|
Baker-Nord
Center Events Archive
2001-02 Events
2002-03 Events
2003-04 Events
2004-05 Events
2005-06 Events
2006-07 Events
| Saturday, Sept. 22,
7:00 p.m. |
Film: Dora-Heita (Alley
Cat)
The Cleveland Cinematheque |
Linda Ehrlich, Associate Professor, Department of Modern
Languages and Literatures at CWRU, and Stephen Prince will
lead an informal discussion after the film.
Sponsored by the Cleveland Cinematheque
For more information: 216-421-7450
| Saturday, Sept. 22,
8:00 p.m. |
Trisha Brown Dance
Company in Concert
Ohio Theater, Playhouse Square |
Tickets available from tickets.com, or at the box office.
| Saturday, Sept. 29 |
American Music Masters Conference
Downhearted Blues: The Music, Life and Legacy
of Bessie Smith
CWRU Campus |
This 6th annual converence will combine musicalperformances
and presentations by scholars critics, journalists, and musicians,
celebrating the life of Bessie Smith. A special closing keynote
presentation by Angela Davis, author and political activist.
Co-sponsored by the CWRU College of Arts & Sciences and the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED.
For information, call 216-368-2400 or email pdm3@po.cwru.edu
| October 18, 19, 20 |
OhioDance 25th Anniversary
Festival
CWRU Campus & Cuyahoga Community College Metropolitan Campus |
This hallmark festival celebrates the state organization
that was founded in Cleveland 25 years ago. The 25th anniversary
festival will be three days of education workshops, showcases,
and lectures. Also included will be Master Classes in a wide
array of dance forms, as well as techniques and panel discussions.
Sponsored by the Dance Program in the Department of Theater Arts
For more information: 216-368-2854
Thursday, October 25
Monday, October 29
Tuesday, October 30 |
September 11, 2001: A
Humanities Response
All events will be held in Clark Hall, Room 309 |
The events of September 11 and since have affected
all of us at CWRU in different and lasting ways. To explore
how academic disciplines may interpret and be interpreted
by the current climate, the Baker-Nord Center presents three
interdisciplinary faculty discussions intended to offer humanities'
perspectives on recent events, and to engage the campus community
in dialogue. The discussion topics will be as follows:
Thursday, October 25, 5 p.m.: Violence
in Art and Literature :
Martin Helzle (Classics): Aeneas in the Whitehouse
David Carrier (Art History): Representations of Violence in Visual Art
Heather Meakin (English): Speculations on Terrorism in Milton's Samson
Monday, October 29, 5 p.m.: Media Response and
Responsibility
Ted Gup (English)
Mary Step (Communications)
Steve Litt (English; The Plain Dealer)
with guests
David Kordalski (The Plain Dealer)
Leon Bibb (WEWS Channel 5)
Tuesday, October 30, 5 p.m.: Religion and Violence
Tim Beal (Religion)
Julie Exline (Psychology)
Peter Haas (Religion)
James Pfeiffer (Anthropology)
| Thursday, November 1, 4:30
p.m. |
Georgia Cowart:
Watteau's Pilgrimage to Cythera, Louis XIV,
and the Subversive Utopia
of the Paris Opera House
1914 Lounge, Thwing Center |
Dr. Cowart will discuss her explication, published
in the latest issue of The Art Bulletin, that Antoine Watteau's
well-known painting The Pilgrimate to Cythera may be traced
to a set of subversive opera-ballets at the Paris Opera House.
Satirizing roles actually danced by Louis XIV in the earlier
court ballet, these works posit Venus, Cupid, and their island
home of Cythera as a pacifist and egalitarian counterutopia
to Louis's court.
