Rights; Chicano Catholic History; and Oral History and Testimonio. Several of Prof. Garcia’s graduate students will speak about their work with him. As part of the symposium\, there will be a special video presented on the Life and Career of Mario T. Garcia\, prepared by Dr. Todd Holmes of the Bancroft Library. \nSponsored by the IHC’s Chicano/Latino Research Group; Interdisciplinary Humanities Center; Office of the Chancellor; Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor; Office of the Vice Chancellor for Diversity\, Equity & Inclusion; Dean of Social Sciences; Office of Equal Opportunity & Discrimination Prevention; Chicano Studies Institute; Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies; Educational Opportunity Program; Department of History; Latin American & Iberian Studies; Las Maestras Center; Department of Spanish & Portuguese \nIf you have questions about the conference\, please contact Professor Mario Garcia or Professor Ralph Armbruster-Sandoval.
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/sal-castro-memorial-conference-on-the-chicano-movement-and-the-long-history-of-mexican-american-civil-rights-struggles/
LOCATION:McCune Conference Room\, 6020 HSSB\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Sub-Units
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/Castro-ChicanoConference_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Chicano/Latino Research Group":MAILTO:garcia@history.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230222T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230222T130000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230117T230650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230215T172417Z
UID:10000625-1677067200-1677070800@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Information Sessions: Public Humanities Graduate Fellows Program
DESCRIPTION:Wednesday\, February 22 | 12:00 PM | McCune Conference Room\, HSSB 6020 | RSVP\nLunch will be provided.\nAND\nThursday\, February 23 | 4:00 PM | McCune Conference Room\, HSSB 6020 | RSVP\nRefreshments will be provided. \nJoin the IHC on 2/22 or 2/23 to learn more about the
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/information-sessions-public-humanities-graduate-fellows-program-feb-22-2023/
LOCATION:McCune Conference Room\, 6020 HSSB\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Research Support,Other Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/IHC_PublicHumanities_slogan.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Interdisciplinary Humanities Center":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230222T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230222T134500
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20221102T185725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230120T201004Z
UID:10000616-1677069000-1677073500@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: Racist Love - Author Conversation
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a discussion of Leslie Bow’s Racist Love: Asian Abstraction and the Pleasures of Fantasy (2022). The talk will feature a brief comment from the author\, followed by Q and A with participants. \nRacist Love traces the ways in which Asian Americans become objects of anxiety and desire. Conceptualizing these feelings as “racist love\,” Bow explores how race is abstracted and then projected onto Asianized objects. Bow shows how anthropomorphic objects and images such as cartoon animals in children’s books\, home décor and cute tchotchkes\, contemporary visual art\, and artificially intelligent robots function as repositories of seemingly positive feelings and attachment to Asianness. \nProfessor Leslie Bow is Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of English and Asian American Studies and Dorothy Draheim Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She is the author of the award-winning\, ‘Partly Colored’: Asian Americans and Racial Anomaly in the Segregated South (New York University Press\, 2010); and Betrayal and Other Acts of Subversion: Feminism\, Sexual Politics\, Asian American Women’s Literature (Princeton University Press\, 2001). \nRegister here for Zoom attendance link \nSponsored by the IHC’s Asian/American Studies Collective Research Focus Group and the Department of Asian American Studies \nPhoto credit: Duke University Press
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/racist-love-author-conversation/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:The Asian/American Studies Collective,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/RacistLove_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Asian/American Studies Collective RFG":MAILTO:aasc.ucsb@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230223T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230223T150000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20221026T183304Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230221T163851Z
UID:10000614-1677157200-1677164400@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Meeting: Defiant Worship: How Conservative Christian Legal Organizations are Changing Legal Culture
