China Studies Program – UW News /news Fri, 25 Apr 2025 23:18:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 ArtSci Roundup: April 2025 /news/2025/03/12/artsci-roundup-april-2025/ Wed, 12 Mar 2025 19:08:19 +0000 /news/?p=87712

From campus to wherever you call home, we welcome you to learn from and connect with the College of Arts & Sciences community through public events spanning the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences. We hope to see you this April.


Worldwide Conversations

April 4 | (Political Science)

April 4 | (Political Science)

April 7 | (Jackson School)

April 8 | (Department of Asian Languages & Literature)

April 9 | (Political Science)

April 10 – April 11 | (Middle Easter Languages and Cultures)

April 10 – April 12 | (Jackson School)

April 11 | (Classics)

April 14 | (Jackson School)

April 14 | (Jackson School)

April 15 | (French & Italian)

April 21 | (Jackson School)

April 23 | (Astronomy)

April 24 | (Middle Easter Languages and Cultures)

April 28 | (Jackson School)


ArtSci on the Go

Looking for more ways to get more out of Arts & Sciences? Check out these resources to take ArtSci wherever you go!

“Ways of Knowing” Podcast (College of Arts & Sciences)

Black Composers Project engages School of Music faculty, students ()

Ladino Day Interview with Leigh Bardugo & MELC professor Canan Bolel听()


Week of March 31

Dr. Victoria Meadows

Wednesday, April 2, 7 pm – 8 pm | (Department of Astronomy)

UWAB is excited to announce that we are hosting a public lecture series to celebrate the program’s 25th anniversary in April 2025! All talks will occur in Kane Hall (Room 120), with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. and lectures beginning at 7 p.m. Each event will feature an hour-long lecture and up to 45 minutes of Q&A with our speaker.

This week’s lecturer: Dr. Victoria Meadows, UW Astrobiology Program Director听Professor of Astronomy at the 天美影视传媒

s are required for both in-person and Zoom attendance


Wednesday, April 2, 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm | (Department of English)

P谩draig 脫 Tuama (photo credit: David Pugh)

Poet and theologian, P谩draig 脫 Tuama鈥檚 work centers around themes of language, power, conflict, and religion. Working fluently on the page and in public, he is a compelling poet, skilled speaker, teacher, and group worker. He presents Poetry Unbound with On Being Studios. Following the lecture, there will be a book signing and reception.


Friday, April 4, 12:30 pm – 1:30 pm | (Department of Political Science)

Join the 天美影视传媒 Department of Political Science for a UWISC featuring Ian Callison and his lecture “The Blame Game: Militias, civilians, and the States’ accountability-effectiveness Trade-off.”


Friday, April 4, 7:30 pm | (School of Music)

The Bennardo Larson Duo (Photo: Pat_Swoboda)

The violin and piano duo鈥擬aya Bennardo (violin) and Karl Larson (piano)鈥攑erform works by recent Rome Prize winner (and School of Music alumnus) Anthony Vine and others.

The Bennardo-Larson Duo is an NYC/Stockholm-based contemporary classical duo committed to the performance and promotion of forward-thinking works for violin and piano. Their programming features the complete Sonatas for Violin and Piano by Charles Ives, Morton Feldman鈥檚 monumental 鈥楩or John Cage,鈥 and ‘a Wind’s Whisper,鈥 a program featuring works by John Cage, Michael Pisaro, Eva Maria Houben, and two commissions by Adrian Knight and Kristofer Svensson. In April of 2024, the duo will present the world premiere of two substantial new commissions by Anthony Vine and Maya Bennardo on the Bowerbird Series in Philadelphia, PA.

Beyond the concert stage, Bennardo and Larson are passionate educators, offering workshops in contemporary string and piano techniques for performers and composers.


Friday, April 4, 12 pm – 1:30 pm | (Department of Political Science)

Brian Leung

Brian Leung: Firm Lobbying and the Political Economy of US-China Trade


Additional Events

April 1 | (Music)

April 2 | (Music)

April 3 – 5 | (Meany Center)

April 3 | (Applied Mathematics)

April 3 | (Jackson School)

April 4 | (Classics)

April 4 | (Mathematics)


Week of April 7

Monday, April 7, 5 pm – 6:20 pm | (Jackson School)

Prof. David Bachman

Trump in the World 2.0, is a series of talks and discussions from March 31 to June 2 on the international impact of the second Trump presidency. Faculty and guest speaker presentations will explore how different regions and global issues are affected by the Trump administration’s policies.

This week’s speakers: David Bachman, Radhika Govindrajan, and James Lin.

Livestream only for the public. In-person for students only.


Tuesday, April 8, 5:30 pm – 8 pm | (Asian Languages & Literature)

Prof. Davinder Bhowmik

罢丑别听Omoro S艒shi听is an indigenous compilation of 1500 songs, poems, and prayers that extoll the golden age of the Ryukyu Islands. It offers insights absent from official histories that focus on great heroes. The collection sheds light on the Ryukyu’s semitropical flora and fauna, and by extension, the everyday life of the common people.

This presentation will be held by Professor Davinder Bhowmik and will introduce the main features of the Omoro S艒shi and pay particular attention to key aspects of the landscape that shaped traditional communal formations. It aims to consider whether the compilation reflects a history of the region as top-down (Yamato) or bottom-up (Ryukyu).


Wednesday, April 9, 11:30 am – 12 pm | (Henry Art Gallery)

James Turrell Skyspace (photo credit: Lara Swimmer)

Join听Ashwini Sadekar, founder of the Conscious Creative Circle, in the听James Turrell Skyspace for a guided meditation to cultivate calm and presence through mind-body-breath connection. Immersed within the awe-inspiring interior of Turrell鈥檚 artwork, participants will enjoy a 20-minute guided meditation followed by a 10-minute small group reflection. All are welcome, no previous experience is required. Registration is encouraged.


Wednesday, April 9, 7 pm – 8 pm | (Department of Astronomy)

Dr. Giada Arney

UWAB is excited to announce that we are hosting a public lecture series to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the program in April 2025! ll talks will take place in Kane Hall (Room 120) with doors open at 6:30 pm, and lectures beginning at 7 pm. Each event will feature an hour-long lecture followed by up to 45 min of Q&A with our speaker.

This week’s lecturers: Dr. Giada Arney, UW Astrobiology Program Graduate 2016, NASA Research Scientist & Interim Project Scientist for Habitable Worlds Observatory, and Dr. Rika Anderson, UWAB Graduate 2013,听Associate Professor of Biology at Carleton College

s are required for both in-person and Zoom attendance


Thursday, April 10 – Saturday, April 12 | (Jackson School)

2022 Ellison Center Director Scott Radnitz speaking at the REECAS Northwest Conference

REECAS Northwest听welcomes students, faculty, independent scholars, and language educators from the United States and abroad.听Established in 1994, REECAS Northwest is an annual event for scholars and students in the Pacific Northwest and beyond. The interdisciplinary conference is organized by the 天美影视传媒鈥檚 Ellison Center for Russian, East European, and Central Asian Studies.

The conference hosts many panels on a variety of topics from a wide diversity of disciplines including political science, history, literature, linguistics, anthropology, culture, migration studies, gender studies, LGBTQ studies, film studies, and more.