Georgia Cowart is Associate Professor and Chair Designate
of Music, effective July 2002. Currently she is the recipient
of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the
Humanities for a book project entitled "Louis XIV and the Politics of Art:
The Opera-Ballet as Political Propaganda and Utopian Prot est.
| Wednesday, Nov. 14,
4:30 p.m. |
The Jewish
Messiah Who Became a Muslim:
Shabbetai Zvi and His Disciples from the 17th Century Through
Today
Baker-Nord Center, Room 206 Clark Hall |
Yom Tom Assis
Rosenthal Visiting Fellow
Head, Institute of Jewish Studies,
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
When Shabbetai Zvi, the mystic Jew from Izmir, Turkey, proclaimed himself the
messiah in the second half of the 17th century, almost the entire Jewish population
of the world accepted him as such and began preparations for the return to
their homeland.
The shock and embarrassment were great, therefore, when
under Turkish pressure, Shabbetai converted to Islam as Mehmet
Efendi. He was followed by his most loyal supporters who
also converted and became known as the Donmeh - a crypto-Jewish
sect which survives in Turkey today.
For more information:
216-368-2414
www.cwru.edu/artsci/rosenthal
| Monday, January 28
- 4:30 p.m. |
Christoph von Dohnanyi
Harkness Chapel |
Christoph von Dohanyi, Music Director of The Cleveland Orchestra,
in conversation with Donald Rosenberg, Classical Music Critic
at the Cleveland Plain Dealer. This event is free and open
to the public. For more information, call 216-368-0528.
| Friday, March 1 -
4:00 p.m. |
How to Get a Book
Published
Baker-Nord Center, Clark Hall Room 206 |
William Germano, Vice-President and Publishing Director
at Routledge and author of Getting It Published: A Guide
for Scholars and Anyone Else Serious about Serious Books ,
will speak about preparing and producing an academic book.
This event is free and open to the public. For more information,
call 216-368-0528.
| Monday, March 18
:: 1:30-2:30 p.m. |
Roundtable Discussion
Featuring James Badford, investigative reporter and
bestselling author
Baker-Nord Center, Clark Hall Room 206 |
This lecture is part of the Susie Gharib Distinguished
Lecture Series in Journalism .
Free and Open to the Public. For more information: 216-368-4837.
| Thursday, March 21
:: 4:30-5:30 p.m. |
Open Class Discussion
Featuring Leonard Downie, Jr., Executive Editor, Washington
Post
Clark Hall Room 309 |
This lecture is part of the Susie Gharib Distinguished
Lecture Series in Journalism .
Free and Open to the Public. For more information: 216-368-4837.
| Monday, March 25
:: 4:30 p.m. |
Transfer of Knowledge
in the Medieval Mediterranean: A New Approach
A lecture by Alain Touwaide, Ph.D., Scholar in Residence,
National Museum of Natural History
Baker-Nord Center, Clark Hall Room 206 |
Alain Touwaide is a classicist and orientalist specializing
in the history of medicine and pharmacy from Antiquity to
the Renaissance. Dr. Touwaide is especially interested in
the circulation of medical books, texts, and theories among
the cultures that flourished in the Mediterranean area, including
the assimilation of ancient science into Western science.
He is currently Scholar in Residence at the History of Medicine,
Division of the National Library of Medicine and Visiting
Scholar, Section of Botany, National Museum of Natural History,
Smithsonian Institution.
| Monday, April 1 ::
1:30-2:30 p.m. |
Roundtable Discussion
Featuring Mary Jordan and Kevin Sullivan,
Washington Post
Baker-Nord Center, Clark Hall Room 206 |
This lecture is part of the Susie Gharib Distinguished
Lecture Series in Journalism .
Free and Open to the Public. For more information: 216-368-4837.
| Thursday, April 4
:: 4:30 p.m. |
Infections & Inequalities:
The Modern Plagues
A lecture by Paul Farmer, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine,
Harvard University
Ford Auditorium |
Sponsored by the College
Scholars Program . For more information: 216-368-6996.
Free and Open to the Public.
| Monday, April 8::
12:00 p.m. |
Violence, Natality & Mortality:
Sectarian Conflicts and the Claims of the Other
A lecture by Veena Das, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University
1914 Lounge, Thwing Center |
Sponsored by the Interdisciplinary Initiative on Religion
and Culture. Co-sponsored by the Department of Anthropology
and the Baker-Nord Center for the Humanities.
