Events

Views Navigation

Event Views Navigation

Today

Surveillance and Cinematics: American Artist, Simone Browne, and Ruha Benjamin

Virtual Event

Next in the Visualizing Abolition series is Surveillance and Cinematics with American Artist, Simone Browne, and Ruha Benjamin. Visualizing Abolition is a series of online events organized in collaboration with Dr. Gina Dent and featuring artists, activists, scholars, and others united by their commitment to the vital struggle for prison abolition. Visualizing Abolition is a […]

“Coded Bias” Film Screening and Panel Discussion

Virtual Event

The award winning documentary Coded Bias explores how machine-learning algorithms can perpetuate society’s existing class-, race-, and gender-based inequities. While working on an assignment involving facial-recognition software, the M.I.T. Media Lab researcher Joy Buolamwini found that the algorithm couldn’t detect her face — until she put on a white mask. As she recounts in the […]

Living Writers: K-Ming Chang

Virtual Event

K-Ming Chang / 張欣明 is a Kundiman fellow, a Lambda Literary Award finalist, and a National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree. She is the author of the debut novel BESTIARY (One World/Random House, 2020). More of her writing can be found online at kmingchang.com.

C. Nadia Seremetakis: The Senses Still

Virtual Event

The THI Sense Memory Cluster presents on Thursday, January 28, 10-12, Professor C. Nadia Seremetakis, author of The Last Word, The Senses Still, and Sensing the Everyday. She will discuss her practice of sensory ethnography, her theory of sense memory, and "the third stream of anamnesis" in the contemporary spread of little memorials in Greek […]

Ethiraj Gabriel Dattatreyan – The Globally Familiar: Digital Hip Hop and Gendered Aspirations in Urban India

Virtual Event

In the last decade, access to digital communication technologies has created opportunities for young people on the margins of the national imaginary in India to take part in transnational media worlds. In his recently published book, Dattatreyan uses the ‘globally familiar’ as an analytic to engage with the recursive effects of online media consumption, production, […]

Aomar Boum: Seeing as Memory – Graphic Memoir as Historical Ethnography

Virtual Event

Aomar Boum (UCLA) will speak in HIS 185O about his upcoming graphic novel collaboration recounting the story of European Jewish refugees in Morocco during the Second World War. In the last decade, graphic memoirs and novels have emerged as a significant form of historical (re)writing of past narratives and events. The medium of comics and its […]

Book Talk – Christine Hong: A Violent Peace: Race, US Militarism, and Cultures of Democratization in Cold War Asia and the Pacific

Virtual Event

Join us for a book Talk and celebration of Christine Hong's (Assoc Prof Lit and Director of CRES) new book A Violent Peace: Race, US Militarism, and Cultures of Democratization in Cold War Asia and the Pacific (Stanford U Press, 2020) with respondents: Neel Ahuja (Assoc Professor, FMST and CRES) and Alyosha Goldstein (Professor, American Studies, University […]

Nick Estes and Melanie K. Yazzie, of The Red Nation

Virtual Event

Nick Estes (Lower Brule Sioux) and Melanie Yazzie (Diné) of The Red Nation, respond to the prompt: What lies beyond dystopian catastrophism, and how can we cultivate radical futures of social justice and ecological flourishing? Welcomed by Chairman Valentin Lopez (Amah Mutsun) Moderated by Mayanthi Fernando and T. J. Demos Nick Estes is Kul Wicasa […]

Dina Danon: Modernity in the Eastern Sephardi Diaspora – The Jews of Late Ottoman Izmir

Virtual Event

Dina Danon (Binghamton University) will speak in HIS 74B on her book titled The Jews of Ottoman Izmir: A Modern History (Stanford University Press, 2020). This lecture will tell the story of a long-overlooked Ottoman Jewish community in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Drawing extensively on a rich body of previously untapped Ladino […]