Additional Events

April 8 | (Meany Center)

April 9 | (Political Science)

April 10 | (Music)

April 10 | (Political Science)

April 10 | (Sociology)

April 10 – April 11 | (Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures) – ONLINE

April 11 | (Geography)

April 11 | (Music)

April 12 | (Meany Center)

April 12 | (Taiwan Studies)


Week of April 14

Prof. Sabine Lang

Monday, April 14, 5 pm – 6:20 pm | (Jackson School)

Trump in the World 2.0, is a series of talks and discussions from March 31 to June 2 on the international impact of the second Trump presidency. Faculty and guest speaker presentations will explore how different regions and global issues are affected by the Trump administration’s policies.

This week’s speakers: Sabine Lang in conversation with U.S. Ambassadors (ret.) Jeff Hovenier and John Koenig

Livestream only for the public. In-person for students only.


Wednesday, April 16 | (Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures)

Farhat J. Ziadeh

This annual lectureship was established in honor of Farhat J. Ziadeh, whose contributions to the fields of Islamic law, Arabic language, and Islamic Studies are truly unparalleled.

The Ziadeh fund was formally endowed in 2001 and since that time, it has allowed MELC to strengthen its educational reach and showcase the most outstanding scholarship in Arab and Islamic Studies.


Wednesday, April 16, 7 pm – 8 pm | (Department of Astronomy)

Dr. Ken Williford

UWAB is excited to announce that we are hosting a public lecture series to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the program in April 2025! ll talks will take place in Kane Hall (Room 120) with doors open at 6:30 pm, and lectures beginning at 7 pm. Each event will feature an hour-long lecture followed by up to 45 min of Q&A with our speaker.

This week’s lecturer: Dr. Ken Williford, UW Astrobiology Program Graduate 2007,听Deputy Project Scientist for the Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover

s are required for both in-person and Zoom attendance


Friday, April 18, 12 pm – 1:30 pm | (Department of Political Science)

Emily Broad Leib

Emily Broad Leib is a Clinical Professor of Law, Director of the Harvard Law School Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation, and Founding Director of the Harvard Law School Food Law and Policy Clinic, the nation鈥檚 first law school clinic devoted to providing legal and policy solutions to the health, economic, and environmental challenges facing our food system. Working directly with clients and communities, Broad Leib champions community-led food system change, reduction in food waste, food access, food is medicine interventions and equity and sustainability in food production.


Saturday, April 19 | (School of Art + Art History + Design)

Don’t miss your last chance to experience听artists & poets at the Jacob Lawrence Gallery!

Working to emulate the interdisciplinary artistic environment Jacob Lawrence experienced in his formative years, this exhibition explores a legacy of collaboration between artists and poets.听artists & poets听is a part of the re-grounding of the Jacob Lawrence Gallery in its mission of education, experimentation, and social justice.


Additional Events

April 14 | (Jackson School)

April 14 | (Communication)

April 14 | (Simpson Center)

April 14 | (Jackson School)

April 15听触 (Political Science)

April 15 | (Philosophy)

April 15 | (French & Italian)

April 16 | (Music)

April 17 | (Art + Art History + Design)

April 18 | (Political Science)

April 18 | (Music)

April 18 | (Simpson Center)

April 18 | (Linguistics)

April 18 | (Speech and Hearing Sciences)


Week of April 21

Monday, April 21, 5 pm – 6:20 pm | (Jackson School)

Trump in the World 2.0, is a series of talks and discussions from March 31 to June 2 on the international impact of the second Trump presidency. Faculty and guest speaker presentations will explore how different regions and global issues are affected by the Trump administration’s policies.

This week’s speakers: Liora R. Halperin, Randa Tawil, and Re艧at Kasaba

Livestream only for the public. In-person for students only.


Wednesday, April 23, 7 pm – 8 pm | 听(Department of Astronomy)

Dr. Aomawa Shields

UWAB is excited to announce that we are hosting a public lecture series to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the program in April 2025! ll talks will take place in Kane Hall (Room 120) with doors open at 6:30 pm, and lectures beginning at 7 pm. Each event will feature an hour-long lecture followed by up to 45 min of Q&A with our speaker.

This week’s lecturer: Dr. Aomawa Shields, UW Astrobiology Program Graduate 2014, Clare Boothe Luce Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy at the University of California Irvine

s are required for both in-person and Zoom attendance


Wednesday, April 23, 7 pm – 9 pm | (Department of Psychology)

Allen L. Edwards

The 17th Annual Allen L. Edwards Psychology Lectures presents The Science of Altruism. This interdisciplinary panel brings together leading experts from psychology, anthropology, neuroscience, and animal behavior to explore the biological, cognitive, and social foundations of altruistic behaviors.

Moderated听by KUOW Host Bill Radke, the event features the following panelists:

  • Abigail Marsh, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Psychology & Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience, Georgetown University
  • Kristen Hawkes, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor in Anthropology, University of Utah
  • John M. Marzluff, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Wildlife Science, School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, 天美影视传媒
  • Andrew Meltzoff, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology at the 天美影视传媒.

Thursday, April 24, 6 pm – 7:30 pm | (Center for Child & Family Well-Being)

Luc铆a Magis-Weinberg, M.D., Ph.D.

罢丑颈蝉听webinar听will include a panel of experts discussing parents,迟别别苍蝉鈥,听and preteens鈥digital technology and听social media use and its relation to mental health.Panel members will be asked to discuss current patterns of social media use by parents and听youth, and share about听the potential for both positive and detrimentaleffects of social media,听includingthe role of technology and social media in supporting social connectedness and awareness, while also contributing to mental health challenges. Panelists will听suggest听approaches to social media use that incorporate mindfulness and听supportwell-being.


Thursday, April 24, 7 pm – 8:30 pm | (Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures)

After the conquest of Constantinople in 1453, Ottoman elites at the imperial court turned to poetry to craft distinctive modes of expression to articulate their place within the Ottoman sultanate.

In this talk, Oscar Aguirre-Mandujano will discuss his new book, Occasions for Poetry: Politics, Literature, and Imagination Among the Early Modern Ottomans (Penn Press, 2025), where he explores how scholars and bureaucrats interacted with each other through poetic imagery, revealing how literary language affected bureaucratic practice.


Friday, April 25, 7:30 pm | (School of Music)

Guitarist Bill Frisell (Photo: Monica Jane Frisell).

The School of Music and the student-run Improvised Music Project present IMPFest, featuring UW Jazz Studies students and faculty performing with special guests: renowned guitarist Bill Frisell; saxophonist听Josh Johnson; and bassist (and School of Music alumnus)听Luke Bergman.

Seating is limited; please order tickets in advance.


Additional Events

April 21 | (Political Science)

April 22 | (Music)

April 22 | (East Asia Center)

April 22 – April 26 | (Drama)

April 24 | (Music)

April 24 | (Taiwan Studies)

April 24| (Slavic Languages)

April 27 | (Henry Art Gallery)


Week of April 28

Monday, April 28, 5 pm – 6:20 pm | (Jackson School)

Prof. Jessica L. Beyer and Prof. Scott Radnitz

Trump in the World 2.0, is a series of talks and discussions from March 31 to June 2 on the international impact of the second Trump presidency. Faculty and guest speaker presentations will explore how different regions and global issues are affected by the Trump administration’s policies.

