The Distinguished Faculty Lectures showcase new research by Temple faculty followed by open discussion. CHAT is honored to welcome the following faculty in the 2023 lecture series.
2019-20 Lecture Series
October 10, 2019
Travis Glasson (Department of History)
CHAT Faculty Fellow 2019-2020
“Sunshine Patriots: Family and Divided Loyalties in the American Revolution”
November 7, 2019
Mariola Alvarez (Department of Art History)
CHAT Faculty Fellow 2019-2020
“Becoming Modern, Becoming Brazilian: Japanese Brazilian Abstract Artists”
November 21, 2019
Rebeca Hey-Colón (Department of Spanish)
“Spectral Waters: Diasporic Women’s Writing from Hispaniola”
December 5, 2019
Lee-Ann Chae (Department of Philosophy)
“Trust and Contingency Plans”
January 23, 2020
Jess Newman (Department of Anthropology)
“Territorializing Rumors, Dangerous Sex”
Postponed
James Salazar (Department of English)
CHAT Faculty Fellow 2019-2020
“Embodying Time: Pedagogies of Rhythm in 19th Century American Culture”
Postponed
Patricia Melzer (Department of German & Department of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies)
CHAT Faculty Fellow 2019-2020
“Militante Mannsbilder: Alternative Masculinities in Men’s Groups of the Autonomen”
Postponed
Brian Creech (Department of Journalism)
CHAT Faculty Fellow 2019-2020
“Private Platforms, Public Demands: Tech CEOs as Locus of Popular Critique”
Postponed
Katya Motyl (Department of History)
CHAT Faculty Fellow 2019-2020
“The Mysterious and Endangered Reality of Femininity: New Womanhood in Vienna, 1890-1930”
2018-2019 Lecture Series
Professional Development Workshop
Humanities Internships for Graduate Students - A Conversation
Thurdsay, October 11
12:30-1:50, CHAT Lounge
Could internships be the first step for careers and research in the public humanities? What kinds of internships exist? What are employers looking for? How do your skills apply in the workplace? How do you get an internship?
An experienced graduate intern, internship supervisor, and faculty opened up about how they got their internships, what their experiences were, and how they benefited from the experience.
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Jonathan Burton is the Executive Director of the Philadelphia Society for the Preservation of Landmarks. In this role, he has overseen interns from a wide variety of backgrounds, who have worked in development, communications, education, curatorial, and other roles at the organization.
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Joy Feagan obtained her first internship by cold-calling her local historical society to ask if they’d like some extra help. Thankfully, they did. Since then Joy has interned and worked at historical societies, libraries, and museums including the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History, Mote Marine Aquarium’s Arthur Vining Davis Library, and the Tampa Baseball Museum.
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Hilary Iris Lowe is an assistant professor in the History Department. She has served as the faculty internship advisor for graduate and undergraduate students at Temple. Her own graduate internship introduced her to the work of public humanities.
Distinguished Lecture Series
Answers to the Labor Question: The Origins of Industrial Relations Regimes in the Anglophone World, 1880-1945
Thursday, September 13
12:30 - 1:50pm, CHAT Lounge
Starting in the mid-19th Century, elites and reformers often alluded to “the labor question,” which was rooted in the system of wage labor that produced contending classes of employers and employees as industrialization unfolded. The labor question involved both social justice (how workers would be treated as a class) and social order (how class conflict could be managed). Despite many similarities, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the U.K and the U.S. came up with dramatically different answers to the labor question that I label “voluntarist,” “statist,” and “legalist.” Exploring the paths these nations took and those they rejected, this project illuminates how and why they developed divergent industrial relations regimes.
Gary Mucciaroni is a Professor in the Department of Political Science and Director of the Master of Public Policy Program at Temple University. He served as Department Chair from 2005-10 and 2015-16. He is the author of four books and several articles on public policymaking in the United States and specifically on policies related to employment, public assistance, taxes, trade, telecommunications, LGBTQ rights, and abortion.
