| Legal Career Boosted by Humanities Studies
Matt Brolund (Economics and Law, History, and Society)
RPW Center Undergrad Fellow Matt Brolund interviews lawyer Davis Shugrue who says that studying the humanities proved helpful for his career in law.
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4:10 PM
Community Room,
Central Library
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| Environmental Humanities Seminar
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The Highs and Lows of Climate Grief: An Evening with Mary Annaïse Heglar
Mary Annaïse Heglar is a climate journalist and activist who works at the intersection of climate change, climate grief, and climate justice.
Co-sponsored by the Curb Center, the Program in Communication of Science and Technology (CSET), and the Environmental Humanities Seminar
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| RPW Humanities Writer's House (Drop-in)
[Humanities Faculty, Postdocs, and Graduate Students]
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Lunch for those planning on staying to write, 12-1. House goes quiet for writing at 1 pm. RSVP required. (Max. 25)
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Exercising Anti-Blackness in Nova Scotia: The Rhetoric of Black Refugee Removal in Nova Scotia, 1817-1820
Danyelle Valentine (Gender and Sexuality Studies and American Studies)
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| Temporal Lives of Knowledge: When Islamic Science Became a Thing of the Past
Duygu Yıldırım (History, UT-Knoxville). She will be joining via Zoom.
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| East Europe and Eurasia Seminar
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Queering Yugoslav (Dis)integration: Diasporic Resistance in Contemporary Art
Jasmina Tumbas (Global Gender and Sexuality Studies, SUNY Buffalo)
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| Shirking from Home: New Grub Street
and the Spaces of Literary Labor
Leah Price (English, Rutgers University)
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| RPW Humanities Writer's House (Drop-in)
[Humanities Faculty, Postdocs, and Graduate Students]
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Lunch for those planning on staying to write, 12-1. House goes quiet for writing at 1 pm. RSVP required. (Max. 25)
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12:15 - 2 PM
Buttrick 101
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Freedom in Slavery’s City: Informality as Afterlife in Recife, Brazil
Brodwyn Fischer (Latin American History, University of Chicago)
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4:10 PM
Community Room,
Central Library
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| 2023-24 Harry C. Howard Jr. Lecture
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I'll Take You There: Community-Engaged History Projects
Amie Thurber (School of Social Work, Portland State University) and Learotha Williams Jr. (African American, Civil War and Reconstruction, and Public History, Tennessee State University)
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Feb. 23
4:30 P
Buttrick 102
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| Documentary Screening: 20 Days in Mariupol
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As the Russian invasion begins, a team of Ukrainian journalists trapped in the besieged city of Mariupol struggle to continue their work documenting the war's atrocities.
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Feb. 23-25, 29
Mar. 1-2
Neely Auditorium
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| Written by Philip Dawkins
Directed by Leah Lowe (Theatre, Director of The Curb Center for Art, Enterprise, and Public Policy)
Click here for tickets.
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| VU Limited Submission Opportunity: 2024 CLIR Recordings at Risk
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Vanderbilt University may submit one application
to the Recordings at Risk program, a national regranting program to support the preservation of rare and unique audio, audiovisual, and other time-based media of high scholarly value through digital reformatting. Interested faculty should visit here
to apply for the internal LSO competition and to find additional information about the opportunity.
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Feb. 29
4:10 PM
203 Cohen
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| The Norman L. and Roselea J. Goldberg Lecture in Art History
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Pop and the People: Re-thinking Wang Guangyi’s Great Criticism series
Peggy Wang (Art History and Asian Studies, Bowdoin College)
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