This week’s speakers: Jessica L. Beyer and Scott Radnitz

Livestream only for the public. In-person for students only.


Tuesday, April 29 – Friday, May 9 | (School of Art + Art History + Design)

Join the School of Art + Art History + Design in celebrating the work of this year’s students. There will be four student exhibits throughout the spring quarter!


Wednesday, April 30, 4 pm – 5:30 pm | (Department of History)

Prof. Nathan Connolly

In 鈥淟etters from the Ancestors,鈥 Prof. Connolly follows the experiences of four generations of his Caribbean family, offering an intimate view of the history of late capitalism in the Atlantic World. Under twentieth-century colonialism, he argues, working people developed uniquely gendered coping strategies for managing the precarities of racism and reputation. Even in post-colonial times, these strategies continue to govern how we relate to institutions, set our aspirations, and even narrate our own personal and political histories. More than just a tour through a single family鈥檚 experience, 鈥淟etter from the Ancestors” seeks to retain and advance our fluency in the history of colonized families. This history, Connolly suggests, seems all the more relevant today, in a nation and world of dwindling government protections for women and people of color.


Wednesday, April 30, 5 pm – 6:30 pm | (Department of Political Science)

鈥淧opulist Power Plays: Erdogan鈥檚 Turkey, Trump鈥檚 USA, and the Future of Democracy,鈥 Garo Paylan, former Member of the Turkish Parliament, in conversation with UW Professor听Asli Cansunar.


Additional Events

April 29 | (Mathematics)

April 29 | (Political Science)

April 30 | (China Studies Program)

April 30 | An Evening with Christine Sun Kim (Public Lectures)

April 30 | (Art + Art History + Design)


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Kathrine Braseth (kbraseth@uw.edu).

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ArtSci Roundup: March 2025 /news/2025/02/20/artsci-roundup-march-2025/ Thu, 20 Feb 2025 22:28:30 +0000 /news/?p=87556

From campus to wherever you call home, we welcome you to learn from and connect with the College of Arts & Sciences community through public events spanning the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences. We hope to see you this March.


Closing Exhibits

Overexposures: Photographs from the Henry Collection [Installation view, Henry Art Gallery, 天美影视传媒, Seattle. 2024]. Photo: Jueqian Fang.

March 1 | (Henry Art Gallery)

March 1 | (Henry Art Gallery)

March 13 | (Allen Library)

March 31 | (China Studies)


March, the Month of Music

Join the for a full month of melodious events.

| Campus and Concert Bands: Passages

| Modern Music Ensemble

| Chamber Singers and University Chorale: The Promise of Living

| Campus Philharmonia Orchestras

| Composition Studio

| Studio Jazz Ensemble and Modern Band

| Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band: Transformation

| Seattle Modern Orchestra, Tribute: Jo毛l-Fran莽ois Durand

| UW Symphony Orchestra with UW Choirs

| CD Release Celebration: Melia Watras, the almond tree duos


Week of March 3

March 6, 8:30 am – 5:00 pm | (Department of Asian Language & Literature)

Spring 2025 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the end of the Second Indochina War, also known as the Vietnam War. This milestone invites scholars, artists, authors, community leaders, and UW students to reflect on the transformations, challenges, and developments in Vietnam, Cambodia, and the Southeast Asian diaspora in Greater Seattle since April 1975.


March 6, 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm | (Jackson School)

How did Taiwan, a former Japanese colony and the last fortress of the defeated Chinese Nationalists, ascend to such heights in high-tech manufacturing? In Island Tinkerers, Honghong Tinn tells the critical history of how hobbyists and enthusiasts in Taiwan, including engineers, technologists, technocrats, computer users, and engineers-turned-entrepreneurs, helped transform the country with their hands-on engagement with computers.


March 7, 7:30 pm and March 8, 10 am – 3:00 pm | 听(American Indian Studies)

The Department of American Indian Studies at the 天美影视传媒 hosts an annual literary and storytelling series. Sacred Breath features Indigenous writers and storytellers sharing their craft at the beautiful w菨色菨b蕯altx史 Intellectual House on the UW Seattle campus. Storytelling offers a spiritual connection; a sharing of sacred breath. Literature, similarly, preserves human experience and ideals. Both forms are durable and transmit power that teaches us how to live. Both storytelling and reading aloud can impact audiences through the power of presence, allowing for the experience of the transfer of sacred breath as audiences are immersed in the experience of being inside stories and works of literature.


Additional Events

March 2 | (German Studies)

March 3 | (Music)

March 3 | (Comparative History of Ideas)

March 4 | (Music)

March 4 | (Public Lectures)

March 4 | (Jackson School)

March 4 | (Communication)

March 4 | (China Studies)

March 4 | (Jackson School)

March 6 | (Political Science)

March 6 | (History)

March 6 | (French and Italian Studies)

March 6 | (Henry Art Gallery)

March 6 | (African Studies)

March 7 | (Political Science)

March 7 | (Slavic Language & Literature)

March 7 | (Music)

March 7 | (American Ethnic Studies)

March 7 | (Cinema & Media)

March 8 | (Burke)

March 8 | (Music)

March 8 | (Henry Art Gallery)


Week of March 10

March 11 to March 15 | (School of Drama)

It is a play for all the lady cowboys of heart and mind who ride outside the city limits of convention.

Audience members may see more vigorous artistic risk-taking in these Lab productions. From their first year to graduation, the Lab is a space for our student artists to practice their craft.

Written by Sarah Ruhl / Directed by Nick O鈥橪eary


March 11, 9:30 am – 8:30 pm | (Stroum Center for Jewish Students)

You are invited to join past and present SCJS faculty and students as they spend the day marking the fostering of five decades of meaningful and insightful discussions on diverse Jewish experiences.

We have a full day of events planned, starting with a series of daytime panels highlighting SCJS鈥檚 key accomplishments and ending with an evening discussion titled 鈥淭oday鈥檚 campus conflicts and the future of Jewish Studies.鈥

– Morning panels: 鈥50 years of impact on campus and beyond鈥

– Evening talk: 鈥淭oday鈥檚 campus conflicts and the future of Jewish Studies鈥


March 15, 11:00 am – 4:00 pm | (Henry Art Gallery)

Spring into art at the Henry! Join the Henry for the Spring Open House, a day filled with vibrant activities, hands-on artmaking, and engaging programs that bring contemporary art and ideas to life. Whether you鈥檙e an art enthusiast or simply curious, there鈥檚 something for everyone to enjoy.


Additional Events

March 10 | (Music)

March 11 | (Music)

March 12 | (Music)

March 12 | (American Ethnic Studies)

March 13 | (History)

March 14 | (Music)

March 14 | (Music)


Week of March 17

March 18, 7:30 pm | (Meany Center)

One of America鈥檚 foremost pianists, Jeremy Denk鈥檚 creative blend of virtuosic dexterity and colorful imagination has earned him praise as 鈥渁n artist you want to hear no matter what he performs鈥 (The New York Times). A winner of both the MacArthur 鈥淕enius鈥 Fellowship and the Avery Fisher Prize, his bestselling memoir,听Every Good Boy Does Fine, showcases his original and insightful writing about music. Denk鈥檚 recital features Bach鈥檚 Six Partitas for Keyboard, known for being as technically difficult as they are beautiful.