Boundaries Lecture Series
What does it mean to be ‘Post Truth’? co-sponsored with the Global Studies Program
Wednesday, September 26
4:00 - 5:30pm, CHAT Lounge
The phenomenon of “post-truth” rocketed to public attention in November 2016, when it was named “word of the year” by the Oxford Dictionaries. But what does it mean? Is post-truth synonymous with lying? Where did post-truth come from? And does saying that we are in a post-truth era mean that no one cares about truth anymore? Some have defined post-truth as the idea that “objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.” I’ll discuss this and how it fits into the political context of seeing post-truth as a precursor to authoritarian rule.
Lee McIntyre is a Research Fellow at the Center for Philosophy and History of Science at Boston University and a Lecturer in Ethics at Harvard Extension School. He has previously taught philosophy at Colgate University, Boston University, Tufts Experimental College and Simmons College. He is the author of Post-Truth (MIT Press, 2018) and several popular essays that have appeared in The New York Times, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The New Statesman, and The Times Higher Education Supplement.
Distinguished Lecture Series
How Sound Shapes Demonstrations, and How Demonstrations Shape Sound
Thursday, October 18
12:30 - 1:50pm, CHAT Lounge
How does the sound of street protests reflect the kind of democracy that is allowed? What factors shape sonic participation? Starting with Turino's concept of performance as presentational or participatory, I examine the ways in which sociopolitical circumstances, policing (Rancière), urban landscape (Parkinson), and acoustics (Kang) shape protest performance. Drawing from field work, I analyze the sound demonstration, a Japanese protest featuring a truck upon which DJs and rappers perform - a tactic born of the constraints placed by police and the urban environment. American protests are less organized, with scattered protesters spontaneously erupting into sound; this format allows for innovation in chants but also involves social segregation and hierarchy.
Noriko Manabe is Associate Professor of Music Studies at Temple University. Her monograph, The Revolution Will Not Be Televised: Protest Music After Fukushima, won the John Whitney Hall Book Prize from the Association for Asian Studies, the British Forum for Ethnomusicology Book Award, and Honorable Mention for the Alan Merriam Prize from the Society for Ethnomusicology. She is currently writing her second monograph, Revolution Remixed: Intertextuality in Protest Music, and co-editing the volumes, the Oxford Handbook of Protest Music (with Eric Drott) and Nuclear Music (with Jessica Schwartz). She has recently analyzed Kendrick Lamar and the sounds of post-Trump protests. She is series editor for 33-1/3 Japan, a book series on Japanese popular music at Bloomsbury Publishing.
Distinguished Lecture Series
Believing Against the Evidence
Thursday, October 18
12:30 - 1:50pm, CHAT Lounge
We all do things we believe we shouldn’t do. Do we also believe things we believe we shouldn’t believe? For many of us, the very idea of ‘akrasia’ in belief is deeply puzzling. If we discover compelling evidence that one of our beliefs is mistaken, don’t we give up the belief? Isn’t that how changing our minds works? This talk argues that a clearer picture of belief can both dissolve and explain that widespread puzzlement, and help us understand a broad range of phenomena, from self-deception to superstition to anorexia.
Eugene Chislenko is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Temple University, where he teaches courses in moral philosophy and its history. His recent work includes "A Solution for Buridan's Ass" (Ethics, January 2016) and "Moore's Paradox and Akratic Belief" (Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, May 2016). He is now working on a book manuscript about moral motivation, entitled The Guise of the Good, and a series of essays on the ethics of blame.
Distinguished Lecture Series
Queering “Civil Disobedience”
Thursday, November 1
12:30 –1:50 pm, CHAT Lounge
n a government whose legitimacy depends upon the "consent of the governed," civil disobedience can be understood as withholding one's consent to be governed. Refusing to pay one's taxes, for example, leaves the state with few options other than resorting to force, and exposes the ultimately coercive nature of a government that claims to be free and democratic. Successful acts of civil disobedience cast the protester as the object of the state's aggressive demand for consent-a position that is, despite Henry David Thoreau's insistence on the manliness of civil disobedience, oddly feminized. In addition to Thoreau's essay, I examine Melville's fictional character Bartleby, reading him as a type of the paradoxically defensive, queer version of selfhood that consent theory constructs and the withholding of consent exposes.
