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  • Tzutu Kan: Maya Hip Hop

    Kresge Town Hall

    Tzutu Kan, hailing from what the Maya considered the belly button of the Universe -- Lake Atitlan in the vernal Guatemala highlands -- is a painter, sculptor, bio-builder, activist in […]

  • World Philosophy Day at Humble Sea Brewing Co.

    Humble Sea Brewing Company 820 Swift St, Santa Cruz, CA, United States

    World Philosophy Day? Yes, it is a thing! Falling on the third Thursday of each November, World Philosophy Day celebrates the value and practice of philosophy. This year, The Center […]

  • Interdisciplinary Graduate Writing: Challenges and Strategies I

    Humanities 1, Room 210 1156 high st, Santa cruz, CA, United States

    Do you struggle with dissertation writing? Us too! This workshop will provide a peer-led space for conversation among graduate students engaged in interdisciplinary dissertation writing in the humanities and humanistic […]

  • Living Writers: Alexandria Marzano Lesnevich

    Peace United Church 900 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA, United States

    Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich is the author of THE FACT OF A BODY: A Murder and a Memoir, recipient of the 2018 Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Memoir and the 2018 Chautauqua […]

  • Book Presentation: Jai Sen’s The Movements of Movements

    Humanities 1, Room 202

    Join us as Jai Sen discusses his ambitious anthology on social movements with a panel of commentators including Michelle Glowa (CIIS), Deborah Gould (UCSC), and Patrick King (UCSC). Jai Sen is an […]

  • Algorithms, Mobility, and Justice

    Engineering 2, Room 599 Engineering 2 Building @ UCSC, Santa Cruz, CA, United States

    Are moral algorithms a reasonable solution for taking advantage of life-saving potentials of self-driving cars? In this talk, Neda Atanasoski (UCSC Professor of Feminist Studies) will engage the utilitarian framings that are dominant in the discourses on self-driving cars inclusive of the assumptions that are folded into the question above: that algorithms can be moral […]

  • Invitation and Object: Reframing the Study of Palestine

    Humanities 1, Room 202

    "Welcome to Gaza: On the Politics of Invitation and the Right to Tourism" Jennifer Kelly, Associate Professor, UCSC  In between Israeli military incursions, Palestinians in Gaza have described their colonial condition and navigated their cleavage from the rest of Palestine through virtual collaborative projects that rehearse, satirize, and reimagine tourism. These projects refuse to position […]

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