2.04 7:00 p.m. University Center Ballroom
Fiction Reading and Booksigning: The Glass Castle
Jeannette Walls, Best-Selling Author
Jeannette Walls will be speaking about and reading from her New York Times best-selling memoir, The Glass Castle. In this book chosen for UMBC’s New Student Book Experience Walls describes growing up in the desert of the American Southwest and then in a West Virginia mining town with her three siblings and the brilliant, unorthodox, irresponsible parents who manage at once to neglect them, love them, and teach them to face their fears. Despite deprivations the children grow up reading Shakespeare and dreaming of the beautiful glass house they will all one day build.
SPONSORS:
Division of Student Affairs
Dresher Center for the Humanities
Office of Undergraduate Education
2.18 7:00 p.m. Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery
Transmodernism Panel
James Mahoney, Department of Visual Arts, UMBC
Catherine Pancake, Independent Filmmaker and Musician
Elizabeth (Dori) Tunstall, School of Art and Design, University of Illinois, Chicago
Moderated by Preminda Jacob, Department of Visual Arts, UMBC
“Transmodern” is a term that came into use in the early 1990s to denote emerging attitudes, values, and aesthetics that seemed to move past postmodernism's canon of critique into more intriguingly open areas of cultural inquiry and practice. The rise of the Internet has networked a transmodernity that includes green and liberation theologies, alternative music, multiculturalism in every form, and a re-engagement with the question of symbols in art, etc. In essence, the transmodern is a proactive recasting of the primal modernist condition, one in which, as Karl Marx said, “All that is solid melts into air.”
SPONSOR:
Dresher Center for the Humanities
3.11 4:00 p.m. Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery
Women’s History Month Lecture
The Muslim Headscarf in Europe: Veiled Threat or Religious Freedom?
Claudia Koonz, Department of History, Duke University
Even as the European Union promises to create shared cultural values, vehement disagreements about the Muslim headscarf reveal deep divisions within German, French, and British attitudes to immigrants. Does a woman wearing a headscarf, or hijab, signify subservience to oppression, an identity statement, or religious piety? Who has the right to decide? Professor Koonz explores the answers to these questions within three visual cultures as a way of connecting gender, Islam, and human rights.
SPONSORS:
Department of Gender and Women Studies
Department of History
Dresher Center for the Humanities
UMBC Women’s Center
3.25 4:00 p.m. Albin O. Kuhn Library, 7th Floor
The Daphne Harrison Lecture
Gaining Information, Knowledge, and Power in the 21st Century
Carla Hayden, Director, Enoch Pratt Free Library
Libraries are changing and dynamic places that offer opportunities and countless resources. As the information hub for Baltimore, the Enoch Pratt Free Library's mission is to empower and equip citizens with information and educational resources to help shape their future.
SPONSOR:
Dresher Center for the Humanities
4.15 4:00 p.m. Albin O. Kuhn Library, 7th Floor
Fiction Reading: Last One InElise Levine, Award-winning author
Author of the story collection Driving Men Mad and the novel Requests and Dedication, Elise Levine was named by Margaret Atwood as one of Canada’s most important emerging women writers. She is the recipient of a (Canadian) National Magazine Award for fiction as well as numerous awards from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, and the Toronto Arts Council. In Last One In, Levine’s forthcoming novel, a woman whose best friend dies while exploring an underwater cave must confront her own history of betrayals and self-betrayals, and explore the nature of the bonds that bind and liberate.
SPONSORS:
Department of English
Dresher Center for the Humanities
4.30 4:00 p.m. Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery
The 2nd Annual Lipitz Lecture
Poetic Narrative: Non-linear Strategies for Digital Cinema
John Sturgeon
Lipitz Professor, Department of Visual Arts, UMBC
Media artist John Sturgeon will discuss his new artwork and the non-linear narrative potential of multi-stream collage offered by high-definition video and interactive media. Sturgeon will also discuss the J. Paul Getty Museum’s restoration and archiving of his 1970s video art works.
SPONSORS:
College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences
Department of Visual Arts
Dresher Center for the Humanities
5.5 7:00 p.m. University Center Ballroom
The United Nations' Role in Defining and Defending Human Rights
United Nations Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms. Kyung-wha Kang
Ms. Kyung-wha Kang, the United Nations' Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, will be coming from UN Headquarters in Geneva to
UMBC on Tuesday, May 5, 2009 to speak in the University Center Ballroom. Her visit is sponsored by the Dresher Center for the Humanities and will conclude its celebration of the 60th anniversary of the UN's Declaration of Human Rights.
SPONSORS:
Social Sciences Forum
Dresher Center for the Humanities