Katherine Henry is Associate Professor of English and department chair. Her first book, Liberalism and the Culture of Security: The Nineteenth-Century Rhetoric of Reform, considers the strategies antislavery and women's rights activists employed to challenge the boundaries of U.S. citizenship, and her research continues to engage questions of civic participation and liberal political theory as they are represented in literary texts.
Boundaries Lecture Series
Reimagining the Agency of Borderland Populations: The Bronze Age Indus and Magan Interaction Sphere and Role of the Site of Dahwa as a Regional Redistribution Center for Foreign Goods.
Co-sponsored with the Department of Anthropology, the Global Studies Program, and the Department of Geography and Urban Studies
Wednesday, November 7
4:00 - 5:30pm, CHAT Lounge
The Arabian Gulf has long been a venue for exchange of goods, ideas, and people. This is true today, as it was in the ancient past. The waters that separated the Gulf islands and the Arabian Peninsula from Elam, Baluchistan, and Indus have served as a trade corridor for more than 5,000 years. During the Bronze Age (3200-2000BC), trade focused on copper mined from the mountains of the Oman Peninsula in exchange for ceramics, personal ornaments, and other valued commodities. This talk will explore the role of the site of Dahwa as a regional redistribution center that existed at the nexus of two borderlands: on the coast with access to foreign traders and travelers and at the mouth of a major wadi that connected it to the rest of the Oman Peninsula.
Dr. Nasser al-Jahwari is a landscape archaeologist who earned his PhD from Durham University, UK. He has extensive archaeological field experience and currently directs the field project at the 3rd millennium BC site at Dahwa area near to Saham, Oman. He is an expert on Umm an-Nar settlement patterns on the Oman Peninsula. Most recently, he has published on the importance of Oman’s coastal seaports, settlements strategies, and the distribution of monuments on the Oman Peninsula. He is currently Associate Professor of Archaeology at Sultan Qaboos University in the Sultanate of Oman. He is also a world heritage expert for some international organizations such as ICOMOS and WMF.
Distinguished Lecture Series
Creating an American Myth: How the U.S. Census Uses Social Science and Stereotype to Define Race in America
Thursday, November 15
12:30 –1:50 pm, CHAT Lounge
How and why does the U.S. Census determine what race is - and should mean - in the United States? The first Census Bureau identified three races: "Free white males/females, all other free persons, and slaves." Over time, dozens of newly discovered "races" have entered - and exited - the Census. In 2016, the Bureau proposed adding a new Census 2020 race category - "MENA". Recently, it abruptly reversed course. This talk situates these evolving race definitions against political, cultural, and legal developments over time, and highlights social-science methodologies that shaped the 2020 Census "race" categories - for perhaps the most important Census of our lifetime.
Hosea H. Harvey is Associate Professor of Law and Political Science (by courtesy) at Temple University. His articles have appeared in an array of publications and have been cited by The New York Times and other media sources. Using both qualitative and empirical methods, he specializes in analyzing the design, implementation, and effectiveness of laws, public policies, and regulations that impact vulnerable populations.
Boundaries Lecture Series
Imagining their Voices: The Murdered Women of Juárez
Co-sponsored with the Global Studies Program
Wednesday, November 28
4:00 - 5:30pm, CHAT Lounge
Claudia Castro Luna is the Poet Laureate of Washington State (2018-2020) She served as Seattle’s first Civic Poet from 2015-2017 and is the author of Pushcart nominated Killing Marías (Two Sylvia's Press) and This City (Floating Bridge Press). Born in El Salvador she came to the United States in 1981 fleeing civil war. She has an MFA in poetry from Mills College, an MA in Urban Planning from UCLA and a K-12 teaching certificate. Her poems have appeared in Poetry Northwest, La Bloga, Diálogo, Psychological Perspectives, and the Taos Journal of International Poetry and Art among others. Her non-fiction work can be read in the anthologies, This Is the Place: Women Writing About Home (Seal Press), The Wandering Song: Central American Writing in the US, (Northwestern University Press) and Vanishing Points: Contemporary Salvadoran Narrative (Kalina Eds). Living in English and Spanish, Claudia writes and teaches in Seattle where she gardens and keeps chickens with her husband and their three children.