Week of March 24

March 28, 7:30 pm | (Meany Center for the Performing Arts)

Grammy Award-winning musical ensemble Silkroad鈥檚听Uplifted Voices听brings together a stellar lineup of performer-composers from the Silkroad Ensemble in a series of pieces that highlight each artist鈥檚 musical storytelling. These compositions, often inspired by their homeland, ancestors, community, and family, represent previously under-recognized voices from around the world, offering a fresh perspective on the history and migration of music.


Week of March 31

March 31, 5:00 pm – 6:20 pm | (Jackson School)

Danny Hoffman, Director of the Jackson School of International Studies

Join JSIS for Trump in the World 2.0, a series of talks and discussions on the international impact of the second Trump presidency. Faculty and guest speaker presentations will explore how different regions and global issues are affected by the policies of the Trump administration. The series is moderated by Danny Hoffman, Director of the Jackson School of International Studies, and Stanley D. Golub Chair of International Studies.

Mondays, 5-6:20 p.m. from March 31 to June 2, 2025 | in-person 2 credit/no credit course for UW students Free for the public via live stream only.

The first lecture is only open to students. Public lectures begin Monday, April 7.


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Kathrine Braseth (kbraseth@uw.edu).

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ArtSci Roundup: Improvised Music Project Festival, Modern Abortion Around the World Panel, Taiwan’s Pop Music and more /news/2024/04/18/artsci-roundup-improvised-music-project-festival-modern-abortion-around-the-world-panel-taiwans-pop-music-and-more/ Thu, 18 Apr 2024 22:07:03 +0000 /news/?p=85098 This week, join the Jackson School for International Studies for a panel on Modern Abortion Around the World, head to Meany Hall for the Improvised Music Project Festival, celebrate Taiwan’s pop music, and much more.


April 22, 3:30 – 5:00 pm | Thomson Hall

The Jackson School of International Studies invites Research Scholar Kim Brandt, Columbia University, to discuss the significance of the Hiroshima Maidens.

“Hiroshima Maidens鈥 loosely translates to “genbaku otome”, a phrase used to refer to young women who were scarred by injuries during the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Ten years later, 25 such women were flown to New York to undergo extensive reconstructive surgery. The 鈥淢aidens鈥 received wide publicity in the U.S. and Japan, where the story resonated with growing anxiety about nuclear weapons, public fascination with new forms of beauty culture, and the potential of postwar technology.

Free |


April 23 – May 3 | Jacob Lawrence Gallery

The Jacob Lawrence Gallery will feature the work of students graduating from one of the School of Art + Art History + Design’s Bachelors of Art in Art concentrations: 3D4M: ceramics + glass + sculpture, Interdisciplinary Visual Art, Painting + Drawing, and Photo/Media.

Free |


April 24, 4:00 – 5:30 pm | Communications Building

The 2024 Stephanie M.H. Camp Memorial Lecture by Jennifer L. Morgan, professor at New York University, explores the connections between domestic space, the idea of privacy, and the presence of enslaved women in the early modern world. Drawing on court cases, legislation, and the growth of slavery, Morgan revisits questions of the public/private divide to consider the impact of slavery in the early modern period upon the development of racially marked notions of private life.

Free |


April 24 – May 28 | Allen Library North Lobby

In partnership with the听, the UW Taiwan Studies Arts & Culture Program welcomes everyone to celebrate Taiwan鈥檚 pop music through the 鈥淢usic, Island, Stories: Taiwan Calling!鈥 pop-up exhibition on the UW campus.

Free |听


April 25, 3:00 – 4:30 pm | Husky Union Building

Join The Jackson School of International Studies for Modern Abortion Around the World, a panel discussion on the history of abortion in Bolivia, China, Kenya, South Asia, and the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands over the past 60 years, and听what those histories reveal about technopolitical developments, reproductive governance, and transnational social movements.

Free |


April 25, 5:30 – 7:00 pm | Kane Hall

The 2024 Griffith and Patricia Way Lecture will interrogate two sets of fourteenth-century hell paintings owned by the temples Gokurakuji in Hy艒go Prefecture and Konkaik艒my艒ji in Kyoto, which both posit the possibility of early escape from the infernal realms, albeit in seemingly contradictory ways. This talk will uncover the ways people in premodern Japan transformed hell from a place solely retributive in nature into one that had liberating powers.

Free |


April 25, 7:30 pm | Meany Hall

The UW Wind Ensemble, led by Director Timothy Salzman, and Symphonic Band, led by Director Shaun Day, present 鈥淪potlight,鈥 performing music by Nancy Galbraith, Michael Daugherty, Henk Badings, and others. This performance features winners of the 2024 Winds Concerto Competition: Devin Foster (tuba), Kelly Hou (harp), and Cole Henslee (tuba).

Tickets |


April 26, 12:00 – 1:30 pm | Suzzallo Library

Guest speaker Dr. Melvin Rogers, professor of political science at Brown University, is invited to speak about “The Darkened Light of Faith: Race, Democracy, and Freedom in African American Political Thought.”

Free |


April 26, 3:30 pm | Denny Hall or Online via Zoom

The Department of Classics invites Glynnis Fawkes, cartoonist and archaeological illustrator, who will analyze the way a cartoonist adapts history. Fawkes will specifically look into Eric H. Cline’s 1177BC: A Graphic History of the Year Civilization Collapsed? to describe the process of interpreting Cline’s text in comic, an exercise where Fawkes repeatedly asks: how might she tell this story visually, and how can she put Eric鈥檚 words into the mouths of characters involved in the story?

Free |


April 26, 3:30 – 5:00 pm | 听Smith Hall

Dr. Keston K Perry, who researches race, reparations, and climate change for the University of California, Los Angeles Department of African American Studies, is invited to speak for the Geography Colloquium on 鈥淏eyond Repair? The Crisis of Ecological Imperialism and Reparative Ecologies in the Caribbean.鈥

Free |


April 26, 7:30 pm | 听Meany Hall

David Alexander Rahbee conducts the UW Symphony and winners of the UW Concerto Competition鈥擪ai-En Cheng, violin; Rachel Reyes, flute; and Ella Kalinichenko, piano鈥攊n a program including winning concerto excerpts. This performance will feature a UW student composition by graduate student Yonatan Ron, Silvestre Revueltas’s Sensemay谩, and Overture to Le roi d’Ys,听by脡duard Lalo. 听

Tickets |


April 27, 7:30 pm | 听Meany Hall

Renowned bassist Todd Sickafoose headlines this special performance as a part of the 2024 Improvised Music Project Festival (IMPFEST). Sickafoose will be performing sets with UW Jazz Studies students and UW faculty Cuong Vu, trumpet, Ted Poor, drums, and Steve Rodby, bass.

