WALEED MAHDI has received his PhD with his dissertation
entitled, "The Cultural Politics of Otherness: Arab Americans at
Crossroads of U.S-Arab Imagery." Rod Ferguson, adviser.
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Dr. Karen Mary Davalos Job Talk
DR. KAREN MARY DAVALOS will be giving a job talk as part of the RIGS
Initiative. Her talk is titled “The Landscapes of Gilbert ‘Magu’ Sánchez Luján:
Remapping and Reimagining the Hemisphere” and will be held on Monday, November
30th at 4:00pm in Walter Library 402.
Labels:
Lectures & Events
"Using Theatrical Techniques to Deliver Powerful Presenattions" Grad Student Workshop
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL is offering a graduate student workshop called “Using
Theatrical Techniques to Deliver Powerful Presentations.” The workshop will be
led by Kym Longhi, Senior Teaching Specialist in the Department of Theatre Arts
and Dance, and will be held on December 1st from 3:00 – 5:00pm in
the Beacon Room, University Recreation and Wellness Center. See below for full details.
Using
Theatrical Techniques to Deliver Powerful Presentations
Tuesday, December 1, 3:00 – 5:00 p.m. | Location: Beacon Room,
University Recreation and Wellness Center
Presenter: Kym Longhi, Senior Teaching Specialist, Department of
Theatre Arts and Dance (College of Liberal Arts)
Discover your inner “actor” and infuse your presentations with dynamic
presence and more powerful communication skills. In this lively
2-hour workshop you will explore theatrical exercises and techniques
that will help you:
· Understand and practice the elements of effective
communication and performance
· Connect to your audience with increased presence
· Project your voice with more power and ease
· “Think on your feet” and develop confidence in your own creativity
Demystify successful performance, discover creative strategies to
bring your ideas to life, and literally “play” your way into more
vibrant and evocative presentations through the art of acting!
Tuesday, December 1, 3:00 – 5:00 p.m. | Location: Beacon Room,
University Recreation and Wellness Center
Presenter: Kym Longhi, Senior Teaching Specialist, Department of
Theatre Arts and Dance (College of Liberal Arts)
Discover your inner “actor” and infuse your presentations with dynamic
presence and more powerful communication skills. In this lively
2-hour workshop you will explore theatrical exercises and techniques
that will help you:
· Understand and practice the elements of effective
communication and performance
· Connect to your audience with increased presence
· Project your voice with more power and ease
· “Think on your feet” and develop confidence in your own creativity
Demystify successful performance, discover creative strategies to
bring your ideas to life, and literally “play” your way into more
vibrant and evocative presentations through the art of acting!
Labels:
Courses & Workshops
NYU Center for Humanities Postdoc
THE NYU CENTER for the HUMANITIES is pleased
to announce applications are open for their one year Diversity Postdoctoral Fellowship.
Click here
for complete information and to apply.
WashU Postdoctoral Fellowship in Inequality and Identity
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY in ST. LOUIS is pleased
to announce applications are open for a Postdoctoral Fellowship in Inequality
and Identity. The fellowship is through their Program in American Cultural
Studies and can last up to two years. Click here
for complete information and to apply.
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
AMST 8401: Teaching Practicum
AMST 8401 will be taught by Prof. Kale Fajardo this spring and will meet
on Mondays from 1:25 – 3:20pm in Nicholson 110. The course will focus on building
skills in pedagogy and learning practical strategies for inclusive 21st
century teaching.
Labels:
Courses & Workshops
AMST 1511: Americans Abroad
ROSE MIRON, American Studies PhD student, will be teaching a new American Studies
course this Spring, AMST 1511 “Americans Abroad.” The course will meet on
Mondays 6:20 – 8:50pm. The course will look at Americans who travel abroad and
how they interact with and shape the countries and cultures they visit. It will
also consider the overall effect and influence of American society on the rest
of the world.
Labels:
Courses & Workshops
AMST 2031 Chasing the American Dream: Economic Opportunity and Inequality in the United States
JENNIFER PIERCE will be teaching a new American Studies course this Spring,
AMST 2031 “Chasing the American Dream: Economic Opportunity and Inequality in
the United States.” The course will meet on Mon & Wed 12:45 – 2:00pm. The
course will explore if there ever was or still is an American Dream and
how economic opportunity and inequality play out in American society
.
Labels:
Undergraduate Program
COMM 4616 “African American Civil Right’s Rhetoric: From 'Aint I a Woman' to #SAYHERNAME”
CATHERINE SQUIRES will be teaching COMM 4616 “African
American Civil Right’s Rhetoric: From Aint
I a Woman to #SAYHERNAME” on Mon & Wed from 9:45 – 11:00am this Spring.
Students will explore classic speeches, poems, comedy routines, editorials,
song lyrics, hashtagsm and other key responses from African Americans and
Allies in the ongoing struggle for freedom.
Labels:
Undergraduate Program
UC Santa Cruz "Non-Citizenship" Mellon Post-doc
UC SANTA CRUZ is pleased to announce an open
postdoctoral fellowship with the Chicano Latino Research Center. The fellowship
is part of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation John E. Sawyer Seminar series which
next year will be titled “Non-Citizenship.” They invite scholars from any
discipline who study migration, mobility, and/or (non-)citizenship in any
region of the world or period. Click here for complete
information and to apply.