Distinguished Lecture Series
Doctors’ Orders: The Making of Status Hierarchies in the American Medical Profession
Thursday, January 24
12:30 –1:50 pm, CHAT Lounge
Not all doctors, it seems, are created equal. This talk will examine the construction and implications of status hierarchies among internal medicine residents along the lines of educational pedigree. I will explore how American-trained MDs come to enjoy higher status in the profession compared to international or osteopathic graduates, who disproportionately occupy less prestigious positions. I will conclude that by relying on informal status distinctions that equate status with merit and eclipse structural disadvantages, US-trained physicians are able to remain elite despite importing some of the world’s best and brightest.
Tania Jenkins (Ph.D. Brown University) is a sociologist specializing in the medical profession. Her work examines how and why status hierarchies are (re)produced among physicians and how they impact both doctors and patients. Her research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and the International Association of Medical Science Educators, among others. She is currently writing her first book entitled Doctors’ Orders: The Making of Status and Inequality in the American Medical Profession(under contract with Columbia University Press).
Distinguished Lecture Series
Co-sponsored with the Global Studies Program
Polskayiti: Polish Permutations in Haitian Religious History and Culture
Thursday, February 7
12:30 - 1:50pm, CHAT Lounge
Boundaries Lecture Series
The Known Citizen: Exploring the History of Privacy in Modern America
Wednesday, February 13
3:00 –5:30 pm, CHAT Lounge
Every day, Americans make decisions about their privacy: what to share and when, how much to expose and to whom. Securing the boundary between one’s private affairs and public identity has become a central task of citizenship. Ranging from the era of “instantaneous photography” to our own age of big data, Sarah Igo will explore how privacy became the indispensable language for monitoring the ever-shifting line between our personal and social selves — and the surprising ways that debates over what should be kept out of the public eye transformed U.S. politics and society.
Sarah E. Igo (Ph.D. Princeton University) is an Associate Professor of History and Director of the Program in American Studies at Vanderbilt University. An intellectual and cultural historian of the modern United States, she is the author of The Averaged American: Surveys, Citizens and the Making of a Mass Public (2007) and a new book, The Known Citizen: A History of Privacy in Modern America (2018).
Distinguished Lecture Series
Co-sponsored with the Global Studies Program
Women and the Spectacle of Politics: The Theater in Lima, 1800-1850
Thursday, February 21
12:30 - 1:50pm, CHAT Lounge
Modern politics came to being in Peru around the 1800s. Political oratory boomed; struggles for power dominated the early republic. Women did not play a visible role in these manly-dominated spheres. We have to look somewhere else to find them in action. The theater of Lima offered them an arena. Women of the elite and lower groups were regulars. They smoked and raised their voices in protest. Some performed and exercised authority as actresses. A few worked as managers. Women played leading roles in Lima’s theater at a time when this institution was conceived of as the ideal space to build a virtuous republican nation.
Mónica Ricketts is a historian of colonial Latin America and the Iberian Atlantic World. She specializes in the intellectual, political, and cultural history of the Spanish world. She received her B.A. and Licenciate degrees from the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú in Lima, Peru, and her Ph.D. from Harvard University. She has taught at Temple University since 2010. In 2017 she published Who Should Rule? Men of Arms, the Republic of Letters, and the Fall of the Spanish Empire (Oxford University Press). She is currently working on the role of the theater in the formation of a common political culture in Spain and Spanish America and on the history of women’s political participation in Peru.
