Events
Women, Jews and Venetians Conference
Stevenson Fireside Lounge Humanites 1 University of California, Santa Cruz Cowell College, Santa CruzWeek of Events
Women, Jews and Venetians Conference
"L'Italie, Laboratoire de la modernite juive," -- Workshop of Jewish Modernity – a group of scholars recently characterized Venice and the Ghetto and thereby focused discussion on how this laboratory shaped Jewish modernity. Carrying forward a recently emerging scholarly view about early modern Jewish communities, these essays emphasize the interaction of the Jews in the […]
Music and Greek Drama: History, Theory, and Practice
University of California, Santa Cruz Presents: Music and Greek Drama: History, Theory, and Practice An International Conference In connection with the UCSC Theater Arts production of Orestes Terrorist, a new version of Euripides’ Orestes by Mary-Kay Gamel, Mainstage Theater, UCSC, May 20-29 May 28-29, 2011 College 8, Room 240 Scholars and theater […]
Tamara Spira: “Neoliberal Captivities: Pisagua Prison and the Low Intensity Form”
The Center for Cultural Studies Colloquium Series Presents: Tamara Spira, UC President's Postdoctoral Fellow in Cultural Studies, UC Davis "Neoliberal Captivities: Pisagua Prison and the Low Intensity Form" Doctor Spira works at the intersections of feminist, comparative ethnic and hemispheric American studies, and is completing Movements of Feeling: Neoliberalism, Affect and (Post) Revolutionary Memory in […]
Joan Retallack: “Reciprocal Alterities, Questions of Poethics for Difficult Times”
Poetry and Politics Research Cluster presents: A talk and workshop with Joan Retallack, followed by a poetry reading at Felix Kulpa Gallery in downtown Santa Cruz. Joan Retallack’s most recent publication Procedural Elegies / Western Civ Cont’d / (Roof Books) was the poetry volume named by Artforum as a best book of 2010. Other poetry […]
Nancy Hornberger: “Multilingual Education Policy and Practice: Ten Certainties (Grounded in Indigenous Experience)”
Ethnic diversity and inequality, intercultural communication and contact, and global political and economic interdependence are acknowledged realities in today’s world. Multilingual education, too, is a fact of life, and though there are a great variety of contexts, models, contents, and developmental trajectories in multilingual education policy and practice, it is possible to discern continuities that […]
Joan Retallack: Poetry Reading
Poetry and Politics Research Cluster presents: A talk and workshop with Joan Retallack, followed by a poetry reading at Felix Kulpa Gallery in downtown Santa Cruz. Joan Retallack’s most recent publication Procedural Elegies / Western Civ Cont’d / (Roof Books) was the poetry volume named by Artforum as a best book of 2010. Other poetry […]
Dai Jin-hua: “In Vogue: Politics and National Ethnicity in Lust, Caution and the Lust, Caution Phenomenon in China”
Dai Jinhua is Founder and Director of the Center for Contemporary Cultural Studies and Film Studies at Peking University, where she is also Professor of Chinese Literature and Language. She is a prominent cultural scholar of literature, film, and popular culture. With Meng Yue, she wrote the 1989 Emerging on the Horizon of History, one […]
Living Writers Series: Neo Benshi
Neo Benshi, Roxi Power Hamilton, Jen Hofer and Konrad Steiner present a new take on the Japanese tradition of “benshi”—a writer or actor who provides live narration and commentary alongside films. The neo-benshi concept invites writers/performers to choose scenes from well-known narrative features or TV shows, mute the soundtrack, and re-inscribe the familiar images with […]
Roumyana Pancheva
The Linguistics Colloquium Series Presents: Roumyana Pancheva (USC) Stay tuned for more details!
Under the Sign of War: U.S. Militarism and Asian Americanist Critique
This year’s Pacific Seminar returns focus to war, both as a way of invoking the foundational anti-Vietnam War struggles that inaugurated Asian American studies as an urgent political and epistemological project and as a contemporary analytic that wields the potential of reconfiguring the project of Asian American studies today. In particular, this year’s Pacific Seminar […]