Free |


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Kathrine Braseth (kbraseth@uw.edu).

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ArtSci Roundup: Mark Morris Dance Group, Psychology Seminar, Screening Queer Hong Kong, and more /news/2024/03/07/artsci-roundup-mark-morris-dance-group-psychology-seminar-screening-queer-hong-kong-and-more/ Thu, 07 Mar 2024 21:51:17 +0000 /news/?p=84660 This week, head to Meany Hall for The Look of Love performance by the Mark Morris Dance Group, learn about recent research at a clinical seminar hosted by the Department of Psychology, tune into a book talk with the Japan Studies Program, and more.


March 12, 11:30 am – 12:50 pm | Kincaid Hall

The Department of Psychology invites Assistant Professor of Psychology, Tyler Jimenez, to talk on Neoliberal Distress: Examining the Relationships between Neoliberalism, Precarity, and Mental Health. The conversation centers on recent research that has begun identifying political determinants of mental health, with neoliberalism theorized to be one such determinant.

Free |


March 13, 3:30 – 5:00 pm | Thomson Hall

The UW Japan Studies Program invited author Gennifer Weisenfeld to talk about her book Gas Mask Nation: Visualizing Civil Air Defense in Wartime Japan. The book was awarded the 2024 Prize for Outstanding Book from the Southeast Conference of the Association for Asian Studies. It explores the multilayered construction of an anxious yet perversely pleasurable culture of Japanese civil air defense through a diverse range of artworks and media.

Free |

March 13, 3:30 – 5:30 pm | Allen Library

Join the Department of Asian Languages and Literature Literature for “Screening Queer Hong Kong,” a screening of two short films: Always My Child and Forever 17.

The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Director Kit Hung, moderated by professor Ungsan Kim. A film director, producer, media artist, and educator based in Hong Kong and London, Hung has made films and video works about LGBTQ+ people in Hong Kong and its diasporas.

Free |听


March 13, 6:00 – 8:00 pm | Zoom

The Jackson School lecturer with Hellenic Studies and the Center for West European Studies, Nektaria Klapaki, is featured as the 2024 Nikos Kazantzakis Endowed Lecturer at UC Berkeley. Klapaki will address two new perspectives a seminal episode in Kazantzakis鈥 life, the loss of his Christian faith after his introduction to Darwin鈥檚 theory of evolution, and Copernicus鈥 heliocentric theory.

Hosted by the Institute of European Studies at UC Berkeley.

Free |听


March 14 – 16, 8:00 pm | 听Meany Hall

The Look of Love is a wistful and heartfelt homage to the chart-topping songs of the late Burt Bacharach. A towering figure of popular music, Bacharach is known for his soaring melodies and unique orchestrations influenced by jazz, rock, and Brazilian music 鈥 his longtime lyricist Hal David providing unsentimental, poignant lyrics. This evening-length work features original choreography by Mark Morris and new musical arrangements by Ethan Iverson, performed by an ensemble of piano, trumpet, bass, and drums, with singer, actress, and Broadway star Marcy Harriell on lead vocals.

Tickets |


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Kathrine Braseth (kbraseth@uw.edu).

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ArtSci Roundup: Katz Distinguished Lecture, Book Talks, Michelle Cann Piano Performance, and more /news/2024/01/25/artsci-roundup-katz-distinguished-lecture-book-talks-michelle-cann-piano-performance-and-more/ Thu, 25 Jan 2024 21:08:36 +0000 /news/?p=84224 This week, listen to the Katz Distinguished Lecture series led by Sasha Su-Ling Welland, join a book talk event with Dr. Alexander Bubb, be awed by Michelle Cann’s piano performance, and more.


January 26, 10:00 – 11:00 am | Zoom

UW Textual Studies will host a virtual book talk event with Dr. Alexander Bubb on his latest book, Asian Classics on the Victorian Bookshelf. There will be a featured presentation and Q&A session that follows.

Free |


January 26, 12:30 – 1:30 pm | Denny Hall

The Department of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures invites Semih Tareen, the Seattle Turkish Film Festival Director, to give a talk on viruses, biotechnology, and horror movies.听

Free |


January 29, 6:30 pm | 听Brechemin Auditorium

UW keyboard performance students perform concerto movements for outside judges for a chance to perform with the UW Symphony.

Free |


January 29, 3:30 – 5:00 pm | Thomson Hall

Sponsored by the UW Japan Studies Program, the China Studies Program is hosting book talk with Wenkai He, author of Public Interest and State Legitimation: Early Modern England, Japan, and China.听

Free |


January 30, 6:30 pm | Kane Hall

In this Katz Distinguished Lecture Series, Sasha Su-Ling Welland, Chair and Professor in the Department of Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies, is invited to discuss “The Art of Living in the Nuclear Anthropocene.” This is a story of kinship, grief, and place that asks an impossible question. This lecture explores telling terrible stories in a way that centers relationally and compels those to seek repair instead of closure.

Free |


January 30, 6:00 – 7:00 pm | Thomson Hall

The converging forces of climate change, migration, and shifting livelihoods have thrust Nepal’s farmers into precarious positions. Join the South Asia Center and the Nepal Studies Initiative for a case study on how Sanskriti Farms & Research Centre is responding through innovative and sustainable agricultural practices at a local scale while empowering the community.

Shree Krishna Dhital is the Executive Director of Sanskriti Farms & Research Centre and Phoolbari Homestay. He has over a decade of experience in tourism, community farming, and sustainable technological implementation.

Free |

 


January 30, 5:00 – 6:20 pm | Husky Union Building

Karam Dana, Associate Professor at UW Bothell, will discuss “The Question of Palestine and the Evolution of Solidarity and Resistance in the U.S.” His research examines Palestinian political identity and the impact of Israeli occupation on Palestinian society. He also studies American Muslims, how they are racialized, and what affects their political participation in the U.S.

This event is part of War in the Middle East, a series of talks and discussions on the aftermath of October 7, the war in Gaza, and responses worldwide.

Recordings of each lecture will be made available on the . Watch or listen to the January 16, 2024, recording of .

Free |


January 30, 7:30 pm | Meany Hall

Faculty colleagues Rachel Lee Priday and Craig Sheppard present a blockbuster program, including the Faur茅 A Major Sonata and Bartok #1 and shorter works by Arvo P盲rt and Franz Schubert.

Tickets |


 

January 31, 7:00 – 8:30 pm | Kane Hall

In this History Lecture Series, Professor Elena Campbell explores the multifaceted history of Seattle鈥檚 engagement with peoples from the Romanov Empire and the Soviet Union, including trade relations and commerce, Russian emigration, the 鈥淩ed Scare,鈥 Russian studies, and citizen diplomacy.

Recordings of each lecture will be made available on the Department of History听.

Free |


February 1, 7:30 pm | Meany Hall

Lauded as 鈥渢echnically fearless with鈥n enormous, rich sound鈥 (La Scena Musicale), pianist Michelle Cann made her orchestral debut at age 14 and has since performed as a soloist with numerous prominent orchestras.

Cann鈥檚 Meany debut features a music program by luminaries of Chicago鈥檚 Black Renaissance, including Hazel Scott, Nora Holt, Irene Britton Smith, and others. A champion of Florence Price’s music, Cann also performs the composer鈥檚 Fantasies No. 1, 2,听and 4.