Distinguished Lecture Series
Tabloid Trump and the Political Imaginary, 1980-1999
Thursday, March 21
12:30 –1:50 pm, CHAT Lounge
Years before Twitter, Fox News, or reality TV, Donald Trump became a public figure through his presence across a range of tabloid media. Although much of that focused on sex and spectacle, early tabloid coverage of Trump was surprisingly political, with speculation about a possible presidential campaign beginning as early as 1987. Through the theoretical lens of the political imaginary, this talk tracks the early articulation of Trump as political brand, the boundary-crossing media logics that shaped his public persona, and the political work the tabloids performed in building the foundations upon which the actual Trump presidency now stands.
Geoffrey Baym is professor of Media Studies and Production at Temple University. He is the author of From Cronkite to Colbert: The Evolution of Broadcast News (Oxford, 2010) and numerous articles and chapters exploring ongoing transformations in public affairs media, popular discourse, and political culture.
Boundaries Lecture Series
Hate and Border Ephemerality in the Digital Realm
Co-Sponsored with the Global Studies Program and the Klein College of Media and Communication
Thursday, March 28
4:00 - 5:30pm, CHAT Lounge
Border walls have been in our minds for the last couple of years thanks to President Trump’s promise that he would build one and that Mexico would pay for it. But there are other walls, which in their ephemerality and inconsistency are also at play in the contemporary experience of ethnicity and immigration in the United States. In this talk, Dr. Amaya explores the digital architecture of the internet as it constitutes new forms of intersubjectivity and perplexing displays of ethnic and nationalistic hate that often rely on different gradations of anonymity.
Dr. Hector Amaya is Professor of Media Studies at the University of Virginia and the Infosys Member of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. He researches globalization, ethnicity, and Latinas/os. His current project, The Anonymous Condition, examines new forms of social interaction afforded by digitation and evaluates them against normative ideas of the public sphere. This will be his fourth single authored book.
Distinguished Lecture Series
Co-sponsored with the Global Studies Program
The Afterlife of Radicalism: African Americans and Africa in the Age of Reagan
Thursday, April 18
12:30 - 1:50pm, CHAT Lounge
During the 1980s, African American elected officials adopted US support for the white-minority government in South Africa as their consensus foreign policy issue and gained an outsized voice in US foreign affairs. In this talk, Professor Talton examines the defining features of African American involvement in African affairs from within the US government during the 1980s and the reasons this high point of political engagement with the continent ended during the 1990s.
Benjamin Talton is a historian of modern African history at Temple University. His book, In This Land of Plenty: Mickey Leland and Africa in American Politics, is forthcoming from Penn Press.
CLIR Opportunities: Balancing Academic and Alt-Ac Career Paths for Doctoral Students
Tuesday, March 12, 3:30-5:00pm
CHAT Lounge, 10th Floor, Gladfelter Hall
The panel discussion was an opportunity to hear from four Council of Library and Information Resources postdoctoral fellows located at research universities and liberal art colleges around the country. Each CLIR fellow spoke about their doctoral research and their postdoctoral career path, before turning to a discussion followed by Q&A focused on professionalization in academia, the changing nature of doctoral study, and the opportunities available for graduates to find fulfilling and meaningful employment in the current era.
Dr. Lorena Gauthereau is the CLIR-Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Houston’s Recovering the US Hispanic Literary Heritage (also known as “Recovery”) where she works on data curation for Latinx archives, and is helping to create the first digital humanities center focused on US Latinx studies. She teaches courses on Mexican American Studies. Gauthereau received her PhD from Rice University in English literature and her MA in Hispanic Studies. Her research interests include Chicanx literature, affect theory, class analysis, decolonial theory, and the digital humanities. Her current book project is titled Manos de Obra: Class, Race, Gender, and Colonial Affect-Culture in Mexican American Literature.
