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Arts & Culture

Humanities Center Closes Out Month with High-Profile Events

Thursday, February 18, 2016, By Rob Enslin
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College of Arts and SciencesEventsspeakersϲ Symposium

The , based in the , wraps up February with a quartet of high-profile events. It features visits by , an award-winning ethnomusicologist at George Washington University (GW); Alicia Garza, founder of the Black Lives Matter movement; , a media archeologist at the University of Colorado Boulder; and , a legendary black feminist.

All events are free and open to the public, unless otherwise noted. For more information, visit or call 315-443-7192.

“We are proud to finish off the month with four highly distinguished guests,” says Vivian May, director of the Humanities Center and associate professor of women’s and gender studies. “Common to all of them is a deep appreciation for the humanities in American public life. Whether their work is disciplinary or interdisciplinary, it has transformative potential and seeks to reimagine the nature and scope of engaged scholarship.”

Jonathan Dueck

Jonathan Dueck

On Monday, Feb. 22, Dueck will discuss “Players on the Field: Thinking About Musical Humanity Through Sport” at 2:15 p.m. in the Kilian Room, 500 Hall of Languages. At 4 p.m., he will lead a private mini-seminar in 304 Tolley Humanities Building titled “Musical Methods for Teaching and Researching Movement in Sport.” Both events are sponsored by the Department of Art & Music Histories (AMH) in Arts and Sciences.

Dueck is both an assistant professor of writing and the deputy director of Writing in the Disciplines at GW, where he studies, among other things, musical practices among affinity groups. He is co-editor of the “Oxford Handbook of Music and World Christianities” (Oxford University Press, forthcoming), and is a regular contributor to several scholarly publications, including Ethnomusicology, the Journal of American Folklore, and Popular Music and Society.

Alicia Garza

Alicia Garza

The following day (Tuesday, Feb. 23), Garza will deliver the University’s Black History Month Commemorative Lecture at 7 p.m. in Hendricks Chapel. The renowned social activist is expected to address the 2013 acquittal of George Zimmerman (a white Hispanic) in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin (a black teenager), which prompted her to use social media to express her love and anguish for the black community. Ending her message with “Our Lives Matter / We Matter / Black Lives Matter,” she helped turn those powerful last words into a Twitter hashtag. Today, is an Internet-driven civil rights movement.

Currently the special projects director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance, Garza formerly served as executive director of People Organized to Win Employment Rights. Her visit is sponsored by the Office of Multicultural Affairs.

Lori Emerson

Lori Emerson

The week continues with a two-day residency by Emerson, founder of the Media Archeology Lab, as well as associate professor of English and of intermedia arts, writing and performance at CU Boulder. Part of the 2015-16 ϲ Symposium, whose theme is “Networks,” her visit gets underway on Thursday, Feb. 25, with a lecture titled “Other Networks: Hands-on History in the Media Archeology Lab” at 5 p.m. in the Peter Graham Scholarly Commons, 114 Bird Library. The next day, she will participate in a private mini-seminar titled “Internet, Darknet, Alternet // The Past, Present, and Future of Cooperatively Run Networks” from 9 a.m. to noon in 304 Tolley.

Emerson writes about media poetics, as well as the history of computing, media archaeology, media theory and digital humanities. She is the author of multiple book projects, including “The Lab Book: Situated Practices in Media Studies” (University of Minnesota Press, forthcoming) and “Other Networks” (forthcoming), a history of telecommunications networks before and outside of the Internet. Her visit is co-sponsored by ϲ Libraries, AMH and the Writing Program (both in Arts and Sciences), and the Office of Research.

Gloria Joseph

Gloria Joseph

On Monday, Feb. 29, Joseph will visit the Community Folk Art Center (805 East Genesee St.) from 5-8 p.m. During her visit, the iconic feminist will read from her acclaimed book, “The Wind Is Spirit: The Life, Love and Legacy of Audre Lorde” (Villarosa Media, 2014), honoring the memory of her lifelong partner. Part biography and part anthology, the book features essays, poems, and reflections about Lorde, a self-described “black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet” who died in 1992.

Joseph is professor emeritus of Africana studies at Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass. She is widely known for her cross-cutting pedagogical style, combining arts and activism. Her reading is sponsored by the Democratizing Knowledge Collective in Arts and Sciences, and is followed by a reception and book-signing.

Click for the complete Spring 2016 schedule.

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Rob Enslin

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