For more information: 216-368-2259.
Free and Open to the Public.
| Friday, April 12
:: 7:00 p.m. |
The Meaning of the
Cloth: The Tapestry and the Loincloth
A lecture by Arthur C. Danto, the Johnsonian Professor of
Philosophy, Columbia University Art Critic, "The Nation"
Recital Hall, The Cleveland Museum of Art |
Sponsored by the Department of Art History and Art at CWRU
and the Cleveland Institute of Art.
Free and Open to the Public.
| April 12 & 13 |
JUST CAUSE - 2
day conference
CWRU, Campus-wide |
Keynote Presentation: "Justice and
'The Butterfly Effect'
- Catherine Pinkerton, CSJ
Saturday, April 13 will feature a series of
workshops to choose from covering Hunger and Homelessness,
After 9/11, Jobs with Justice, Race & the Death Penalty,
and Welfare Reform.
Featured luncheon speaker will be Elizabeth McAllister, "Speaking Truth
to Power."
Sponsored by The Hallinan Project.
Registration deadline: Friday, April 5. $15
registration fee, $2 for students. All fees will be donated
to the St. Augustine Hunger Center.
For more information: 216-368-6996.
| Saturday, April 13
:: 1:30 p.m. |
Queers and Jews:
Questions of Community and Diaspora in France
A lecture by David Caron, Associate Professor of French,
University of Michigan
Clark Hall, Room 309 |
This talk is held in conjunction with the Northeast
Ohio French Studies Colloquium. Sponsored by the Program
in French Studies, the Baker-Nord Center for the Humanities,
and the Departments of Modern Languages and Literatures,
Music, Philosophy, Art History, and History at CWRU.
For more information: 216-368-8983.
Free and Open to the Public.
| Humanities
Week 2002 - September 17-22, 2002 |
See below for a list
of events. All events listed are subject to change.
Please check back for updates.
This year's theme is "The Americas" |
Tuesday, September 17
4:30 p.m.
Baker-Nord Center
Clark Hall 206 |
Lecture by Lawrence Lipking of Northwestern
University - "The American Scholar: Poetic Reflections
on Survival" |
Tuesday, September 17
8:00 p.m.
Strosacker Auditorium |
Film: "Love and Human Remains" (Canada) |
Wednesday, September
18
8:00 p.m.
Strosacker Auditorium |
Film: "El Mariachi" |
Thursday, September 19
12 noon
Baker-Nord Center
Clark Hall 206 |
"Careers for Liberal Arts Students" event |
Thursday, September 19
7:00 p.m.
Clark Hall 309 |
Polyglot Follies presents "Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs" (reception to follow in the Baker-Nord
Center, Clark Hall 206) |
Thursday, September 19
8:00 p.m.
Strosacker Auditorium |
Film: "An American in Paris" (USA) |
Friday, September 20
3:30-4:20 p.m.
Location TBA |
Richard Rodriguez informal Q&A |
Friday, September 20
4:30 p.m.
Strosacker Auditorium |
Keynote Lecture: Richard
Rodriguez (booksigning to follow in Tomlinson) (cosponsored
with the College
Scholars Program ) |
Saturday, September 21
7:00 p.m.
Baker-Nord Center
Clark Hall 206 |
Reading and lecture by Marjorie Agosin: "Thresholds
of Memory: a poetry of rememberance." Reception to follow |
Saturday, September 21
11:00 a.m.
Guilford Parlor |
Marathon Reading: "Literature of the Americas" |
Sunday, September 22
2:00 p.m.
Harkness Chapel |
"Tres Vidas" performance |
| "Disney in the World" Week
- October 24-31 |
| See below
for a list of events. All events listed are subject
to change. Please check back for updates. |
Thursday, October 24
4:30 p.m.
Clark Hall 309 |
Public lecture on theme-park
architecture (title TBA) by Karal Marling. |
Monday, October 28
4:30 p.m.