DESCRIPTION:In this RFG meeting\, Moore will discuss her new paper that offers a critical analysis of religious freedom discourse engendered by the coronavirus pandemic. Restrictions on indoor religious gatherings during the first nine months of the pandemic were challenged in courts\, and their constitutionality was addressed by the Supreme Court over the summer of 2020. This historic period—with lockdowns\, testing\, contact tracing\, and vaccines\, not to mention its prohibition on public gatherings—provide a unique opportunity to assess religious liberty claims during a nationwide public health emergency. The paper’s focus is on public discourses related to what we can describe as “defiant worship\,” or actions taken by pastors and congregations that violated state mandates about indoor religious gatherings. This paper contributes to the secondary literature that deconstructs assumed binaries between secular and religious\, legal and lay\, and public and private spheres\, and examines key actors that approach constitutional law from their religious commitments\, such as Conservative Christian Legal Organizations (CCLOs). \nKathleen M. Moore is Professor of Religious Studies and Associate Dean of Humanities and Fine Arts at UCSB. This research is part of a larger book project on religious liberty arguments in the American conservative Christian legal movement\, tentatively entitled “When the Religious Turn Litigious.” \nSponsored by the IHC’s Legal Humanities Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/research-focus-group-meeting-defiant-worship-how-conservative-christian-legal-organizations-are-changing-legal-culture/
LOCATION:6056 HSSB\, UC Santa Barbara\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106-7100\, United States
CATEGORIES:Legal Humanities,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Moore_LegalHumanities_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Legal Humanities RFG":MAILTO:kmoore@religion.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230223T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230223T170000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230117T231344Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230215T172425Z
UID:10000626-1677168000-1677171600@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Information Sessions: Public Humanities Graduate Fellows Program
DESCRIPTION:Wednesday\, February 22 | 12:00 PM | McCune Conference Room\, HSSB 6020 | RSVP\nLunch will be provided.\nAND\nThursday\, February 23 | 4:00 PM | McCune Conference Room\, HSSB 6020 | RSVP\nRefreshments will be provided. \nJoin the IHC on 2/22 or 2/23 to learn more about the
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/information-sessions-public-humanities-graduate-fellows-program-feb-23-2023/
LOCATION:McCune Conference Room\, 6020 HSSB\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Research Support,Other Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/IHC_PublicHumanities_slogan.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Interdisciplinary Humanities Center":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230227T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230227T173000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20221221T182508Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230209T194253Z
UID:10000622-1677513600-1677519000@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: US Policymaking and the Promises of Technology in the 1990s' “New Economy”
DESCRIPTION:On April 5th\, 2000\, President William Clinton stepped to the microphone at the White House Conference on the New Economy and told those gathered that the United States was experiencing “an economic transformation as profound as that that led us into the industrial revolution.” The 1990s was a heady moment for chatter about technological change\, especially around personal computers and the Internet. Microsoft CEO Bill Gates predicted Business @ the Speed of Thought\, as one of his book titles put it\, and Wired writer Kevin Kelly argued that the Internet would lead to the dematerialization of the economy. This “irrational exuberance” would eventually end in the dot com bust\, but not before members of the Clinton administration used projections around “the New Economy” to justify a number of decisions that would have far-reaching ramifications\, including policies around telecommunications\, labor and trade\, education and training\, student loans\, and economic\, racial\, and gender inequality. \nIn this talk\, Lee Vinsel will build on recent work on the history of the Clinton White House and political economy\, including Margaret O’Mara’s The Code: Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America and Nelson Lichtenstein and Judith Stein’s forthcoming\, A Fabulous Failure: The Clinton Presidency and the Transformation of American Capitalism. Vinsel will ask what can be gained for this literature by focusing on technology\, both the actual material change taking place in the 1990s and\, perhaps most importantly\, the ideas and fantasies surrounding the concept “technology\,” which greatly outpaced reality. \nLee Vinsel is Associate Professor of Science\, Technology and Society at Virginia Tech. \nSponsored by the IHC’s Machines\, People\, and Politics Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/us-policymaking-and-the-promises-of-technology-in-the-1990s-new-economy/
LOCATION:4041 HSSB
CATEGORIES:All Events,Machines, People, and Politics,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Vinsel_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Machines%2C People%2C and Politics RFG":MAILTO:pmccray@history.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230302T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230302T171500
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20221201T004124Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230309T183427Z
UID:10000401-1677772800-1677777300@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:TMI Talk: Critical Race Theory (CRT): What It Is\, What It Isn’t\, and What You Need to Know
