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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for The Humanities Institute
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200206T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200206T143000
DTSTAMP:20260426T060702
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SUMMARY:Marc Herbst - "Culture Beside Itself: On Common Sociality and its Relation to More Law-Like Cultural and Governmental Forms"
DESCRIPTION:Marc Herbst will be presenting a talk titled “Culture Beside Itself: On common sociality and its relation to more law-like cultural and governmental forms\,” based on his ongoing research on social movements and eco-social planning and his part in the collective efforts of the 11th issue of the Journal of Aesthetics & Protest. \nThese efforts are to attune creative activist/artistic attention towards the realm where social reproduction necessarily occurs\, in order to strengthen ways in which cosmopolitically progressive thought and production (as culture and law) can better inform common life towards its autonomous ends. The work is grounded in Herbst’s research within the Barcelona based-Plataforma De Afectados por La Hipoteca (the PAH) housing rights movement\, his recent eco-social work as a teacher/editor for the Berlin based Nachbarschaftsakademie and his current residency at Oakland’s Pro Art and Commons. \nThe talk will highlight concepts related to the upcoming Issue 11 of the Journal of Aesthetics & Protest\, which looks at common sociality outside and beyond formal being (that is\, more concretised cultural and governmental forms) in the light of the related challenges of climate change and resurgent fascism. Besides the particular of the project\, the conversation engages autonomist Marxist\, queer and de-colonial theory/praxis\, either as an expression of ongoing praxis and theoretical work. \n\nMarc Herbst is a co-founder of the Journal of Aesthetics & Protest\, an interdisciplinary journal and weirdo collective founded in Los Angeles in 2001. He recently completed a PhD at Goldsmiths Centre for Cultural Studies in London with a study titled\, A cultural policy for the multitude in the time of climate change; with an understanding that the multitude has no policy. Marc’s collective and individual efforts are also interdisciplinary (between engagements with the formal art world\, DIY networks and relatively autonomous political projects) and he works between publishing\, social practice and illustration. As a publisher/editor\, he works with Aesthetics & Protest and also has recently been collaborating with Minor Compositions/Autonomedia\, Pluto Press and Canary Press. \nWith the Aesthetics & Protest editorial collective\, he is currently editing an issue working with anti-fascist and avant garde art collectives on situated practice outside of but in awareness of the mediating practices of political and cultural structures. He also helped publish recent books on precarious labor with the UK-based Precarious Workers Brigade\, and (related to his PhD) a book on housing rights activism and transversal urban organizing by Ada Colau and Adria Alemany. In addition to other work\, he is currently co-editing with Michelle Teran a book based on situated\, cosmopolitical and eco-social learning through the coming 99 years of climate based in the Prinzessinnengarten in Berlin. \nIssue 11: Culture Beside Itself\nPro-arts and Common Residency\nNachbarschaftsakademie\, Growing in the Midst of our Collective Disaster \n  \nPresented by: The History of Consciousness Department and the Center for Creative Ecologies
URL:https://thi.ucsc.edu/event/marc-herbst-culture-beside-itself-on-common-sociality-and-its-relation-to-more-law-like-cultural-and-governmental-forms/
LOCATION:Humanities 1\, Room 210\, 1156 high st\, Santa cruz\, CA\, 95060\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20190517T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20190517T190000
DTSTAMP:20260426T060702
CREATED:20190227T211932Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190510T213526Z
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SUMMARY:Norman O. Brown Conference: Into the Future\, Day 1
DESCRIPTION:A weekend of presentation\, reflection\, and inquiry addressing the work and life of Norman O. Brown. From poetics to politics\, theology to pedagogy\, utopia to apocalypse: scholars from around the country will meet to engage Brown’s long shadow. Amidst the landscapes he traversed incessantly\, we can gauge the importance of Norman O. Brown for the 21st century. \n  \nFriday\, May 17th\n3:00 – 3:30. Opening remarks\n3:30 – 4:45. “The Return of the Gods: Brown’s Prophetic Tradition\,” part 1\n4:45 – 5:00. Break / coffee\n5:00 – 6:15. “The Return of the Gods: Brown’s Prophetic Tradition\,” part 2\n6:15 – 6:30. Film screening\, Garden\n6:30 – 9:00. Reception and dinner for participants and friends \n* \nThe Return of the Gods: Brown’s Prophetic Tradition\npart 1:\nAsad Haider\, moderator\nThomas Marshall\, “Whaddayou Mean “ςπουδαιογελοιον”?: Nabi’s Last Study”\nMartin Devecka\, “Variae inludunt pestes: Learning and Labor in the Georgics”\nBarry Katz\, “Opening Time\, Closing Time: A Journey from Hermes and Hesiod to Vico and Joyce” \npart 2:\nJack Davies\, moderator\nEdmund Burke\, “Prophecy & Apocalypse in the Irano-Semitic Tradition: Norman O. Brown & Marshall Hodgson”\nG.S. Sahota\, “Identifying Khizr: On the Paths of Goethe and Iqbal” \n  \nDay 2 Information \nSponsored by Cowell College\, the Humanities Institute\, the Siegfried B. and Elisabeth Mignon Puknat Literary Studies Endowment\, and the History of Consciousness department.
