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Arts & Culture

Humanities Center Announces March Lineup

Tuesday, March 1, 2016, By Rob Enslin
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College of Arts and SciencesEventsϲ Symposium

The , based in the , continues its spring series of lectures, workshops and performances. Special guests include former Public Enemy member , Spanish author and critic , British-Nigerian singer and UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador nominee and cultural theorist .

“This spring is one of the Humanities Center’s most ambitious to date,” says Vivian May, director of the center and associate professor of women’s and gender studies. “We’re excited to support a rich array of scholars and artists who engage with the humanities as a public good. Many of them are committed to addressing issues of broad societal concern in the public and scholarly realms.”

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

The March schedule is as follows:

Tuesday, March 1
Lecture: “Prototyping Absence, Remaking Old Media”
4:30 p.m.
Guerlac Room in the Andrew Dickson White House, Cornell University (29 East Ave., Ithaca)
, assistant professor of English and director of the Maker Lab in the Humanities at the University of Victoria (Canada), discusses how historians of media and technology, when conducting archival research, often encounter devices that no longer work or exist only as illustrations, fictions or one-offs. Sayers outlines ways to prototype absences in the historical record. Supported by The Central New York Humanities Corridor, from an award by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Organizers: The CNY Humanities Corridor, The Society for the Humanities (Cornell) and Cornell University Library

Co-Sponsors: The Writing Program, The Writing Program’s Student Organization and Composition & Cultural Rhetoric Graduate Circle, the Humanities Center, the Department of English, ϲ Libraries and the Digital Humanities Working Group of The CNY Humanities Corridor

Thursday, March 3

Jentery Sayers

Jentery Sayers

Lecture: “Making Things, Writing Things: Prototyping as a Compositional Strategy”
2:15-3:45 p.m.
The Kilian Room, 500 Hall of Languages
ϲ Symposium continues its yearlong “Networks” theme with a presentation by Sayers, who examines scholarly communication, with an emphasis on rapid prototyping (i.e., the production of abstract models in tactile form). Supported by The CNY Humanities Corridor, from an award by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Co-Sponsors: The Writing Program, The Writing Program’s Student Organization and Composition & Cultural Rhetoric Graduate Circle, the Department of English, ϲ Libraries and the Digital Humanities Working Group of The CNY Humanities Corridor

Thursday, March 3
Panel Discussion: “Poetry of Content: A Roundtable Discussion with Exhibition Artists”
7-9 p.m.
Watson Theater
SUArt Galleries’ “” features an evening with the show’s participating artists: Robert Birmelin, Tim Lowly, Bill Murphy, Gillian Pederson-Krag and Joel Sheesley, moderated by Jerome Witkin, professor of painting in the School of Art in the . “Poetry of Content” is co-curated by Witkin and David Prince G’83, associate director and curator of collections at SUArt Galleries.

Co-Sponsors: The Program in Painting in the School of Art and the Department of Art & Music Histories

Friday, March 4
Mini Seminar: “Scalar for Beginners: An Introduction to Media-Rich Scholarly Communication,” led by Sayers
9 a.m. to noon
227 Huntington Beard Crouse Hall
Sayers provides an overview of Scalar, a free open-source authoring and publishing platform that facilitates long-form, web-based scholarship. Supported by The CNY Humanities Corridor, from an award by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Co-Sponsors: The Writing Program, The Writing Program’s Student Organization and Composition and Cultural Rhetoric Graduate Circle, the Department of English, ϲ Libraries and the Digital Humanities Working Group of The CNY Humanities Corridor

Wednesday, March 9
Lecture: “To Kill a Mockingbird: From Jim Crow to Black Lives Matter”
2-2:45 p.m.
ϲ Stage (820 East Genesee St.)
, a professor in the College of Law and an expert on sex, race and family in the United States, leads a pre-performance discussion and Q&A about the ongoing relevance of Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird.”

Organizer: ϲ Stage

Wednesday, March 9

Cary Wolfe

Cary Wolfe

Lecture: “The Poetics of Extinction”
4:30-6:30 p.m.
Room 123, Sims Hall
Cary Wolfe, the Bruce and Elizabeth Dunlevie Professor of English and director of the Center for Critical and Cultural Theory at Rice University, delivers The CNY Humanities Corridor Mellon Distinguished Visiting Collaborator Public Lecture. He will focus on how art, science and philosophy respond to the concept of extinction, along with society’s ethical responsibilities to other forms of life.