Sacramento State Assistant Professor: Native American History
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO is
pleased to announce an open tenure-track Assistant Professor position in US
History with a specialization in Native American history prior to 1877. Click here
for more information and to apply.
CFP: "Spatializing Sovereignty" Symposium
THE SOCIETY for RADICAL GEOGRAPHY, SPATIAL
THEORY, and EVERYDAY LIFE is pleased to announce a Call for Papers for their
2016 Symposium “Spatializing Sovereignty.” The symposium will be held on March
4th, 2016 at UC Berkeley. Click here
for more information and to submit a paper.
Bianet Castellano Talk
PROF. BIANET CASTELLANOS will be giving a talk
titled “Idealizing Maya Culture: The Politics of Race, Indigeneity, and
Immigration Among Maya Restaurant Owners in Southern California” on Friday,
November 20th from 10:30 – 12:00 in Scott Hall Room 2. The talk is
part of the Chicano and Latino Studies Department’s “Critical Conversations in
Chicano and Latino Studies” series.
Labels:
Lectures & Events
AMST 8290: Comparative Indigeneities of the Americas
AMST 8290 will be taught by Prof. Bianet Castellanos this spring and will
be titled “Comparative Indigeneities of the Americas.” The course will be
offered on Wednesdays from 1:25 – 3:20pm in Nicholson 120. See below for course description.
This course brings
together transnational and interdisciplinary scholarship to articulate new ways
of pursuing critical Indigenous studies through a hemispheric frame. In light
of the shared history of colonization, genocide, racial and sexual violence
experienced by indigenous peoples, the goal for this course is to engage with
the ways that indigenous and mestiza/o (mixed race) peoples enact resistance to
state, nation-state, and imperial attempts to erase, deny, repress, disappear,
circumscribe displace, and assimilate indigenous peoples. To do so, this course
examines key concepts and methodologies, including their intellectual
genealogies, used to engage with indigenous experiences across the Américas.
Finally, this course attempts to promote a broader understanding of the
relationships between Native and decolonizing mestiza/o (mixed race) peoples in the hemisphere. We will analyze an assortment of texts, including books,
articles, and visual media, that speak to the multiple ways that indigeneity is
lived, practiced, and imagined.
Labels:
Courses & Workshops
Northwestern University Open Positions in Native American and Indigenous Studies
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY is pleased to announce
an Indigenous Studies Research Initiative, which will include the hiring of
three positions in Native American and Indigenous Studies. One position is a
postdoctoral fellowship and the other two are tenure-track Assistant Professor
positions. Click here
for complete information and to apply.
GIS 5590 - Spatial Digital Humanities
A NEW GRAD COURSE, GIS 5590: Spatial Digital Humanities is being offered
this Spring on Mondays from 5:30 – 8:00pm. The course will include a basic
overview of GIS and other mapping techniques and how the can be implemented in
humanities research and scholarship. See below for full course description.
Spatial Digital Humanities.
Spatial Digital Humanities.
Experience with
geographic information science (GIS) is not required to take the course.
Rather, the course is designed for students from other disciplines who
would like to incorporate some kind of geographical visualization into
their coursework and/or research, as well as students who are familiar
with GIS.
Here is a brief description of the course:
GIS 5990 will include a basic overview of desktop GIS (both Esri and open source), as well as an introduction to a number of other mapping techniques (such as Esri Maps for Office, ArcGIS Online, web mapping basics, georeferencing historical maps, etc) in addition to digital scholarship techniques (such as Omeka/Neatline, data visualization, etc). The lab component will involve assignments that will familiarize you with these techniques. The typical student taking the class will 1) have experience using GIS but, would like to explore non-traditional uses of GIS or, 2) will not have much (if any) experience with GIS, but would like to explore how GIS can benefit their chosen research area.
The full (tentative) syllabus is also available to view.
Labels:
Courses & Workshops
The Chateaubrian Fellowship
THE CHATEAUBRIAND FELLOWSHIP is now accepting
applications. The fellowship is offered by the Embassy of France in the United
States for PhD students who wish to conduct research in France for 4 to 9
months. Click here to
learn more and to apply.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
If you plan to apply for the Dolores Zohrab Liebmann Fund Fellowship, notify Melanie by this Friday, November 13 at 12:00pm Noon.
IF YOU PLAN TO APPLY FOR THE Dolores Zohrab Liebmann Fund
Fellowship, please notify Melanie of your intent by this Friday, November 13 at
12:00pm Noon. Melanie will then be in
contact with you directly regarding an internal application deadline for this just-announced
fellowship. Please note that because the Department received late notice
of this award, a short turn-around time for application materials will be
necessary. Click here
for information about the Fellowship. Please be certain to closely review all
eligibility, terms, and conditions info.