Dr. Jessica C. Linker is the CLIR Humanities and Digital Scholarship Postdoctoral Fellow at Bryn Mawr College, where she also directs the History of Women in Science Project, a collaborative digital work that uses 3D technology to reconstruct spaces where women historically practiced science. She has received numerous awards to support her research, including from New York Public Library, the American Antiquarian Society, the Library Company of Philadelphia, the American Philosophical Society, and the McNeil Center for Early American Studies, among others.
Dr. Alex Galarza is the CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow in Data Curation for Latin American and Caribbean Studies at Haverford College where he leads a project creating a post-custodial archive in Guatemala. He received his Ph.D. from the Department of History at Michigan State University and worked as the Digital Liberal Arts Fellow for the Mellon Scholars Program at Hope College. His research topics include soccer clubs and urban life in Buenos Aires and Cold War violence in Guatemala.
Dr. Crystal A. Felima is the 2017-2019 CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow in Caribbean Studies Data Curation for the George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida. Her work explores the emerging trends and best practices in digital humanities and critical pedagogies in Caribbean Studies. Dr. Felima’s interdisciplinary background draws from Africana studies and cultural anthropology. Her primary research areas of interest include environmental hazards, development, and governance in Haiti. For her doctoral research, Dr. Felima spent a cumulative 27 months in Haiti to conduct her fieldwork. Her dissertation focuses on disaster narratives from river communities in northern Haiti. For more information about her work, visit her website: crystalfelima.com and follow her on Twitter: @phelima.
Dr. Elliott Shore began working with the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) in 2003 and was appointed Senior Presidential Fellow in 2008. He is the founding co-dean of the Postdoctoral Fellowship Program at CLIR that has introduced almost 200 recent Ph.D.s to hybrid career roles in the academy, and a mentor the CLIR/Mellon Dissertation Fellows. He has served as co-dean of the Frye then Leading Change Institute (co-sponsored by CLIR and EDUCAUSE) since 2012, and was instrumental in developing the CLIR/CIOs program. From 2013 through 2017, Elliott took on the role of Executive Director of the Association of Research Libraries, a nonprofit organization of 125 research libraries at comprehensive, research-intensive institutions in the US and Canada, and spent 2018 as a special advisor to its board.
Investigating Borders and Boundaries of the Body
Friday, April 5
12:00-4:30pm
CHAT Lounge, Gladfelter Hall, 10th Floor
Expanding 2019’s CHAT theme of Borders, Boundaries, and Walls, this symposium explored the experience of the body-as-boundary from a variety of perspectives. Boundaries delimit what is possible and yet simultaneously invite and sometimes even encourage transgression and transcendence. How do bodies shape knowledge and emotion? What possibilities emerge when we consider the social experience of the body as both limit and possibility; closed and porous?
Keynote Speaker: Dr. Janet Lyon, Associate Professor of English, Penn State University
Epistemologies of Bodyminds: Disability and Modernism
The CHAT Fellows Conference was from 12-4:30pm on Friday, April 5, 2019 with the following schedule:
- 12 - 12:15 PM - Opening Remarks
- 12:15 - 1 PM - Lunch
- 1 - 2:30 PM - Keynote Address: Dr. Janet Lyon, English Department, Penn State University, Epistemologies of Bodyminds: Disability and Modernism
- 2:30 - 3 PM - Coffee Break
- 3 - 4:15 PM - Graduate Student Roundtable
- 4:15 - 4:30 PM - Concluding Remarks
The CHAT Graduate Fellows strove to welcome all attendees and to host an accessible event.
Borders, Boundaries, Walls Symposium
Thursday, April 11, 2019, 12:30 - 5:45 pm & Friday, April 12, 9:00-5:00 pm
Russell F. Weigley Room, 914 Gladfelter Hall
Co-sponsored by Office of International Affairs, Ben Gurion University, College of Liberal Arts, Center for the Humanities at Temple, Feinstein Center for Jewish Studies, Klein College of Media and Communication, Global Studies Program, School of Social Work and Center for the Study of Force and Diplomacy.