DESCRIPTION:Critical Race Theory (CRT) seeks to understand why inequality persists in a society that has explicitly condemned racism and has repeatedly adopted laws and policies intended to eliminate it. Drawing on research in history\, social sciences\, and the humanities\, CRT demonstrates how laws and policies can reproduce racial inequality—even when they are adopted without explicit racial bias. CRT is thus an important tool to support our nation’s ongoing efforts to achieve a robust multiracial democracy. \nOver the past year\, CRT has been a source of discussion everywhere – in the media\, in school board meetings\, in classrooms – and has generated many questions. During this session\, Taifha Alexander\, UCLA Law CRT Forward Project Director\, will discuss CRT\, its founding\, and contributions\, and the recent assault on the theory. Audience Q&A will follow. \nTaifha Natalee Alexander currently serves as the CRT Forward Project Director at UCLA School of Law Critical Race Studies Program. She graduated\, with honors\, from both Georgetown Law and UCLA School of Law. Taifha has over twelve years of experience in higher education. Her legal studies and research are focused at the intersection of law\, critical race studies\, higher education\, social justice\, and equity. While a law student at Georgetown\, Taifha’s article\, “We Can’t Breathe: How Top Law Schools Can Resuscitate an Inclusive Climate for Minority and Low-Income Students\,” was published in the Georgetown Journal of Modern Critical Race Perspectives. Since earning her J.D.\, Taifha has served in roles at University of South Carolina Aiken\, UCLA\, and Wofford College\, to manifest the recommendations she put forth in her article. Taifha’s commitment to equity\, justice\, and anti-racism was fostered at St. John’s University in Queens\, NY\, where she earned her Bachelor of Science in Legal Studies. \nFree to attend; registration required to receive Zoom webinar attendance link\n \nSponsored by the IHC’s Too Much Information series and the Harry Girvetz Memorial Endowment \nImage: Screenshot of the CRT Forward Tracking Project Interactive Map (https://crtforward.law.ucla.edu/)
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/tmi-talk-critical-race-theory-crt/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Too Much Information,Harry Girvetz Memorial Endowment,All Events,IHC Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Alexander_CRT_FB-Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Interdisciplinary Humanities Center":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230306T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230306T133000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230214T165039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230221T173331Z
UID:10000632-1678104000-1678109400@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Roundtable: AASC Works-in-Progress
DESCRIPTION:The Asian/American Studies Collective’s Work-in-Progress Roundtables are an opportunity for UCSB graduate students to receive feedback on draft presentations of their research. On this occasion\, we will be hearing from three graduate students who will be presenting at the annual conference of the Association for Asian American Studies. \nMika Thornburg (History) | American Models & Hotel Occupiers: The Role of Tourism in the Entanglement of American and Japanese Settler Colonialisms\nClara Chin (English) | oh\, i taste so good: @breadfaceblog and The Intimacies of Self-Curation\nJanna Haider (History) | Entitled to Citizenship: Witness Networks and Asian Settler Colonialism in the Hawaiian Islands\, 1923–1952 \nPlease join us to hear from our presenters and provide valuable feedback. This event is open to all members of the UCSB community. No registration is required. \nSponsored by the IHC’s Asian/American Studies Collective Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/aasc-works-in-progress-roundtable/
LOCATION:5024 HSSB\, UC Santa Barbara
CATEGORIES:The Asian/American Studies Collective,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/AASC_Research-Workshop_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Asian/American Studies Collective RFG":MAILTO:aasc.ucsb@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230313T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230313T160000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230320T162340Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230509T153127Z
UID:10000638-1678719600-1678723200@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: Rethinking Non-Violence: The Spiritual and Emotional Lives of Animals in Jain Literature
DESCRIPTION:Why are Jains committed to non-violence (ahiṃsā)? Is it out of a compassion for animals? Is it because of the consequences of violent action on the soul? This talk argues that the answer to these questions depends in part on whether one is reading Jain doctrinal texts or Jain literature. Jain literature in Kannada and Sanskrit offers a rationale for non-violence that is based on an affective materiality that karmically binds souls together across transmigration and in and through animal and human bodies. For these texts\, such bonds mean that the fish on your dinner plate could be your father in ways that complicate the motivations and consequences of non-violence. \nSarah Pierce Taylor is Assistant Professor of South Asian religions at the University of Chicago Divinity School. Her research interests focus on the historical interactions of Jain traditions with Hindu and Buddhist traditions. Her talk will draw on her forthcoming book\, Embodying Souls: Emotion\, Gender\, and Animality in Premodern South Asian Religions\, which engages medieval literature in Sanskrit and Kannada produced by the Digambara Jain community of the western Deccan and argues that Jain literature\, in engaging the breadth of the soul’s experience\, formulated a vision of the human being that exceeded normative constructions and envisioned the human as formerly animal\, conceivably transgendered\, materially bound by emotion\, and relationally connected to a larger group of souls. \nSponsored by the IHC’s South Asian Religions and Cultures Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/rethinking-non-violence-the-spiritual-and-emotional-lives-of-animals-in-jain-literature/