Tickets |

 


February 2, 3:30 – 5:00 pm | Gowen Hall

Join the Department of History and the Severyns Ravenholt Endowment at the UW for a conversation with Suparna Chaudhry, Assistant Professor in the Department of International Affairs at Lewis and Clark College, and Ji Hyeon Chung, graduate student in the Political Science Department at the UW.

Free |


February 2, 7:30 pm | Meany Hall

David Alexander Rahbee conducts the 天美影视传媒 Symphony and special guest Michelle Cann, piano, in a music program by Beethoven and Rachmaninoff. With acclaimed pianist Michelle Cann, performing Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18, with the orchestra.

Buy Tickets |


February 2, 7:30 pm | 听Brechemin Auditorium

Guitar students of Michael Partington perform works for solo, duo, and group arrangements.

Michael Partington is one of the most engaging of the new generation of concert players. Praised by Classical Guitar Magazine for his 鈥渓yricism, intensity, and clear technical command,鈥 this award-winning British guitarist has performed internationally as a soloist and with an ensemble to unanimous critical praise.

Free |


February 5, 7:00 pm | Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall

Carole Terry, renowned organist and former longtime UW professor of Organ Studies presents a lecture, “How the body works when playing piano, organ, or harpsichord.鈥

This series is made possible with support from the Paul B. Fritts Endowed Faculty Fellowship in Organ.

Free |


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Lauren Zondag (zondagld@uw.edu)

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ArtSci Roundup: Fall Concert with DXARTS, Dance Graduate Research Symposium and more /news/2023/10/19/artsci-roundup-fall-concert-with-dxarts-dance-graduate-research-symposium-and-more/ Thu, 19 Oct 2023 22:46:45 +0000 /news/?p=83195 This week, check out the Fall Concert hosted by DXARTS (Department of Digital Arts and Experimental Media), attend the Dance Graduate Research Symposium, listen to guest composer concerts, and more.


October 25, 7:30pm | Meany Hall听

Join the Department of Digital Arts and Experimental Media (DXARTS) as they host a Fall Concert with the Henry Art Gallery, Mini Mart City Park, Method Gallery, Gallery 4Culture, Jack Straw Cultural Center, Georgetown Steam Plant, and Meany Hall at the UW. This experimental arts festival will feature technology driven art on ritual, entropy, and storm.

Free |


October 27, 8:00pm | Meany Hall

Combining the manual art of shadow puppetry with projected animation, Song of the North tells the courageous tale of Manijeh, a heroine from ancient Persia. Manijeh must use all her strengths and talents to rescue her beloved Bijan from a dangerous predicament of her own making and help prevent a war. This love story, adapted from the Book of Kings (Shahnameh), employs a cast of 500 handmade puppets and a talented ensemble of nine actors and puppeteers to create a spectacular multimedia experience.

$10 – $69 Tickets |


October 27, 11:30am – 1:00pm | Gowen Hall

This talk will show how woodblock printing techniques, first developed by Buddhists, provided a technology that could give a broad number of people access to the written word.

Yuhua Wang, Professor of Government at Harvard University, argues that state formation depends not only on military competition but also on the supply of ideas and techniques in a society. These ideas can sometimes come from unexpected areas before being adopted by those in power.

Free |


October 27, 2:30pm | Jones Playhouse

Join the UW Department of Dance to hear research presentations by second year MFA candidates in dance.

Free |


October 28, 7:30pm | Meany Hall

Enjoy the latest installment of an ongoing series created by artistic director Naeim Rahmani. The program includes commissioned works by Iranian composers living outside of Iran and Seattle-based composers with strong ties to the UW Composition Program: Huck Hodge, Jo毛l-Fran莽ois Durand, Jeff Bowen, and Yigit K枚lat.

$10 – $20 Tickets |


October – November | 鈥淲ays of Knowing鈥 Podcast: Episode 2

鈥淲ays of Knowing鈥 is an eight-episode podcast connecting humanities research with current events and issues. This weeks episode is a Close Reading with Charles LaPorte of 鈥淒over Beach,鈥 a poem by 19th century British writer Matthew Arnold. The poem can be read as both a romantic lament and, as many scholars have concluded, a dark, existential commentary on the loss of religious faith.

This season features faculty from the UW College of Arts & Sciences as they explore race, immigration, history, the natural world 鈥 even comic books. Each episode analyzes a work, or an idea, and provides additional resources for learning more.

Free | More info


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Lauren Zondag (zondagld@uw.edu).

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ArtSci Roundup: Ghetto: The History of a Word, CJMD Spotlight: Public opinion in U.S. broadcast news, and More /news/2021/04/14/artsci-roundup-ghetto-the-history-of-a-word-cjmd-spotlight-public-opinion-in-u-s-broadcast-news-and-more/ Wed, 14 Apr 2021 18:49:11 +0000 /news/?p=73786 During this time of uncertainty and isolation, find solace in digital opportunities听to connect, share, and engage. Each week, we will share upcoming events that bring the UW, and the greater community, together online.听

Many of these online opportunities are streamed through Zoom. All UW faculty, staff, and students have access to听.听


Joseph and Friends: A Svoboda Scavenger Hunt

April 19 – May 14 |

The Svoboda Diaries Project is an interdisciplinary digital humanities project dedicated to the preservation of a unique set of historical diaries. Joseph Svoboda, who traveled up and down the Tigris River as part of his work as a steamship purser for a British shipping company, kept detailed accounts of the persons he encountered, difficulties, and happenings around him. Today, the diaries survive a unique firsthand account of social, economic, and political life around the Tigris River from the mid- to late 19th century.

This quarter, we are excited to announce a four-week online contest,听Joseph and Friends: A Svoboda Scavenger Hunt:

  • Contest dates: April 19, 2021 to May 14, 2021.
  • Each week, there will be a new theme and set of questions posted on our website.
  • Each question will have a different theme: archeology, medicine, shipping and trade, etc.
  • By participating, you can enter a lottery to win a gift card!

Free |


Graduation Exhibition 1

April 20 – May 1 |

Each year the School of Art + Art History + Design proudly celebrates graduating Art students鈥攂oth undergraduate and graduate鈥攚ith a series of exhibitions.听

The Jacob Lawrence Gallery will feature the work of students graduating with a BA in Art as they celebrate their achievements and embark on the next step in their creative journey.

Free |


Missions and States: Saving or Serving Seafarers

April 19, 12:30 – 1:30 PM |听

Laleh Khalili, Professor of International Politics at the Queen Mary University of London, will be presenting this lecture sponsored by the听Middle East Center and the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, as a part of the 2020-21 “Voices in Middle East Studies” series. Her primary research areas are logistics and trade, infrastructure, policing and incarceration, gender, nationalism, political and social movements, refugees, and diasporas in the Middle East.

Free |


Filming Ethnographic Textures: Representing the Atmospheric Politics of Peruvian Cultural Practices

April 20, 3:00 PM |听

Patricia Alvarez Astacio will discuss and screen her short films El Se帽or de los Milagros and Entretejido in this lecture sponsored by theSimpson Center for the Humanities,听Comparative History of Ideas, Latin American and Caribbean Studies, and the Jackson School of International Studies.