Keynote Address: James Loeffler, Jay Berkowitz Professor of Jewish History, University of Virginia
World Without Borders? The Political Geography of Human Rights, 1918-2018
The theme of borders, boundaries, and walls is fraught with baggage in the current global political climate, yet the discussions about how to keep people and goods in or out have long been a subject of serious academic inquiry. Temple University is partnering with Ben Gurion University to bring together U.S. and Israeli scholars for an academic conference on the subject. The two-day symposium hopes to cut through the current inflammatory rhetoric to discuss how and why borders, boundaries, and walls (symbolic or real) have been established, how they have been transgressed and transcended, and what the consequences of those transgressions and transcendences are. By closely examining borders and boundaries, the conference organizers hope to build bridges and foster dialogue across cultural and political divides; and ultimately enhance our understanding of global movements of people, goods, and ideas.
View the full conference program.
Spring 2015
Kimberly Williams, Anthropology, Monday, March 16
Matthew L. Jockers, English, University of Nebraska, Monday, March 16
A Novel Method for Mapping Plot
Marsha Weinraub, Psychology, Thursday, February 26
Why Do We Sleep, How Does Sleeping affect Children’s Development, and Why Should We Care?
Ethan Watrall, Anthropology, Michigan State University, Wednesday, February 4
Digging, Digitally: Advances in Digital Archaeological Method and Practice
Carolyn Kitch, Journalism, Thursday, January 29
When Does Memory End and History Begin? Testimony, Tribute, and Imaginative Re-Engagement with Troubled Pasts
Fall 2014
Dan Edelstein, French, Stanford University, Wednesday, November 19
Social Network Analysis for Humanistic Research: Beyond Gephi
Rebecca Frost Davis, Director of Instructional and Emerging Technology, St. Edwards University, and Brian Croxall, Digital Humanities Strategist, Emory University, Wednesday, October 22
Panel on Digital Humanities Research and the Classroom
Wazhmah Osman, Media Studies and Production, Thursday, September 18
Brought to You by Foreigners, Warlords, and Local Activists: TV and the Afghan Culture Wars
Spring 2014
Lara Ostaric, Philosophy, Thursday, April 10
The Nonsensical and the Ugly
Mark Pedelty, Communication Studies and Anthropology, University of Minnesota, Wednesday, April 2
Sound Ecology: Music, Noise, and Sonic Conflict in the Salish Sea
Orfeo Fioretos, Political Science, Thursday, March 13
History and Politics in the Remaking of Global Capitalism
Mark Leuchter, Religion, Thursday, February 20
The Devil Made Me Do It: The Ancient Mythology Behind Personal Moral Struggle in Early Judaism
Cristina Gragnani, Italian, Thursday, February 6
The ‘Other’ Side of Conflict: Italian Women Writers and World War I
Fall 2013
Yun Zhu, Critical Languages, Thursday, November 21
Negotiating A Female Public Sphere: The Rhetoric of Sisterhood in the Women’s Magazine Ling Long (Shanghai, 1931-37)
Eileen Ryan, History, Thursday, November 7
Imperial Anxieties: Italian Colonialism and the Formation of the Imperial Mind
Hamil Pearsall, Geography and Urban Studies, Thursday, October 10
Diversification or Transformation? Coping with Vulnerabilities to Multiple Stressors in Chiapas, Mexico
Niambi Carter, African American Studies, Thursday, September 26
The Curious Case of Judge Aaron: Race, the Law, and the Protection of White Supremacy
Adrienne Shaw, Media Studies and Production, Thursday, September 12
Playing at the Edge: Gender, Race, and Sexuality in Video Games
Spring 2013
William Noel, University of Pennsylvania, Thursday, April 25
Free and Easy: The Appearance of Truly Useful Cultural Heritage Data
Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Pomona College, Thursday, March 7
The Humanities in and for the Digital Age
Owen Ware, Philosophy, Thursday, February 28