RIGS Undergraduate Student Survey
The Race, Indigeneity, Gender & Sexuality Studies Initiative (RIGS) was founded by the chairs of the departments of African American & African Studies, Gender Women’s and Sexuality Studies, American Indian Studies, American Studies, Chican@ & Latin@ Studies, and Asian American Studies. These units’ work and spaces challenge commonly understood notions and practices of diversity and equity, and reflect long-running traditions of student activism and social justice research. RIGS builds on the intellectual work of these units to highlight, support, and grow the important research on diversity, inequality, and social justice across the University in meaningful and generative ways. Working collaboratively across academic disciplines, RIGS goes beyond a single faculty hire or student recruitment program to generate interdisciplinary solutions to the challenges we face to develop just and sustainable communities in the global midwest.
This fall the RIGS Initiative is looking to hear from UMN undergraduate students and learn more about their experiences with courses offered in the RIGS-related departments. Specifically, RIGS wants to know about how these courses have influenced your future ambitions (career, graduate school, etc.) and how RIGS courses can continue to serve students at the UMN. We strongly encourage students who are majors, minors, or have completed significant coursework in RIGS departments to complete the survey. Please share this information with students, on social media, and mailing lists. Click here to launch the survey. If you have any questions, please contact RIGS at rigs@umn.edu. Thank you!
Labels:
Undergraduate Program
Karisa Butler-Wall Talk
KARISA BUTLER-WALL, American Studies PhD
candidate, will be giving a talk titled “Active Viewing: Health, Fitness, and
Televisual Intimacy in Postwar Consumer Culture” on Monday November 16th
at 3:30 pm in Scott Hall 105 (the Commons).
Labels:
Lectures & Events
Visual AIDS Curatorial Residency
VISUAL AIDS is pleased to announce a one-month
residency in March of 2016 for a curator, art historian, or arts writer
interested in the intersection of visual art and HIV/AIDS. The position will
develop exhibitions, programs, and scholarship about HIV/AIDS and contemporary
art. Click here
for more information and to apply.
Ithaca College Dissertation Diversity Pre-doc Fellowship Program
ITHACA COLLEGE’S School of Humanities and
Sciences is pleased to announce applications are open for the 2106-2017
Dissertation Diversity Fellowship Program. These are predoctoral fellowships in
various departments such as Culture, Race, and Ethnicity, Sociology, and Women’s
and Gender Studies. Click here
to learn more about the fellowships and to apply.
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
"Ellis" film screening and panel discussion
AMERICAN STUDIES is cosponsoring a film
screening and panel, featuring the movie “Ellis” which stars Robert De Niro.
The event will be held on Monday, November 9th from 11:30am – 1:00pm
in 120 Andersen Library. The panel will feature some of Minnesota’s leading
experts on immigration, who will discuss the film and the issues it raises.
Click here
for complete information.
Labels:
Lectures & Events
U of Dayton Tenure-Track Asst Prof of English Position
THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON is pleased to
announce an open tenure-track Assistant Professor of English position. They are
looking for someone with expertise in the critical study if Indigenous Literatures
and Culture of North America. Click here for more information
and to apply.
GWSS Professionalization Workshop: Conference Papers to Journal Articles
GWSS is hosting a professionalization workshop
with Prof. Lena Palacios titled “Makin’ & Stackin’ Paper: The Conference
Paper 2 Journal Article Hustle & Flow” on Friday, November 6th
from 1:30 – 3:00pm in Ford Hall 400. Lena will share her experience with the
process of revising and extending conference papers into competitive journal
articles.
Labels:
Lectures & Events
"Where are the Teachers of Color?" Conversation
RIGS is hosting a conversation titled “Where are the Teachers of Color?”
on Tuesday, November 17th from 4:00 – 6:00pm in Walter Library
401/402. The conversation will feature high school youth, teachers,
administrators, and community members.
Labels:
Lectures & Events
Thesis Research Travel Grants due to the Grad School, Noon on December 8th
THESIS RESEARCH TRAVEL GRANTS from the Graduate
School are awarded up to $2500 for domestic and $5000 for international.
Applications are due at Noon on December 8th, 2015. Click here
for more information and to apply.
Amber Annis awarded 2015 Joseph J. Kwiat award for best ASA conference paper
AMBER ANNIS was awarded the American Studies Department's
2015 Joseph J. Kwiat award for the best U of M American Studies grad student conference
paper presented at ASA for her paper entitled, "The Cheyenne River Sioux
Tribe: Native Resources as Diplomacy".
UofFlorida Tenure-Track Asst Prof. in Women's and African American Studies
THE UNIVERSITY of
FLORIDA is pleased to announce an open tenure-track Assistant Professor
position in both Women’s Studies and African American Studies. They are looking
for someone with scholarship and teaching experience in race and gender and/or
race and sexuality. Click here
for more information and to apply.
Dr. Karma Chávez talk
THE STEVEN J. SCHOCHET ENDOWMENT for GLBT
STUDIES is hosting a talk by Dr. Karma Chávez titled “The Queer Politics of
Coalition” on Tuesday, November 10th from 6:00 – 7:30pm in the
Mississippi Room in Coffman Memorial Union.
Labels:
Lectures & Events
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
© Regents of the University of Minnesota. All rights reserved. Equal opportunity educator and employer.