LOCATION:3041 HSSB\, UC Santa Barbara\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups,South Asian Religions and Cultures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Pierce-Taylor_SouthAsian_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="South Asian Religions and Cultures RFG":MAILTO:holdrege@religion.ucsb.edu
GEO:34.4139682;-119.8503034
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=3041 HSSB UC Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA 93106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=UC Santa Barbara:geo:-119.8503034,34.4139682
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230313T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230313T161500
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230216T194258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230227T233538Z
UID:10000633-1678719600-1678724100@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: Understanding LatDisCrit Contours
DESCRIPTION:In this talk\, Alexis Padilla will focus on defining and showing the significance of LatDisCrit as a transdisciplinary sub-field. Padilla will use three illustrative counterstories to capture how disability gets racialized in Latinx marginalization dynamics\, while race/ethnicity serves as a proxy for oppressive disablement through exclusionary processes within US settings. \nDr. Alexis Padilla is the Director of Research at the Disability Policy Consortium. Padilla is the author of Disability\, Intersectional Agency\, and Latinx Identity. Theorizing LatDisCrit Counterstories\, a book that links dis/ability and agency by exploring LatDisCrit’s theory and activist emancipatory practice. It refers to the author’s experiential and analytical views as a blind brown Latinx engaged scholar and activist from the global South living and struggling in the highly racialized global North context of the United States. Padilla is a Ph.D. graduate from the Language\, Literacy\, and Sociocultural Studies Department at the University of New Mexico\, Albuquerque. Padilla is also a lawyer\, sociologist\, and conflict transformation engaged scholar. His work explores emancipatory learning and radical agency in the context of decolonial Latinx theorizing and critical disability studies. His published contributions emphasize the activist/disability advocacy vantage point combined with actionable dimensions of inclusive equity research and practice. Padilla’s postsecondary teaching experience encompasses almost three decades. He has more than 20 years of engagement in advocacy and conflict resolution work with Spanish-speaking families and English Language Learning students with disabilities in various U.S. settings. Since Spring 2020\, he has been affiliated with Phillips Theological Seminary to expand his research agenda and his activism scope into intersectional disability theology. \nRegister here for the Zoom attendance link \nSponsored by the IHC’s Disability Studies Initiative Research Focus Group\, Comparative Literature Program\, and Graduate Center for Literary Research \nASL interpretation will be provided.
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/understanding-latdiscrit-contours/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Disability Studies Initiative,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/RFG_DisabilitiesStudies_Event.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Disability Studies Initiative":MAILTO:rlambert@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230315T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230315T163000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230320T163618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230509T153138Z
UID:10000639-1678892400-1678897800@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: Engaging Religious Difference: The Case of Haribhadrasūri
DESCRIPTION:The philosophical corpus attributed to the preeminent eighth-century Śvetāmbara scholar-monk Haribhadrasūri presents one of the most sustained\, systematic\, and multifaceted engagements with religious difference in all of medieval South Asian literature. This talk will examine his various modes of engaging difference and how they fit together: his doxographies surveying the varieties of belief; polemics that advocate critical interrogation of partisan allegiances; rules for debate that seek common ground in the face of divergent identity-based presuppositions; and his philosophical magnum opus on the metaphysics of non-one-sidedness (anekāntavāda)\, which can be read as a way of retrieving agreement in the midst of disagreement. \nAnil Mundra is the Alka Siddhartha Dalal Postdoctoral Fellow for the Study of Jainism at Rutgers University\, New Brunswick. His research focuses on how South Asian philosophers conceptualized doctrinal differences\, navigated disagreements\, and sought agreement with others in the multi-religious ferment of Sanskrit discourse in the late first millennium CE. His talk will draw on his current book project\, No Identity without Diversity: Haribhadrasūri’s Anekāntavāda as a Jain Response to Doctrinal Difference\, which provides a sustained treatment of the contributions of Haribhadrasūri to the development of a premodern Jain cosmopolitanism that accommodated a range of competing voices within a single discourse. \nSponsored by the IHC’s South Asian Religions and Cultures Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/engaging-religious-difference-the-case-of-haribhadrasuri/