Baker-Nord Center
Clark Hall 206 |
Re-Made in Japan: Tokyo Disneyland and
Cultural Domestication - A lecture by Aviad Raz |
Tuesday, October 29
4:30 p.m.
Clark 309 |
Animating Europe: The Meaning and Impact
of Euro Disneyland - A lecture by Andrew Lainsbury |
Wednesday, October 30
7:00 & 9:00 p.m.
Strosacker Auditorium |
Films: Double Bill - "Mulan" (7
p.m.) and
"Princess Mononoke" (9 p.m.) |
Thursday, October 31
4:30 p.m.
Baker-Nord Center
Clark Hall 206
|
Work-in-Progress Colloquium :
Takao Hagiwara (Department of Modern Languages and Literatures)
- "Anime East and West: Hayao Miyazaki's Princess Mononoke" |
| October 18 & 19 |
Western Reserve Studies
Symposium
Food in the Western Reserve
Squire Valleevue Farm |
| Wednesday, November 13, 4:30
p.m. |
Susan Sontag:
In America: A Reading and Discussion with Susan
Sontag"
Strosacker Auditorium |
| March 28, 2003 |
Brown bag lunch & public
talk by Regina Morantz-Sanchez
Historical Reflections on the Figure of the Difficult Woman: The Libel
Trial of Dr. May Dixon Jones, Brooklyn, 1892
Lecture: 4:30 p.m. (reception at 4:00), Baker-Nord Center,
Clark Hall 206 |
| Thursday, April 10,
2003 |
"Just War?"
Panel Discussion
5:00-6:30 p.m., Harkness Chapel |
In the last few months, the language of "just war" has increasingly
become a part of public discourse. Different groups have
used just war doctrine both to oppose and support the war
on Iraq. Political leaders, talk show hosts, editorialists
and movie stars argue about whether this war is just. What
does and doesn't it mean to call any war just? How and when
is such rhetoric politically effective? What value does it
have in an international discussion? Is it only a narrowly
western idea? Does just war doctrine still make sense in
the contemporary world? Join us for a panel discussion on
the history and meaning of "just war."
CWRU Faculty Panelists:
"Just War Doctrine Today: Can a Modern War Be Fought Justly?"
Peter J. Haas
Department of Religion, CWRU
"When is War Philosophically Justifiable? Why -- For Whom?"
Laura Hengehold
Department of Philosophy, CWRU
"Asian Perspectives on the Morality of War"
William E. Deal
Department of Religion, CWRU
"The Political Effectiveness of Just War Language"
Kelly McMann
Department of Political Science, CWRU
Timothy K. Beal, Presiding
| April 23, 2003 |
Campen Lecture in
Architecture - Moshe Safdi
Order and Complexity
4:30 p.m., Strosacker Auditorium |
Moshe Safdie is one
of the world's most original and wide-ranging architects.
He has designed urban housing, public institutions, airports,
mixed-use complexes, and new communities. In 1967, he designed
the master plan of the 1967 World Exposition and supervised
construction of the acclaimed Habitat '67 in Montreal. Today
the firm he heads is a world leader in innovative design
and architectural thought. His most recent book, The City
Without the Automobile, explores urban design ideas in the
absence of the car.
| April 24, 2003 |
Public talk by Donna
Heiland, ACLS
Find Support for Your Research: Funding Opportunities in the Humanities
4:30 p.m., Baker-Nord Center, Clark Hall Room 206 |
There is more money out there than you might think! The American
Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) has for decades
funded individual research in the humanities and related
social sciences, and since 1997 has significantly increased
its available resources. This year's fellowship programs
together awarded just over $5 million in stipends to nearly
150 Fellows. Donna Heiland, Director of Fellowship Programs
at ACLS, will talk about research funding for the humanities,
with a focus on the range of programs available at ACLS,
the thinking behind their development, and the application/review
process.
| September
10, 2003 |
Lecture:
Azar Nafisi - Women's Voices Series
Lolita in Tehran
5:00 p.m., Ford Auditorium |
 |
Azar Nafisi is Visiting Professor and director of the
SAIS Dialogue Project at the Foreign Policy Institute of
Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International
Studies. A professor of aesthetics, culture, and literature,
she has taught at Oxford University and The University
of Tehran, the Free Islamic University and Allameh Tabatabii.
