Campus Humanities Calendar
44 matches found
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This event has been canceled due to unforseen circumstances.
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Tenure-stream faculty who wish to learn more about the Interseminars Initiative are encouraged to attend this Zoom info session.
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Tenure-stream faculty who wish to learn more about the Interseminars Initiative are encouraged to attend this Zoom info session.
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Hear from Anthony Ray Hinton, who survived for 30 years on Alabama's death row. His story is a decades-long journey to exoneration and freedom. In 2018, Mr. Hinton published The Sun Does Shine: How I Found Life and Freedom on Death Row, which was selected for Oprah’s Book Club and is a New York Times bestseller.
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This symposium explores how infrastructure and aesthetics, as structuring forms, are being taken up in the environmental humanities.
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Join this faculty info session to learn more about applying for the Humanities Research Lab opportunity.
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Both AI and HA (human augmentation) are attracting floods of funding and research attention, with most of the attention going to silicon, cloud, and quantum methods to emulate what human beings have already achieved—via evolution and culture—in hard stages across the last half million years. In this talk physicist and author, David Brin, will survey the general...
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The Senate Committee on the Library and the University Library will host a campus-wide Town Hall on April 27 from 1-2:30pm via Zoom. Representatives from the Library will provide a status update on the Archives and Special Collections Building project and speak about the transition of Undergraduate Library services. There will also be an opportunity for Q and A.
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The HRI-Mellon Undergraduate Symposium features a collection of undergraduate research presentations that showcase exploration of law through applications of historical, philosophical, literary, and visual thinking.
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On Friday, April 29, at 5:30 in Room 1092, Lincoln Hall, we will be screening the film How To Train Your Dragon. The film will be followed with a discussion about Vikings, disability, and more! This event is open to anyone and everyone, so undergraduate students, graduates, and professors alike are encouraged to participate.