Free |


CJMD Spotlight: Public opinion in U.S. broadcast news

April 21, 11:30 AM – 12:30 PM |听

Social and political issues make up the lion鈥檚 share of news coverage, drawing individuals鈥 attention to public opinion and policy implications of these issues. However, in recent years, public opinion itself has become a hot topic. Journalists have been accused of misrepresenting what the public really wants, as they failed to predict Brexit and the election of Trump in 2016. Despite these criticisms, news portrayals of public opinion still serve an important democratic function: helping people learn about what other citizens think about issues, which in turn influences their own political attitudes and behaviors (Gunther, 1998; Mutz, 1992).

In this CJMD Spotlight sponsored by the Department of Communication, Dr. Kathleen Beckers discusses how public opinion is portrayed in U.S. broadcast news. Presenting the results of an extensive content analysis, she unveils the myriad ways in which journalists refer to public opinion and the implications of these portrayals.听Speaking to the diversity of opinions (or lack thereof) in news portrayals, she highlights the challenges journalists face in 鈥渞eading鈥 public opinion and how this misreading unwittingly leads to erroneous depictions of public opinion, the consequences of which are especially critical for a high-stakes election.

Free |


Talking Gender in the E.U.: Anti-Gender Politics and Right Wing Populism in Poland

April 27, 12:00 – 1:00 PM |听

Join听El偶bieta Korolczuk, Associate Professor at The School of Historical and Contemporary Studies,听S枚dert枚rn University, Sweden听for a discussion on anti-gender politics and right wing populism in Poland. This lecture series is organized by the Center for West European Studies and the Jean Monnet Center of Excellence with support from the Lee and Stuart Scheingold European Studies Fund, the EU Erasmus+ Program, the Ellison Center for Russian, East European and Central Asian Studies, and the Center for Global Studies.听

Next in the series:

May 13, 12:00 – 1:00 PM: Gender in the European Parliament

Free |


Humanitarianisms: Dean Spade & Cristian Capotescu

April 22, 3:30 PM |听

In this lecture, sponsored by the Simpson Center for the Humanities, Spade and Capotescu will address the Spring Quarter theme, 鈥淩ethinking the Human.”

Dean Spade will lecture on 鈥淢utual Aid: Radical Care in Crisis Conditions,” and how humanitarianism, saviorism, and charity have been extensively critiqued as logics that undergird and legitimize war, colonialism, racialized-gendered control, and extraction. How do people organizing immediate survival support for each other in the face of crisis work together to resist these methods and build practices of solidarity and collective self-determination?

Cristian Capotescu will discuss 鈥淓choes of the 鈥楴ew Soviet Man鈥: Humanity and the Ethics of Giving in Late Socialism.鈥澨In the late 1980s, for many citizens of the former socialist bloc practicing and living socialism involved helping the less fortunate, the sick, and the poor through acts of giving. Such volunteer work and private assistance often invoked moral claims of a better life based on an ethics of shared suffering, dependency, and radical equality. This talk traces how socialist giving opened the possibility for ordinary people to enact notions of shared humanity in alternative ways that frequently eluded capitalist, Western modernity.

Free |


Ghetto: The History of a Word

April 22, 4:00 – 5:15 PM |听

Few words are as ideologically charged as 鈥済hetto.鈥 Its early uses centered on two cities: Venice, the site of the first ghetto in Europe, established in 1516; and Rome, where the ghetto endured until 1870, decades after it had been dismantled elsewhere.

Daniel B. Schwartz,听associate professor of history and the director of the Judaic Studies Program at George Washington University, will give this talk sponsored by the Stroum Center for Jewish Studies.

Free |

 


adrienne maree brown + Prem Krishnamurthy

April 23, 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM |听

Join an online conversation, to explore ways artists contribute to community and propel structural change.听Amidst this time of great loss, yet also change and possibility, what are emerging roles for artists and designers? How does an individual鈥檚 creative practice relate to collectivity, collaboration, and interdependency? How can design processes and organizing learn from each other? Krishnamurthy poses these questions and more, as he and brown discuss potential futures for art, community building, and mutual care, as well as essential tools for today鈥檚 artists and organizers. An audience Q&A follows their dialogue.听Presented in partnership by Cranbrook Art Museum, Jacob Lawrence Gallery, The Black Embodiments Studio, and School of Art + Art History + Design.

Free |


Katarzyna Kobro Composing Space

April 24, 11:00 AM – 12:30 PM |听

Join the Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures and the UW Polish Studies Endowment Committee for a talk by Dr. Marek Wieczorek about Polish sculptor听Katarzyna Kobro.

Between 1925 and 1933, Polish sculptor Katarzyna Kobro made a series of groundbreaking abstract Spatial Compositions. 鈥楢s it becomes united with space,鈥 she wrote about these works, 鈥榯he new sculpture should be its most condensed and essential part.鈥 In this lecture we will trace the artist鈥檚 discovery that the 鈥榮implest and most appropriate鈥 solution to the question of the essence of sculpture was the 鈥榮haping of space鈥 itself.

Free |


Looking for more?

Check out UWAA’s Stronger Together web page for听more digital engagement opportunities.

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ArtSci Roundup: Borders and Blackness: Communicating Belonging and Grief, Drop-in Session: Meditation Inspired By Nature, and More /news/2021/04/05/artsci-roundup-borders-and-blackness-communicating-belonging-and-grief-drop-in-session-meditation-inspired-by-nature-and-more/ Mon, 05 Apr 2021 21:22:59 +0000 /news/?p=73586 During this time of uncertainty and isolation, find solace in digital opportunities听to connect, share, and engage. Each week, we will share upcoming events that bring the UW, and the greater community, together online.听

Many of these online opportunities are streamed through Zoom. All UW faculty, staff, and students have access to听.听


Curating in Conversation: A Panel Series on Sharing Northwest Native Art and Art History with the Public

April 12, 7:00 – 8:30 PM |

In the second of a three-part series sponsored by the Simpson Center for the Humanities and the Canadian Studies Center, this panel discussion features Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse, Curator of Northwest Native Art at the Burke Museum, in conversation with Tlingit artist and co-curator of the Northwest Native Art Gallery Alison Bremner and Karen Duffek, Curator of Contemporary Visual Arts & Pacific Northwest at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia. The program will include an overview of Bremner鈥檚 work as an artist and curator followed by a larger discussion on the state of contemporary Northwest Coast art and the issues involved in ethical curation.

Free |


Drop-in Session: Meditation Inspired By Nature

April 12, 6:00 – 7:00 PM |听

Join the Center for Child and Family Well-Being for a series of short meditations inspired by the book Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer and two poems 鈥 鈥淩ise Up Rooted like Trees鈥 by Rainer Maria Rilke and 鈥淵ou Have Become a Forest鈥 by Nikita Gill. Using nature as inspiration, participants will be guided to focus on resourcing, releasing stress, refueling and connection. Presented by Blaire Carleton.