She has earned national respect and international recognition
for advocating on behalf of Iran's intellectuals, youth
and especially young women. She was expelled from the University
of Tehran for refusing to wear the mandatory Islamic veil
in 1981, and did not resume teaching until 1987.
Dr. Nafisi has lectured and written extensively in English
and Persian on the political implications of literature
and culture as well as the human rights Iranian women and
girls and the important role they play in the process of
change for pluralism and an open society in Iran. Her best
known book, Reading
Lolita in Tehran , chronicles her experiences while
meeting in Tehran with seven former students to discuss
forbidden works of Western literature.
- CWRU
Women's Center
| September
30, 2003 |
Lecture:
Evelyn Accad - Women's Voices Series
Title TBA
4:30 p.m., Clark Hall 309 |
 |
Professor Accad was born and raised in Beirut, Lebanon.
She received her primary and secondary education in Beirut,
which included studies at the Beirut College for Women
(now the Lebanese American University). She received her
B.A. from Anderson College in English Literature; an M.A.
in French from Ball State University; and a Ph.D. in Comparative
Literature from Indiana University.
Accad has been a professor at the University of Illinois,
Champaign-Urbana since 1974 and teaches courses in French,
Comparative Literature, African Studies, Women Studies
and Middle-East Studies. Her other activities include writing
and composing folk songs -- both music and lyrics -- and
performing at various concerts in the United States and
abroad. Accad is the author of several books, including Sexuality & War:
Literary Masks of the Middle East , and The
Wounded Breast: Intimate Journeys Through Cancer ,
which chronicles her struggle with the disease. She also
recently wrote a chapter for the book September
11, 2001: Feminist Perspectives .
- CWRU
Women's Center
| October 10, 2003 |
Lecture:
John D'Emilio, historian of gay America
Title TBA
time TBA, Clark Hall 309 |
| October 16, 2003 |
Yoshiaki
Shimizu
The Zen Patriarch of the Birds' Nests:
Exploring the 17th Century Painting by Tawaraya
Sotatsu in The Cleveland Museum of Art
Inaugural Lecture: The
Mitzie Levine Verne and Daniel Verne Endowment for Asian Studies
4:30 p.m., Harkness Chapel |
Executed in subtle and elusively pale ink on paper, the
painting depicts a Chinese Zen patriarch from the Tang dynasty
whose name translates as "birds' nests." Befitting his name
and religious beliefs, the patriarch lived in a tree like
a bird in order to avoid the dirt and dust of the world.
Dr. Shimizu will explore how this painting came into being
and how we can interpret it against the background of the
artistic and cultural history of 17th century Japan.
Dr. Shimizu specializes in Japanese and Chinese painting
and calligraphy. He is the Frederick Marquand Professor of
Art and Archaeology at Princeton University and has been
a Curator of Japanese Art at the Freer Gallery of Art, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, DC and Guest Curator, National Gallery
of Art, Washington, DC.
Dr. Shimizu holds a Ph.D. from Princeton. He teaches courses
and seminars on the art of China and Japan.
| October
17, 2003 |
 |
"Jerusalem
Women Speak" - Women's Voices Series
Three Women, Three Faiths, One Shared City
3:30 p.m., Harkness Chapel |
Jerusalem Women Speak brings together three
women -- one Jewish, one Christian, and one Muslim -- to
converse across religious and cultural boundaries as they
share personal stories of life in Jerusalem.
Yehudit Keshet (Israeli Jewish participant) was born in
South Wales in 1943 and is a British-Israeli citizen. Although
West Jerusalem became her permanent residence in 1974, she
has lived in Israel off and on since 1958. She founded The
Tradition Center, which is a cooperative, multi-cultural
puppet theater that works with sources common to Jewish,
Christian, and Muslim traditions to provide entertainment
and conduct workshops for children. She also co-founded "Checkpoint
Watch," a women's human rights group opposing Israel's occupation
of the West Bank and Gaza. Keshet is currently on sabbatical
at Lancaster University in England.