LOCATION:3041 HSSB\, UC Santa Barbara\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups,South Asian Religions and Cultures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Mundra_SouthAsian_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="South Asian Religions and Cultures RFG":MAILTO:holdrege@religion.ucsb.edu
GEO:34.4139682;-119.8503034
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=3041 HSSB UC Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA 93106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=UC Santa Barbara:geo:-119.8503034,34.4139682
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230316T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230316T173000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230208T182624Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230217T181849Z
UID:10000631-1678982400-1678987800@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: The History of Our Minds: Evidence for Co-Evolution of Cultural and Psychological Processes
DESCRIPTION:Biologically modern humans are more than 200\,000 years old. Many scientists have devoted their lives to understanding how architecture\, social structure\, and language have changed over this history. Yet we know almost nothing about the history of human minds. Behavioral science research has instead focused nearly exclusively on contemporary people\, and psychological theories often draw from taxonomies that assume a culturally and historically stable structure to emotion\, personality\, morality\, and other psychological processes. In this talk\, Joshua Conrad Jackson surveys new insights into how psychological processes may have changed over human history in ways that challenge these taxonomical models. Psychological change is often patterned and predictable based on cultural change\, and general evolutionary principles may explain psychological changes in multiple domains. We now have the methodological and theoretical tools to build a more historically enriched science of human cognition and behavior\, with a basic capacity to make foundational discoveries and an applied capacity to predict human futures. \nJoshua Conrad Jackson is a DRRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management and an incoming professor of Behavioral Science at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business. He studies cultural and historical variation in psychological processes\, focusing especially on morality\, emotion\, religious belief\, and social norm adherence. He also studies the implications of psychological and cultural change for leadership\, conflict\, cooperation\, and human-technology interactions. Dr. Jackson has published over 50 papers and book chapters on these topics\, and has won awards from the Society for Experimental Social Psychology\, the Society for Personality and Social Psychology\, and the Society for Cross-Cultural Research. He received his Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his B.A. from McGill University. \nZoom attendance link here \nSponsored by the IHC’s Emotions in History Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/the-history-of-our-minds-evidence-for-co-evolution-of-cultural-and-psychological-processes/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Emotions in History,All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Jackson_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Emotions in History RFG":MAILTO:yzuo@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230320T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230320T163000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230309T180456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230313T182801Z
UID:10000634-1679324400-1679329800@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Talk: Art\, Art History\, and Artificial Intelligence
DESCRIPTION:Computation and the Humanities is a series of events at the GCLR investigating the impact of computation on literary and visual research. Guests include researchers\, artists\, and practitioners working within and beyond the digital humanities. On March 20th\, we welcome Dr. Leonardo Impett\, who is a University Assistant Professor in Digital Humanities and convenor of the MPhil in Digital Humanities at Cambridge University. \nIn this talk\, Impett will introduce his current project\, a new history of machine visuality. The stakes are multiple. In the spirit of histories of visuality\, computer vision might tell us something about the dominant modes of thinking about vision over the last century. We might also want to learn something about the scopic regimes of machine vision systems because of their use in surveillance\, automation\, scientific research and so on. More broadly\, Impett will argue that discourses and practices of visuality (and thus a set of only partially explicit theories about seeing) have been central to the invention and development of neural networks\, and thus to contemporary AI more broadly\, from chat-bots to audio systems. \nZoom attendance link here \nPlease visit the GCLR website for full information. \nSponsored by the Graduate Center for Literary Research (GCLR)