URL:https://thi.ucsc.edu/event/norman-o-brown-conference-future/
LOCATION:Page Smith Library
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20190513T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20190513T161500
DTSTAMP:20260426T060702
CREATED:20190424T171652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190502T221946Z
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SUMMARY:A Book Talk and Discussion with Dr. Emily Thuma
DESCRIPTION:Critical Race & Ethnic Studies and Feminist Studies present: \nA Book Talk and Discussion with Dr. Emily Thuma (Assistant Professor of Gender & Sexuality Studies\, UC Irvine): \nALL OUR TRIALS: PRISONS\, POLICING\, AND THE FEMINIST FIGHT TO END VIOLENCE (University of Illinois Press\, 2019) \nCo-Sponsored by the Peggy and Jack Baskin Foundation Presidential Chair in Feminist Studies and the Department of History of Consciousness \n 
URL:https://thi.ucsc.edu/event/emily-l-thuma-feminist-cres-book/
LOCATION:Humanities 1\, Room 210\, 1156 high st\, Santa cruz\, CA\, 95060\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20190222T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20190222T134500
DTSTAMP:20260426T060702
CREATED:20190222T184759Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190222T190035Z
UID:10006718-1550838600-1550843100@thi.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:Friday Forum for Graduate Research: Alirio Karina
DESCRIPTION:Between Two Africas: “Nubia in the Ethnographic Imagination” \nThis paper explores the region and anthropologized people\, of Nubia\, examining how they are produced as (inhabiting) a borderland between two Africas- North Africa and Africa “proper.” By studying three museological movements in which the ethnographic appears and vanishes\, together with two literary test animated by ethnographic concerns with representing Nubian people\, Alirio Karina explores how the disavowal of the ethnographic (in all of its racial and cultural senses in Sudan and Egypt is an attempt to narrate of capitalist modernity in terms of ancient lineages\, and against any sense of relation to the rest African continent\, Karina argues that\, in resurfacing the ethnographic\, we may find a resistant frame through which to think Africanity north of the Sahara. \nAlirio Karina is a PhD candidate in the History of Consciousness Department\, with designated emphasis in the Feminist Studies and Critical Race and Ethnic Studies. Alirio’s dissertation examines ethnographic photographs\, objects and text representing British Africa\, exploring how these materials produce ideas of race\, culture and continent that have shaped and may yet transform African political possibility. \nFriday Forum for Graduate Research is supported by the Graduate Student Association\, the Humanities Institute\, and the following departments HAVC\, Literature\, History of Consciousness\, Psychology\, and Education. \n 
URL:https://thi.ucsc.edu/event/two-africas-nubia-ethnographic-imagination/
LOCATION:Humanities 1\, Room 420\, Humanites 1 University of California\, Santa Cruz Cowell College\, Santa Cruz\, CA\, 95064\, United States
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