Mai J. Nassar (Christian Palestinian participant) was born
and raised in the West Bank town of Beit Jala, where her
family has lived for centuries. She obtained a B.A. degree
in English Literature from the University of Jordan in Amman,
Jordan. Ms. Nassar persued graduate studies at the University
of Warwick in England and graduated with an M.A. in English
Language Teaching. She specializes in teaching English as
a foreign language and currently works at Bethlehem University.
In the United States, Ms. Nassar participated in the Professional
Development Program in English Language Teaching for Educators
at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio -- an intensive workshop
in which six Israeli and six Palestinian educators worked
to find effective methods of teaching English as a foreign
language.
Zleikha Muhtaseb (Muslim Palestinian participant) was born,
raised, and still lives in the West Bank city of Hebron.
She obtained a B.A. in English Literature from Hebron University
and has more than twelve years of experience as an English
teacher and translator. She served as the director of a woman's
center in the city of Hebron from 1999-2000 and is currently
working with Christian Peacemaker Teams. She has also worked
for Human Rights Watch and Save the Children as a translator
and interviewer. Ms. Muhtaseb is currently preparing other
programs which will comprise a more formal educational center
in the Old City of Hebron and participating in a program
that will provide remedial classes for children who missed
school as a result of the curfew in the Old City. She is
a member of the Parents Council in Hebron and the Hebron
Women Youth Center.
Reverend Dr. Joan Brown Campbell (panel moderator) is an
ordained minister with standing in two Christian denominations:
the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and the American
Baptist Church. She was the first woman to be named Executive
Director of the U.S. office of the World Council of Churches;
the first ordained woman to be General Secretary of the National
Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA; and today she
is the first woman Director of Religion at the historic Chautauqua
Institution, a center for religion, the arts, education,
and recreation. The mother of Jane Campbell, the first woman
mayor of Cleveland, Rev. Campbell's honors and achievements
are many and varied, including eleven honorary doctorate
degrees.
| February 25 , 2004 |
Celebration of Russian
Shrovetide (Maslennitsa)
4:00 p.m., Clark Hall Room 206 |
This event will include a performance by Moscow Nights,
a Russian folk music trio. For more information visit www.russianfolk.com or
call 368-2230.
| March 7, 2004 |
Purim Carnevale:
A Theatrical Extravaganza based on the first Hebrew
play, 'A Comedy of Betrothal' by Leone de Sommi (1525-1590)
Directed by Anna Levenstein
2:30 p.m., Cleveland Museum of Art |
Click
here for more information about this event from the Cleveland
Museum of Art.
From the 15th century on, the Jewish community of Mantua
produced Italian commedias for Carnival celebrations at the
ducal court. Playwright and academician Leone de Sommi (1525--1590)
wrote and produced many such plays, including the innovative
Hebrew-language A Comedy of Betrothal , a scripted comedy
in five acts. Ensemble Ciaramella, modeled on the theatrical
musical ensembles of the early 17th century, is joined by
singers, actors, and dancers in periodcostume to present
a theatrical production based on this important and entertaining
work. With dialogue in English and songs in Hebrew, the production
draws on commedia dell 'arte gesture and historical dance.
Presented in conjunction with the Samuel
Rosenthal Center for Judaic Studies .
The production is reconstructed and directed by musicologist
Anna Levenstein, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Music,
and presented with the help of Omri Yavin, Full-Time Lecturer
in Hebrew, Department of Modern Languages and Literatures
in the College of Arts and Sciences at Case.
General admission: $15; CMA and Musart Society members,
senior citizens, and students: $8; Special student rate at
the door: $5. For tickets, call 888-262-0033.
| March 18 , 2004 |
Lecture: Alan Thomas,
University of Chicago Press
Is There a Crisis in Scholarly Publishing?
