Due to social distancing requirements, all 2020-21 events were held virtually.
VIRTUAL LECTURE - Depression: Medical Science and Medical Humanities
September 15, 2020, 4:30 PM
Watch Depression: Medical Science and Medical Humanities
Someone close to you is likely taking an antidepressant.
VIRTUAL LECTURE - The Sounds of Jewry in Early 20th Century American Popular Media
October 6, 2020, 4:30 PM
WatchThe Sounds of Jewry in Early 20th Century American Popular Media
How do the melodies associated with ethnic groups go from familiar tunes to musical stereotypes?
VIRTUAL LECTURE - Uncanny Fidelity: Recognizing Shakespeare in Twenty-First Century Film and Television
October 13, 2020 , 4:30 PM
Watch Uncanny Fidelity: Recognizing Shakespeare in Twenty-First Century Film and Television
For many scholars of Shakespeare’s reception and afterlife, the idea of reading a film adaptation as faithful to its source text is an old-fashioned exercise.
ACLS Workshop for Faculty and Graduate Students
Tuesday, October 20, 12:30 PM, Zoom session
VIRTUAL LECTURE- The Hoax and the Humanities
October 20, 2020, 4:30 PM
Watch The Hoax and the Humanities
Hoaxed again! How’d that happen? Does it matter? Following the online fallout of the 2018 “grievance studies" hoax, one is struck by the enormous range of estimates of its significance, and of the variegated diagnoses of what the hoax does or does not show. In his talk, Chris Haufe, Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy, hopes to get the audience to take this hoax and others like it seriously. To do this, he will address three topics.
VIRTUAL LECTURE - Cultivating Ecological Consciousness: Pauline Oliveros' Deep Listening as Deep Ecology
October 27, 2020, 4:30 PM
Watch Cultivating Ecological Consciousness: Pauline Oliveros' Deep Listening as Deep Ecology
While most modern environmental movements of the late 20th century were concerned with the conservation of the natural world for human use, the deep ecology movement, spearheaded by philosopher Arne Naess, argued that the natural world has intrinsic value unto itself, independent of its human-use value.
VIRTUAL LECTURE - This is your Brain on Humanity
November 10, 2020, 4:30 PM
Watch This is your Brain on Humanity
Thirty years have passed since H. W. Bush declared the ‘decade of the brain.’ In that time, remarkable advances in brain imaging technology have spurred massive growth in neuroscience research. Now in early adulthood, the field is finally learning to set aside its childish ways - of credulous, phrenological, positivistic, and reductionist thinking – in favor of a more skeptical and sophisticated network view of the brain.
Faculty Discussion: Involving Students in Research Projects
November 20, 2020, 12:30 PM
VIRTUAL LECTURE - To Be Held & to Be Seen: Love’s Moral Core & the Security of Wondering
December 1, 2020, 4:30 PM
Watch To Be Held & to Be Seen: Love’s Moral Core & the Security of Wondering
In 2003, the Berkeley philosopher Niko Kolodny published an important paper in Philosophical Review called “Love as Valuing a Relationship.” It introduced the idea, uncommon to Anglophone moral philosophy of the century before him, that love needs to
Graduate Work-in-Progress: The Sight of Sound: Vocal Intervention through Anatomical Alteration
March 23, 2021 - 4:30 PM