Repentance, Moral Conversion, and Personal Identity
Peter Marshall, Psychology, Thursday, February 14
Explanation, Mechanism, and Development
John Palfrey, Phillips Academy, Wednesday, February 6
Building a Digital Public Library of America
Travis Glasson, History, Thursday, January 31
“Honorable Deserters”: POWs and the People in America’s First Civil War, 1777-83
Fall 2012
Alexander Galloway, New York University, Tuesday, November 13
The Unworkable Interface
Joseph Schwartz, Political Science, Thursday, November 8
Rampant Inequality: The Hidden Cause of the Great Recession
Jeffrey Schnapp, Harvard, Thursday, November 6
Teaching (design) Thinking
Marcus Bingenheimer, Religion, Thursday, October 25
Mount Putuo and Its Gazetteers: Landscape and Text in the Creation of a Sacred Buddhist Site in China
Paul Swann, FMA, Thursday, October 11
Digital Arts and Humanities: Coping with Precarity in the Creative Economy
Sherril Dodds, Dance, Thursday, September 27
“Naughty but Nice”: Re-Articulations of Value in Neo-Burlesque Striptease
Therese Dolan, Art History, Thursday, September 13
Facing the Music: Manet and Wagner
Spring 2012
Patricia Aufderheide Film and Media Arts, American University, Tuesday, April 10
Free Speech and Fair Use in the Academic Environment: Libraries, Scholarship, and Teaching
Petra Goedde, History, Thursday, March 29
“It is a basic Communist Doctrine to Fight for Peace”: Cold War Battles Over the Concept of Peace
Nichole Miller, English, Thursday, March 15
Paul’s Call; Cymbeline’s Calling
Alex Gottesman, Greek and Roman Classics, Thursday, February 16
Publicity Stunts in Democratic Athens
Joseph Straus, Music - The Graduate Center, CUNY, Thursday, February 9
Performing Disability, Performing Music
Gerald Silk, Art History, Thursday, February 2
Out of Shape: Gender, Feminism, and the Neglected Art of Reva Urban
Fall 2011
Jose Manuel Pereiro-Otero, Spanish and Portuguese, Thursday, December 1
Don Juan Tenorio’s Cemetery: Metropolis and Necropolis in 19th-Century Spain
Christiane Gruber, History of Art, University of Michigan, Thursday, November 17
Violence’s Vestiges: The Martyrs’ Museum in Tehran
John Campbell, Broadcasting, Telecommunications and Mass Media, Thursday, September 29
From Barbershop to Black Planet: Examining the Necessity of Online Hush Harbors
Michael Klein, Music, Thursday, September 15
Debussy’s Reflections, Proust’s Recollections, and Deleuze’s Three Machines of Modernist Time and Memory
Spring 2011
Hector Postigo, Broadcast, Telecommunication, and Mass Media, Thursday, April 21
The Digital Rights Movement: Free Culture Activism and the YouTube Generation
Javed Akthar in conversation with Priya Joshi, Thursday, April 14
Bollywood and the Global India
David Greenberg, Rutgers University; Marc Lamont-Hill, Columbia University; Kathryn Hirsh-Pasek, Temple University; Lewis R. Gordon, Temple University CHAT Graduate Fellows Conference, Thursday, April 14
The Public Intellectual
Cindy Patton, Simon Fraser University, Thursday, April 13
From Human Rights to Population Rights
Patricia Melzer, French, German, Italian and Slavic, Thursday, March 3
The Other Half of the Sky: Revolutionary Violence and Feminist Politics in Germany and Abroad in the 1970s and 1980s
Britt Russert, Center for the Humanities at Temple, Thursday, February 16
Applying for Postdoctoral Fellowships
Yunte Huang, University of California, Santa Barbara, Thursday, February 10
Charlie Chan: The Untold Story of the Honorable Detective and His Rendezvous with American History
Fall 2010
Danielle McGuire, Wayne State University, Thursday, October 25
At the Dark End of the Street: Black Women, Rape and Resistance, A New History of the Civil Rights Movement
Michael Mann, Pennsylvania State University, Thursday, October 13
Dire Predictions: Understanding Global Warming
Khalil Muhammad, Indiana University, Thursday, September 16
The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America