Free |


Transcultural Approaches to Europe: A Conversation with Fatima El-Tayeb

April 13, 3:00 PM |听

In this lecture,听Professor of Literature and Ethnic Studies at the University of California, San Diego Fatima El-Tayeb and director of study abroad and part-time lecturer for the Comparative History of Ideas Department听Nicolaas Barr discuss how European identities are constructed through 鈥渞acial amnesia鈥 and how the concepts of whiteness, gender, and religion are mobilized in European politics. They might address questions such as: can you decolonize Europe? Why do white Europeans believe they are colorblind? What is the relationship between the so-called refugee crisis and Europe鈥檚 colonial legacy? How are religion, gender and sexuality connected to the rise of right-wing movements? What role do trans-community coalitions play in movements of resistance? Is a multi-religious Europe possible? What is queering ethnicity?

Free |


Borders and Blackness: Communicating Belonging and Grief

April 14, 3:30 – 5:00 PM |听

Black women imagined and orchestrated #Me Too, Black Lives Matter, Bring Back Our Girls, and Say Her Name campaigns in the U.S. and globally. Recently, the importance of Black women鈥檚 experiences, interventions, and contributions to Black life and societies at large has crystalized for non-Black audiences in the U.S. and mixed audiences abroad; the ongoing and public response to deaths made increasingly visible on social media plays a significant role in the ways in which communities in the U.S. and abroad regard Black women.

In the second COM Spring colloquium, sponsored by the Department of Communication,听Dr. Manoucheka Celeste will address the different ways Black women tend to Black life and death. Specifically, she situates the popularity of representations of Black suffering across media, alongside counter-narratives and communication practices by these communities, in transnational contexts. She explores how Black women respond to existing concerns in emotional and political ways in the public sphere.听Using a transnational Blackness framework, Dr. Celeste articulates continuities and ruptures in identities and experiences across geographies to consider the connections between life, death, and social belonging, and what it means for Black women to represent belonging through expressions of grief.

Free |


Changing Global Connections: New Formations of Identity, Place and Region:听Facing the New Geopolitics: China at the Poles

April 15, 4:30 – 6:00 PM |听

Join听Anne-Marie听Brady, professor of China Studies at the University of Canterbury, in conversation on how today鈥檚 changing geopolitics is creating new configurations across regions and in the field of international studies.听This talk explores international relations between China and the Arctic and is sponsored by the Jackson School for International Studies, the Center for Global Studies,听the Canadian Studies Center, the China Studies Program, and the East Asia Center.

Next in the series:

  • April 29, 4:30 – 6:00 PM:听Indigenous Blackness in Am茅ricas: The Queer Politics of Self-Making Garifuna New York
  • May 13, 9:30 – 11:00 AM:听How Emerging Technology is Changing International Security

Free |


American Christians and the Holy Land: Before, During and After Contemporary Pilgrimages to Israel/Palestine

April 15, 4:00 – 5:15 PM |听

Since the 1950s, millions of U.S. Christians have traveled to the Holy Land to visit the places where Jesus lived and died. Why do these pilgrims choose to journey halfway around the world? How do they react to what they encounter, and how do they understand the trip upon return?

Drawing on five years of ethnographic research with groups of pilgrims before, during, and after their trips, Dr. Hillary Kaell (McGill University) frames the experience as both ordinary 鈥 tied to participants鈥 everyday role as 鈥渞itual specialists,鈥 or religious practitioners 鈥 and extraordinary, since they travel far away from home, often for the first time.

This talk, sponsored by the Stroum Center for Jewish Studies, will examine the kind of Christian education and personal experiences that compel individuals to take the trip, and cover a few key examples of what they find once they arrive. Taking the rare step of following pilgrims after they return home, the talk will also examine whether the trip makes an impact in Christians鈥 lives over a longer term.

Free |


E.U. Democracy Forum:听Kristina Weissenbach – The Formation and Institutionalization of New Parties in EU Member States

April 15, 12:00 – 1:15 PM |听

Affiliate Professor for Political Science Kristina Weissenbach (Ph.D. Political Science, 2012, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany) will present the third lecture in the E.U. Democracy Forum series. Sponsored by the Center for West European Studies and E.U. Center.

Next in the series:

  • May 20, 12:00 – 1:15 PM:听Phillip Ayoub – Pride amid Prejudice: The Impact of the First Pride in Sarajevo

Free |


Seattle Art Museum Virtual Saturday University:听The Memory of the Ancients in Modern Iranian and Parsi Architecture

April 17, 10:00 – 11:30 AM |听

In 1822 six fire temples adorned the cityscapes of West India. By the end of the century, Parsis had augmented that number tenfold. Many of these structures were erected in what they dubbed the 鈥淧ersian Style,鈥 on floor plans described as 鈥渙pen.鈥 From the 1830s to the 1930s, the Persian Revival style evolved simultaneously and codependently in two different geo-cultures: the western coast of the Indian subcontinent, with large Parsi urban populations, as in Bombay and Surat, and the major cities of Qajar and Pahlavi Iran, in particular Shiraz and Tehran. These were interpretative 鈥渃opies鈥 of 鈥渙riginals,鈥 not necessarily of archeological sites but European and native fantastical travelogues as 鈥渁uthentic鈥 memories and national resilience.

This lecture will be presented by听Talinn Grigor,听professor and chair of the Art History Program in the Department of Art and Art History at the University of California, Davis. Co-sponsored by the South Asia Center.

Free |


Looking for more?

Check out UWAA’s Stronger Together web page for听more digital engagement opportunities.

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Jackson School hosts lectures on ‘Trump in the World’ Mondays through fall /news/2017/09/26/jackson-school-hosts-lectures-on-trump-in-the-world-mondays-through-fall/ Tue, 26 Sep 2017 17:46:46 +0000 /news/?p=54826 The presidency of Donald Trump continues to have important and long-lasting implications for international affairs. Faculty members in the UW’s will explore the ongoing impact of the Trump presidency in weekly lectures through fall quarter.

This 10-part series examines the ongoing impact of the 2016 election on countries and regions worldwide.听Each week, Jackson School faculty experts听will explore perspectives from Europe, Asia, Mexico, Russia and the Middle East as well as questions of climate change and historical context in the U.S. presidency.

“” lectures will be held from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Monday afternoons in room 110 of Kane Hall, and all are open to the public. Jackson School Director will be moderator for these events.

The schedule is as follows:

Oct. 2: Trump and the World 鈥 a Historical Perspective, with , assistant professor of international studies
Oct. 9: The Middle East and Israel, with , professor of international studies
Oct. 16: Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the Gulf, with , affiliate professor of international studies
Oct. 23: The US-Mexican Border, with , associate professor and chair of the
Oct. 30: India, with , associate professor, director of the
Nov. 6: China, with , professor of international studies
Nov. 13: The Korean Peninsula, with , professor of international studies
Nov. 20: The International Climate Regime, with , professor of international studies and director of the
Nov. 27: Russia, with , professor of history and international studies.
Dec. 4: Final panel discussion and round table.

###

For more information about the series, contact the Jackson School at 206-543-6001 or jsisadv@uw.edu. Interested press may contact Monique Thormann, Jackson School director of communications, at 206-685-0578 or thormm@uw.edu.

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