Principal Organizer: The CNY Humanities Corridor

Co-Sponsors: The Department of Communication and Rhetorical Studies and the Humanities Center

Thursday, March 10
Screenings and Talkback: “Between Species”
6:30-8:30 p.m.
Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum of Art (401 Harrison St., ϲ)
“Between Species,” an Urban Video Project /Light Work exhibition exploring what it means to be an “animal,” presents an evening of curated videos, followed by a conversation between Cary Wolfe, The CNY Humanities Corridor Mellon Distinguished Visiting Collaborator, and , an assistant professor of drawing/intermedia at the University of Alberta and a Lynette S. Autrey Visiting Scholar at Rice University’s Humanities Research Center.

Principal Organizer: The CNY Humanities Corridor

Friday, March 11
Mini-Seminar: “After Biopolitics”
9 a.m. to noon
304 Tolley Humanities Building
Registration required: RSVP mmditmar@syr.edu by Monday, March 7
Wolfe delivers The CNY Humanities Corridor Mellon Distinguished Visiting Collaborator Mini-Seminar. His presentation will address connections between animal studies and post-humanism, systems theory and pragmatism, biopolitics and biophilosophy, and American literature and culture.

Principal Organizer: The CNY Humanities Corridor

Co-Sponsor: The Humanities Center (A&S)

Tuesday, March 22
Lecture/Recital: “A Global Journey Through the Arts”
4-5:30 p.m.

Ola Onabulé

Ola Onabulé

Peter Graham Scholarly Commons, 114 Bird Library
British-Nigerian singer Ola Onabulé reflects on his success as an R&B performer, singer-songwriter, record producer, studio head and label owner. In line to become a UNESCO Honorary and Goodwill Ambassador to Nigeria, he is joined in conversation by James Gordon Williams, assistant professor of African American studies in Arts and Sciences.

Co-Sponsors: The Central New York Jazz Arts Foundation, Office of the Provost, Office of the Dean of Arts and Sciences, the Humanities Center, Department of Art and Music Histories and The Africa Initiative, on behalf of the Department of African American Studies

Wednesday, March 23
Lecture: “Shooting the Enemy: My Life in Pictures with the People Who Became P.E. (Public Enemy)”
7-8:30 p.m.
Watson Theater
Harry Allen (a.k.a. “The Media Assassin”), a hip-hop activist, journalist, D.J. and photographer, discusses his involvement with the legendary group Public Enemy. Moderated by Theo Cateforis, associate professor of music history and cultures and chair of the Department of Art and Music Histories.

Co-Sponsors: Departments of Art & Music Histories and African American Studies, the Humanities Center, the Student Association’s Co-Curricular Fee Fund and the Bandier Program in the Setnor School of Music

Thursday, March 24
Dinner/Workshop: “The Possibilities for Urban Acupuncture in Three ϲ Neighborhoods”
5:30-7 p.m.
Nancy Cantor Warehouse, Ste. 405 (305 West Fayette St.)
Anne Mosher, associate professor of geography in the , co-organizes a “working dinner” to discuss the role of arts and technology in making local communities safer and more vibrant.

Co-Sponsor: Office of Community Engagement and Economic Development

Tuesday, March 29

Laura Freixas

Laura Freixas

Welcome reception for Laura Freixas, the Humanities Center’s 2016 Jeanette K. Watson Distinguished Visiting Professor
5-6:30 p.m.
Goldstein Alumni and Faculty Center
Freixas is a Spanish author, publisher, literary critic and translator. Known the world over for her fiction and nonfiction writing, including the award-winning “Feminine Novel and Its Readers” (The National University of Córdoba, 2009), she is a renowned scholar and proponent of living female writers. The event includes light refreshments, live music and an author book-signing.

During her visit to campus, Freixas will be hosted by Kathryn Everly, professor of Spanish literature and culture in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics in Arts and Sciences.

Thursday, March 31
Lecture: “Woman According to Clarice Lispector”
4-6 p.m.
Peter Graham Scholarly Commons, 114 Bird Library
Freixas considers the life and work of the late Clarice Lispector, arguably the most important Jewish writer since Franz Kafka.

Click for the complete Spring 2016 schedule.

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