11:30 a.m., Baker-Nord Center (Clark Hall 206) |
Alan G. Thomas is Editorial Director for the Humanities
and Sciences at the University of Chicago Press. He acquires
books in literature, literary studies, cultural criticism,
and religious studies. Among the books he has edited are
winners of the National Book Critics Circle Award, the MLA's
Lowell Prize, and the American Academy or Religion's awards
for excellence in publishing.
Mr. Thomas holds a B.A. from Princeton and an M.Phil. from
Oxford, and he has worked at Chicago, the nation's largest
university press, since 1983. His talk will address current
anxieties about scholarly book publishing, from the "monograph
crisis" for tenure-track professors to the promises of electronic
publication.
This event is presented as part of the Baker-Nord Center
for the Humanities' commitment to supporting faculty research
and academic publishing.
| March 17, 2004 |
Panel discussion
on Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ"
4:30 p.m., Clark Hall Room 309 |
Peter
Haas , Tim Beal, and Alice
Bach -- all faculty in the Department of Religion
at Case -- will discuss the film from the perspective of
their respective Jewish, Protestant, and Catholic faiths.
Cosponsored by the Department of Religion and the Samuel
Rosenthal Center for Judaic Studies .
For more information about this event, click
here .
To visit the movie's official web site, click
here
|
Wednesday, October 6, 2004
"Imagined Homelands: Re-mapping Cultural Identity"
Ernst van Alphen
4:30 p.m.
Clark Hall 309
In light of the video installation "Facing Forward" by the artist Fiona Tan, van Alphen will discus the connection between place, history and migrancy. It explores how migrant identity, seen as an imagined, identificatory relation to an originating place (the so-called homeland) is at the same time predicated on time, and hence, on history. The act of imagining homeland identity is always framed by the historical dimensions of that place and of the migration that started from there, but its is also inflected by those acts of imagining that produce the cultural identity in the present. van Alphen will discus Tan's "Facing Forward" as a theoretical object, which contends that the act of imagining homeland identity is radically framed by the historical dimensions of the place where the imagining act takes place.
Ernst van Alphen is Queen Beatrix Professor of Dutch Studies and Professor of Rhetoric at UC Berkeley and a Professor of Literary Studies at the University of Leiden. His publications include: Francis Bacon and the Loss of Self (Harvard U.P 1993), Caught by History: Holocaust Effects in Contemporary Art, Literature, and Theory (Stanford U.P 1997), Armando: Shaping Memory (NAi Press 2000). Art in Mind: How Contemporary Images Shape Thought (the U. of Chicago Press 2005).
Monday, October 11
"Home is Not a Friendly Place: A Selection of Video Art from the Collection of the Video-Forum at Neuer Berliner Kunstverein"
Public Lecture and Video Screening
Kathrin Becker
4:00 pm
Clark Hall 309
Like never before, in the 60's and 70's the mass media experience was dominated by images of the threatened body confronted with violence. Hence, video art of this early phase did not regard the body as an intact home of the Self. This view was advanced particularly by female artists engaged in the act of mapping the Self. The video screening "Home is Not a Friendly Place" presents positions within video art ranging from the 70's to the immediate present that deal with the internal and external threat to the Self. These works are selected from the collection of the Video-Forum at Neuer Berlin Kunstverein (www.nbk.org/video f.html).
Kathrin Becker studied art history and Slavic languages at the Ruhr-University Bochum/Germany, the Leningrad State University and the Moscow State University. From 1991 to 2001 she worked as an independent curator and realized numerous exhibition projects such as "Louise Bourgeois. Intimate Abstractions, Berlin (2003); "Remake Berlin"
(Winterthur/Switzerland, Berlin, Arles, 2000-2001); "Can you hear me? 2. Ars Baltica Triennial of Photographic Art" (Kiel, Rostock, Dresden, Vilnius, Bergen/Norway, Espoo/Finland, 1999-2001). Since 2001, she is head of the Video-Forum at Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Berlin.
Free and open to the public. |
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