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/talk-art-art-history-and-artificial-intelligence/
LOCATION:6206C Phelps and Zoom\, UC Santa Barbara\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Sub-Units
ORGANIZER;CN="Graduate Center for Literary Research":MAILTO:complit-glcr@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230320T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230320T163000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230320T164148Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230522T215618Z
UID:10000640-1679324400-1679329800@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Research Focus Group Talk: Trust Issues: Debating Medicine and Authority in Medieval India
DESCRIPTION:When it came to medicine in medieval India\, it was hard to know who to trust. Physicians and philosophers employed in royal courts disputed the competing claims to medical authority\, using debates initiated around religious scriptures to assess the authority of canonical Sanskrit medical texts. This talk will focus on arguments made by Ugrāditya\, a physician who was one of many Jain scholars working in the court at Mānyakheṭa of the Rāṣṭrakūṭa king Amoghavarṣa Nṛpatuṅga (r. 815-877). From his position at the center of political power\, Ugrāditya challenged the Sanskrit medical classics and argued that a new understanding of medicine founded on Jain principles was necessary\, negotiating a new space for Jain scholars and physicians in a wider world of medicine. \nEric Gurevitch is a National Endowment for the Humanities Postdoctoral Fellow at Vanderbilt University. His research explores the complex interplay of science and religion in precolonial South Asia and seeks to establish a central place for the sciences in Religious Studies and South Asian Studies. His current book project\, Everyday Sciences: Making Knowledge Local in South Asia\, focuses on a group of Jain authors in southwest India who rewrote the terrain of scholarship in medieval and early modern South Asia by introducing a novel archive of Sanskrit and vernacular texts described as “everyday sciences.” \nSponsored by the IHC’s South Asian Religions and Cultures Research Focus Group
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/trust-issues-debating-medicine-and-authority-in-medieval-india/
LOCATION:3041 HSSB\, UC Santa Barbara\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Research Focus Groups,South Asian Religions and Cultures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/SouthAsian_RFG_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="South Asian Religions and Cultures RFG":MAILTO:holdrege@religion.ucsb.edu
GEO:34.4139682;-119.8503034
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=3041 HSSB UC Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA 93106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=UC Santa Barbara:geo:-119.8503034,34.4139682
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230411T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230411T190000
DTSTAMP:20260418T001133
CREATED:20230208T181924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230322T191255Z
UID:10000630-1681239600-1681239600@ihc.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Conference: Listening to Cumbia
DESCRIPTION:Listening to Cumbia brings together scholars\, filmmakers\, artists\, and archivists for a symposium\, screening\, and DJ event on the contemporary cultural and political history of cumbia music in Mexico and the United States. Cumbia – as transnational record circulation and as local sound system dance scenes – is a living culture that provides insight into the cross-border effects of this popular music as force of social identity and mode of communication among Latinx communities. \nAPRIL 11\, POLLOCK THEATER  \n7:00 – 10:00 PM | Screening: Yo No Soy Guapo (Joyce Garcia\, 2018) and Sonidero Metropolis (Alvaro Parra\, 2023) \nAPRIL 12\, 6020 HSSB  \n10:30 AM – 12:00 PM | Archiving Cumbia: Jorge Balleza\, Carlos Icaza\, Gary Garay\, and Alexandra Lippman Moderator: David Novak \n12:00 – 1:30 PM | Lunch \n1:30 – 3:00 PM | Visualizing Cumbia: Joyce García\, Alvaro Parra\, Roberto Rodriguez\, Mirjam Wirz Moderator: Raquel Pacheco \n3:30 – 5:00 PM | Listening Through Time: Myths of Past Futurities in Cumbia Rebajada: Juan David Rubio Restrepo \n8:00 – 10:00 PM | Baile/Performance (Storke Plaza): Sabotaje Media\, Space Primo\, Ganas\, Tropicaza\, Xandão\, and Penny Lane \nFor complete information and the up-to-date schedule\, visit the symposium’s page at The Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Music here. \nOrganized by the Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Music. Cosponsored by the IHC’s Faculty Collaborative Research Grant\, Carsey-Wolf Center\, Humanities and Fine Arts\, KCSB-FM\, Anthropology\, Chicana/o Studies\, Film and Media Studies\, and Ethnomusicology Forum \nImage credit: Dave Novak
URL:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/event/listening-to-cumbia/
LOCATION:Pollock Theater; McCune Conference Room\, 6020 HSSB\, Santa Barbara\, CA\, 93106\, United States
CATEGORIES:All Events,IHC Research Support
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ihc.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Cumbia_Event.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="David Novak":MAILTO:dnovak09@ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR