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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250423T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250423T123000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250405T050105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250405T050938Z
UID:2191227-1745406000-1745411400@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Thinking\, Talking and Writing
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the second session of our Critical Thinking Focused Teaching Workshop\, hosted by the University of Queensland Critical Thinking Project (UQCTP) and sponsored by the UCLA Department of Philosophy and HumTech. \nIn this session\, we will explore a thinking and talk-based writing pedagogy that is transferable to any discipline and year level. Based on a schematic understanding of Accountable Talk (Michaels et al. 2015)\, argument structure\, and the values of inquiry (Ellerton\, 2015)\, we will unpack the significance and utility of these tools\, both as stand-alone elements and as integrated components of a comprehensive writing pedagogy. \nParticipants will have the opportunity to think through and share how they might integrate more critical and collaborative thinking into writing experiences. \nAs with our first session\, lunch will be provided to allow for informal conversation\, networking\, and deeper reflection on these practices. \nSpace is limited. Please RSVP. 
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/thinking-talking-and-writing/
LOCATION:Young Research Library Presentation Room\, YRL 1st. Floor Presentation Presentation Room 11348\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:HumTech Event,Workshop
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250422T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250422T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250409T181152Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250414T190742Z
UID:2191280-1745337600-1745344800@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Careers In the FBI
DESCRIPTION:Join us in person to meet a variety of professionals who work for the Federal Bureau of Investigation\, and learn about different career paths and opportunities. Speakers will talk about their experiences in their job roles and provide tips on applying for current open positions and opportunities. \nTo register\, go to: Careers Inside the FBI \nSpeakers will include: \nAssistant Director in Charge of the Los Angeles Field Office\, Akil Davis \nSpecial Agent \nSupervisory Intelligence Analyst \nLanguage Analyst
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/careers-in-the-fbi/
LOCATION:314 Royce Hall\, 10745 Dickson Plaza\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Humanities Division
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250422T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250422T123000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250405T050104Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250405T050843Z
UID:2191222-1745319600-1745325000@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Assessing for thinking in an age of AI – the Cognitive Audit
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the inaugural session of our Critical Thinking Focused Teaching Workshop\, hosted by the University of Queensland Critical Thinking Project (UQCTP) and sponsored by the UCLA Department of Philosophy and HumTech. \nA key challenge for teachers is planning and assessing student thinking with the same precision and intentionality applied to content knowledge. This issue becomes particularly significant when addressing student engagement with AI. In this session\, we will explore how to make the cognitive content of tasks and assessments\, especially in argumentative contexts\, explicit and targeted during both planning and evaluation stages. \nParticipants will receive a variety of resources designed to make the processes of planning and assessing thinking transparent\, actionable\, and easily shareable across all subject areas. Additionally\, lunch will be provided to all attendees\, allowing you to network and discuss insights with fellow educators over a meal. \nSpace is limited\, please RSVP \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/assessing-for-thinking-in-an-age-of-ai-the-cognitive-audit/
LOCATION:Young Research Library\, YRL 2"d Floor West Classroom 23167\, Los Angeles\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:HumTech Event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250414
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250415
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250114T083302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T181028Z
UID:2189898-1744588800-1744675199@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:New Book Salon Book Talk by Roberta Morosini
DESCRIPTION:What does a flying bull with a half moon on its belly in Filippino Lippi’s 1502 painting\, the Adoration of the Golden Calf\, have in common with Muhammad\, as a character of Dante’s Comedy? This is the question that Roberta Morosini tries to answer by following the journey of a legend traveling in the Oriental Mediterranean. She argues that what Lippis’s painting and Dante’s Muhammad have in common is a legend of a celestial delivery of the “bull law\,” the Qur’an and Moses’s Tablets of the Law. Just as Moses received the Tablets of the Law from God on Mount Sinai\, the Qur’an\, written according to Thomas Aquinas by mixing fables and a rippled Bible\, is carried by the bull on its horns. Taking us from Medieval Christian Byzantium to the depictions of Muhammad and Averroës in the iconographic tradition\, to the Rome of Oliviero Carafa in the events following the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 through Dante’s Comedy\, the real protagonists of Dante\, Moses and the Book of Islam\, a story narrated through texts and images\, are the Book and the Mediterranean as spaces of transmission of knowledge. Morosini provides a ground breaking reading of Filippino’s Adoration of the Golden Calf as an ancient scene of anti-Islam propaganda\, while shedding new light on Dante’s construction of the cultural other\, on his spaces of otherness\, and on the importance the poet gives to books that bring unity and give form to what lacks it\, like his book\, the Comedy.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/new-book-salon-book-talk-by-roberta-morosini/
LOCATION:Royce 306
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsorship,Humanities,Seminar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250411T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250412T133000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250201T005105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250203T182731Z
UID:2190364-1744365600-1744464600@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Early Global Caribbean: Conference 3: Materialities
DESCRIPTION:Conference organized by Carla Gardina Pestana (University of California\, Los Angeles) and Gabriel de Avilez Rocha (Brown University) \nCo-sponsored by the Joyce Appleby Endowed Chair of America in the World \nThe tangible realities of daily life and the patterns of exchange in the Caribbean and the other Atlantic regions integrated into the Caribbean’s orbit enhance our understanding of the local dimensions of global processes that have long shaped the Caribbean Basin. This final conference will consider how the region’s early global histories may be tracked through their material manifestations in constructed and natural environments from a variety of different disciplinary perspectives. Focusing on the materials embedded and moving through Caribbean land- and waterscapes prompts lines of investigation about how historical interactions and social constructions of meaning were mediated across different historical moments. These interactions and constructions can be explored through physical artifacts\, objects\, and living organisms. We will deliberate on how both the environment itself and the material cultural productions of the people living in the Basin were profoundly and continuously influenced by the advent of different groups\, the imposition of new agricultural regimes\, and a host of other aspects of quotidian life that persisted\, gained new forms\, or disappeared. To what extent might the historical study of transformations in the circumstances of life in the Caribbean benefit from considering distributed agencies of different human and non-human actors across time? What do considerations of materiality in or beyond traditional archives contribute to a global understanding of Caribbean history? \nPlease visit the website for a complete list of speakers and the program schedule.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/early-global-caribbean-conference-3-materialities/
LOCATION:William Andrews Clark Memorial Library\, 2520 Cimarron Street\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90018\, United States
CATEGORIES:Center for 17th & 18th Century Studies,William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250409T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250409T150000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250212T153303Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T170638Z
UID:2190688-1744207200-1744210800@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Seeking Liberation: Contemporary Female Ascetic Orders Among the Jains
DESCRIPTION:Present day records show an overwhelming numerical preponderance of nuns in Jain mendicant orders. Their striking presence demands that we question the androcentric models of renunciation in South Asia\, as well as interrogate the commonsensical assumptions about the attraction that a lifetime of mendicancy may hold for women. By privileging the voice of the nuns\, themselves\, this presentation looks at how the Indic concept of liberation as spiritual deliverance (moksa) may sometimes overlap\, or approximate the more this-worldly idea of women’s liberation. \nRegister here for Zoom link. \nManisha Sethi\, Associate Professor\, Centre for Jawaharlal Nehru Studies\, Jamia Millia Islamia\, New Delhi.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/seeking-liberation-contemporary-female-ascetic-orders-among-the-jains/
LOCATION:Online on Zoom
CATEGORIES:CSR
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ORGANIZER;CN="Center for the Study of Religion":MAILTO:csr@humnet.ucla.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250407T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250407T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250114T083305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T181027Z
UID:2189900-1744045200-1744048800@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Hammer Art History Lecture by Shawon Kinew\, “St. Paul Among the Snakes: A Maltese Artist Goes Home\, c. 1660”
DESCRIPTION:Abstract: At the end of the 1650s\, Melchiorre Cafà\, a Maltese sculptor\, was newly established in Rome. Rome was the most significant site for sculptural production in Europe at that time. It was also a Golden Age of sculpture as artists vied for papal commissions and pushed the limits of their medium. They transformed hard stone into weightless apparitions. But\, in his early days in the Caput Mundi\, Cafà returned home conceptually. He carved in the humble material of wood the patron saint of his island\, St. Paul\, to be sent back to Malta. Today the sculpture is at the center of local devotional practices\, still carried in processions celebrating the Apostle’s shipwreck in Malta. Our time is connected to Paul’s and to Cafà’s in this living tradition. A study of Cafà’s St. Paul is one of Mediterranean cultural continuities\, and a meditation on the ethnographic gaze of the art historian. \nShawon Kinew is an art historian of early modern Southern Europe at Harvard University and specializes in seventeenth-century Rome’s art and theory. Her research on Roman Baroque sculpture focuses on the Maltese artist Melchiorre Cafà\, who is the subject of a book manuscript in preparation\, Baroque Softness: Melchiorre Cafà and the Sculpture of Mysticism. \nRegister to attend in Royce 314 \nMore information about past Hammer Art History Lectures can be found here.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/rescheduled-hammer-art-history-lecture-by-shawon-kinew-st-paul-among-the-snakes-a-maltese-artist-goes-home-c-1660/
LOCATION:Royce 314\, 10745 Dickson Ct\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Conference,Hammer Art History Annual Lecture,Humanities
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250407T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250407T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250123T121807Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T162903Z
UID:2190111-1744038000-1744045200@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Bilingual Lecture Series: Calendar and Identity: Why did the Persian solar calendar survive for 1400 years and become an important feature of Iranian identity?
DESCRIPTION:Calendar and Identity:\nWhy did the Persian solar calendar survive for 1400 years and become an important feature of Iranian identity?\nMonday\, April 7\, 2025 at 3:00pm\, Bunche Hall 10383 \nAlternate live stream on Zoom: \nhttps://ucla.zoom.us/j/95885037418 \n(No need to register in advance\, just click the link at 3:00pm on April 7 to join.) \n \n\n\n\nSince the end of the Sasanian era\, the Persian solar calendar—and the associated rite of Norouz—has endured and grown to become a significant feature of Iranian\, and to some extent the Persianate\, cultural identity. With Hijra as its starting point but based on vernal equinox\, it is a unique solar time reckoning throughout the Muslim world and beyond. This talk explores the circumstances that allowed its survival and adoption as a national calendar of Iran at the turn of the 20th century. \nAbout the Speaker \n\n\n\nAbbas Amanat is William Graham Sumner Professor of History Emeritus at Yale University. Since 1983\, he has taught history of early modern and modern Iran\, Shi’ism\, modern Middle East\, and the Persianate world at Yale. He has authored eight books\, most recently Iran: A Mod-ern History (Yale University Press\, 2017) and Ahd-e Qajar va Sowda-ye Farang in Persian (London\, 2021). He has edited and coedited thirteen volumes and published numerous articles\, encyclopedia entries\, and op eds. His forthcoming books include A Study of the Solar Calendar and Iranian Identity (2024 in Persian); A Study of Historiography and Reconstruction of National Identity in Iran (2024 in Persian and 2025 in English); A New Biography of Fatemah Zarin-Taj Baraghani Qorrat al-Ayn Tahereh (OneWorld\, 2025 in English); Companion of Qajar Studies (Cambridge University Press\, 2025); and Circle of Justice: Persian Art of Governance (Yale University Press\, 2026). Amanat served as the Chair of the Yale Council on Middle East Studies and as the Director of the Yale Program in Iranian Studies. He was the editor-in-chief of the journal of Iranian Studies and he is the editor-in-chief of the forthcoming series Sources for the Study of the Persianate World.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/bilingual-lecture-series-calendar-and-identity-why-did-the-persian-solar-calendar-survive-for-1400-years-and-become-an-important-feature-of-iranian-identity/
LOCATION:10383 Bunche Hall\, 11282 Portola Plaza\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Bilingual Lecture Series,Iranian
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250406T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250406T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250123T121810Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T162902Z
UID:2190113-1743955200-1743962400@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Bilingual Lecture Series: Calendar and Identity: Why did the Persian solar calendar survive for 1400 years and become an important feature of Iranian identity?
DESCRIPTION::گاهشماری و هویت\nچگونه تقویم خورشیدی ایران ۱۴۰۰ سال پایدار ماند و نماد بارزی از هویت ملی شد؟\n\nCalendar and Identity:\nWhy did the Persian solar calendar survive for 1400 years and become an important feature of Iranian identity?\nSunday\, April 6\, 2025 at 4:00pm\, Royce Hall 314 \nAlternate live stream on Zoom: \nhttps://ucla.zoom.us/j/97895439218 \n(No need to register in advance\, just click the link at 4:00pm on April 6 to join) \n  \n\nSince the end of the Sasanian era the Persian solar calendar\, and the associated rite of Nowruz\, endured as became a significant features of Iranian\, and to some extent the Persianate\, cultural identity. With Hijra as its starting point but based on vernal equinox\, it is a unique solar time reckoning throughout the Muslim world and beyond. This talk explores the circumstances that allowed the survival and its adoption as a national calendar of Iran at the turn of the 20th century. A book of the same title is in the press.  \n\n\n\n\nAbout the Speaker \n\n\n\nAbbas Amanat is William Graham Sumner Professor of History Emeritus at Yale University. Since 1983\, he has taught history of early modern and modern Iran\, Shi’ism\, modern Middle East\, and the Persianate world at Yale. He has authored eight books\, most recently Iran: A Mod-ern History (Yale University Press\, 2017) and Ahd-e Qajar va Sowda-ye Farang in Persian (London\, 2021). He has edited and coedited thirteen volumes and published numerous articles\, encyclopedia entries\, and op eds. His forthcoming books include A Study of the Solar Calendar and Iranian Identity (2024 in Persian); A Study of Historiography and Reconstruction of National Identity in Iran (2024 in Persian and 2025 in English); A New Biography of Fatemah Zarin-Taj Baraghani Qorrat al-Ayn Tahereh (OneWorld\, 2025 in English); Companion of Qajar Studies (Cambridge University Press\, 2025); and Circle of Justice: Persian Art of Governance (Yale University Press\, 2026). Amanat served as the Chair of the Yale Council on Middle East Studies and as the Director of the Yale Program in Iranian Studies. He was the editor-in-chief of the journal of Iranian Studies and he is the editor-in-chief of the forthcoming series Sources for the Study of the Persianate World.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/bilingual-lecture-series-calendar-and-identity-why-did-the-persian-solar-calendar-survive-for-1400-years-and-become-an-important-feature-of-iranian-identity-2/
LOCATION:314 Royce Hall\, 10745 Dickson Ct\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Bilingual Lecture Series,Iranian
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250405
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250406
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250105T064815Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T165600Z
UID:2189669-1743811200-1743897599@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:USC-UCLA Graduate Conference in Philosophy
DESCRIPTION:April 5\, 2025\nUSC\n  \nJoin us for the 2025 USC-UCLA Graduate Student Conference in Philosophy happening on April 5\, 2025 at USC! \n\n\nThe USC-UCLA Graduate Student Conference began in 2006. Each year\, the graduate students of the University of Southern California and the University of California\, Los Angeles solicit high-quality papers in all areas of philosophy from graduate students studying at other departments to be presented at the annual conference. For more information\, please visit the Conference Home Page. \n\n\nConference program coming soon. \n\nFor any questions\, please contact the conference organizers at <uscucla.conference@gmail.com>
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/usc-ucla-graduate-conference-in-philosophy-2/
LOCATION:USC
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250402T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250402T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250213T074924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T093300Z
UID:2190703-1743609600-1743616800@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Pourdavoud Lecture Series: Yuhan Vevaina
DESCRIPTION:Zoroastrian Hermeneutics in Late Antiquity\nThe Sūdgar Nask of Dēnkard Book 9 is a commentary on the ‘Old Avesta’ of the 2nd millennium BCE produced in Pahlavi (Zoroastrian Middle Persian) in the Sasanian (224–651 CE) and early Islamic centuries. This commentary is a value-laden\, ideologically motivated discourse that displays a rich panoply of tradition-constituted forms of allegoresis. It mobilizes complex forms of citation\, allusion\, and intertextuality from the inherited Avestan world of myth and ritual in order to engage with and react to the profound changes occurring in Iranian society. Despite its value and importance for developing our nascent understanding of Zoroastrian hermeneutics and the self-conception of the Zoroastrian priesthood in Late Antiquity\, this primary source has attracted scant scholarly attention due to the extreme difficulty of its subject matter and the lack of a reliable translation. This 2-volume work represents the first critical edition\, translation\, and commentary of this formidable text which will contribute to the philological\, theological\, and historiographical study of Zoroastrianism in a pivotal moment in its rich and illustrious history. Reading the Sūdgar Nask is a hermeneutic process of traversing texts\, genres\, and rituals in both the Avestan and Pahlavi corpora\, thus activating nodes in a web or network of textual and meta-textual relations that establish new forms of allegoreses or meaning making. It is argued that this entire hermeneutical complex of weaving a ‘new’ text composed of implicit proof text and explicit commentary renews\, extends\, and\, ultimately\, makes tradition. \nAbout the Speaker \nYuhan Sohrab-Dinshaw Vevaina is the Bahari Associate Professor of Sasanian Studies and a Fellow of Wolfson College at the University of Oxford. He received his Ph.D. in Iranian and Persian Studies from Harvard University in 2007. Since then he has taught at Harvard University\, Stanford University\, and the University of Toronto prior to coming to Oxford in 2017. He is the co-editor with Michael Stausberg of The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Zoroastrianism. He is particularly interested in the interplay between apologetics\, polemics\, and historicising interpretations of the ancient Avestan scriptures by the Zoroastrian priesthood in the Sasanian and early Islamic periods. In 2023 and 2024 he published a two-volume book project of a critical edition and commentary on the ninth book of the Dēnkard with Harrassowitz Verlag\, Wiesbaden. It was awarded the Association for Iranian Studies Book Prize for Best Book in Ancient Iranian Studies in 2024. He is currently preparing a manuscript entitled: Topographies of Rhetoric and Moral Reasoning in Sasanian and Post-Sasanian Zoroastrianism based on his four lectures at L’École Pratique des Hautes Études\, Paris in Spring 2024\, and he is also working on a co-authored critical edition of the Epistles of Manuščihr with Arash Zeini to be published by Edinburgh University Press. \n \n\n\nPourdavoud Lecture Series – Yuhan Vevaina\n\n \n\n\nName*\n\n                             \n                                                    First\n                                                 \n                             \n                                                    Last\n                                                 \n\nEmail*\n\n\nAffiliation*\n\n\n\n				UCLA Student\n			\n\n				UCLA Faculty or Staff\n			\n\n				UCLA Alumnus/Alumna\n			\n\n				Non-UCLA Student\n			\n\n				Non-UCLA Faculty or Staff\n			\n\n				General Public\n			\n\n\n\n\n\nAttending Online or In-Person?\n\n\n\n				In-Person\n			\n\n				Online\n			\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n/* = 0;if(!is_postback){return;}var form_content = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘#gform_wrapper_66’);var is_confirmation = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘#gform_confirmation_wrapper_66’).length > 0;var is_redirect = contents.indexOf(‘gformRedirect(){‘) >= 0;var is_form = form_content.length > 0 && ! 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URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/pourdavoud-lecture-series-yuhan-vevaina/
LOCATION:306 Royce Hall\, 10745 Dickson Plaza\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Launch
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://humanities.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Pourdavoud-Lecture-Series-Vevaina-web-image2-gYRsBl.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250401T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250401T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250114T083259Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T181026Z
UID:2189896-1743530400-1743534000@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:William and Lois Matthews Samuel Pepys Lecture by Carla Pestana
DESCRIPTION:Striving for Expertise \nGuest Speaker: Carla Pestana (UCLA) \nScholars often refer to Samuel Pepys as an early example of a state bureaucrat\, his career as a civil servant in the burgeoning Restoration bureaucracy offering documentation of an important shift in governance. Of equal note—and perhaps greater interest—is the way Pepys himself aimed for expertise. Not content to serve as a cog in a larger bureaucratic machine\, Pepys sought to educate himself about the workings of the navy and of sailing ships\, going beyond the demands of his own office to achieve a deeper understanding. In doing so\, he once again revealed his insecurities\, while he also indulged in personal rivalries and resisted the limitations placed on him in his role as a civil servant. \nCarla Gardina Pestana is Distinguished Professor of History and Joyce Appleby Endowed Chair of America in the World. Her research focuses on 17th and 18th century Atlantic worlds\, especially the English Atlantic\, the Caribbean\, and U.S. religious history. Professor Pestana has published books on religion and empire in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries\, most notably Protestant Empire: Religion and the Making of the British Atlantic World (2009). \nProfessor William Matthews\, a member of UCLA’s English Department faculty and the Center’s second Director (1970-1972)\, was an authority on the life and writings of the seventeenth-century British wit and diarist Samuel Pepys. With the assistance of his wife Lois\, Matthews and his co-editor Robert Latham produced the definitive edition (eleven volumes) of Pepys’s works\, which was published incrementally between 1971 and 1983. The Matthewses’ will\, which endows the Center’s annual lecture and also a festive dinner\, specifies that the event should be scheduled to coincide with Pepys’s own annual celebration commemorating the surgery he endured on March 26\, 1658. \nRegister to attend in Luskin Conference Center\, Laureate Classroom \nMore information about past William and Lois Matthews Samuel Pepys lectures can be found here.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/will-and-lois-matthews-samuel-pepys-lecture-by-carla-pestana/
LOCATION:Luskin Conference Center\, 425 Westwood Plaza\, Los Angeles\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Humanities,Lecture
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250331T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250331T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250313T234831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250321T222400Z
UID:2191090-1743413400-1743436800@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:ELTS Job Fair
DESCRIPTION:The UCLA Department of European Languages and Transcultural Studies will host its 2025 job fair on March 31 from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Royce Hall\, rooms 306 and 314. This transcultural event builds on the success of the 2024 French Job Fair and offers a broad range of global and interdisciplinary career opportunities. \nStudents will have the chance to connect with professionals\, explore career paths\, and discover how language and cultural studies can open doors across various industries. \nLearn more about the ELTS Job Fair here. \nWe look forward to seeing you there!
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/elts-job-fair/
LOCATION:Royce Hall 306 and 314\, 10745 Dickson Court\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095
CATEGORIES:European Languages & Transcultural Studies
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250314T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250314T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250201T004238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250203T175742Z
UID:2190360-1741946400-1741971600@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Cases and Scale in Historiography
DESCRIPTION:Conference organized by Michael Osman and Cristóbal Amunátegui (University of California\, Los Angeles) \nIn the last few decades\, debates stemming from the science and history “wars” have called attention to the ways in which cases are constructed and proven across disciplines. “Cases and Scale in Historiography” will explore the relationship between the case and one of its constitutive elements: scale. Among many other things\, cases are a way of managing distance: between the past and the present\, the far away and the near\, norms and exceptions\, ideation and reality. Thus defined\, cases are inevitably bound to the shifting measures and temporalities of scale\, something which may seem at odds with today’s dominant culture of scholarly specialization. Like magnets\, cases have the potential of centripetally attracting different knowledge\, sites\, and periods in order to solve the problems they pose. To deal with the spatiotemporal vagaries of scale\, however\, entails facing a wide-ranging set of historiographical and epistemological difficulties: the scalar analysis imposed by cases seems to pit historiographical specificity against both blind specialization and Diogenean erudition. By pointing to the links between scale and the case\, then\, our invitation is to explore the limits and possibilities of the historian as both expert and generalist. \nPlease visit the website for the list of speakers and program schedule and register for this event. \n 
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/cases-scale/
LOCATION:William Andrews Clark Memorial Library\, 2520 Cimarron Street\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90018\, United States
CATEGORIES:Center for 17th & 18th Century Studies,William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250313
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250315
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20241219T040254Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T093259Z
UID:2189308-1741824000-1741996799@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:The Bible in Its Ancient Iranian Context
DESCRIPTION:March 13-14\, 2025 | 306 & 314 Royce Hall\nUCLA \nAn International Conference Convened by:\nM. Rahim Shayegan\, UCLA\nWilliam Schniedewind\, UCLA\nCatherine Bonesho\, UCLA \nCo-sponsored by:\nThe Pourdavoud Institute for the Study of the Iranian World\nThe Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies \nZoom Webinar Link \nDownload the Conference Program \nAlthough there has been renewed interest in the Persian period in biblical scholarship\, the profound impact of the ancient Iranian world on the biblical books of Esther and Daniel has often been taken for granted. From their dynamic portraits of foreign kings and Jewish communities in the imperial court to their use of Iranian institutions and literary traditions\, it is impossible to disentangle the books of Esther and Daniel from their ancient Iranian contexts. This conference foregrounds the influence of the ancient Iranian world on Esther and Daniel and its lasting impact on ancient Jewish communities. \nIn organizing this conference\, we hope to offer a truly interdisciplinary analysis of Esther\, Daniel and ancient Iranian Studies by inviting speakers specializing in subjects related to Second Temple Judaism\, Hebrew Bible\, and the Achaemenid Empire. Topics explored at the conference include Jewish constructions of the diaspora and Persian court\, Achaemenid religions\, Aramaic scribalism\, and imperial ideology and hybridity. \nRegister\nvar gform;gform||(document.addEventListener(“gform_main_scripts_loaded”\,function(){gform.scriptsLoaded=!0})\,document.addEventListener(“gform/theme/scripts_loaded”\,function(){gform.themeScriptsLoaded=!0})\,window.addEventListener(“DOMContentLoaded”\,function(){gform.domLoaded=!0})\,gform={domLoaded:!1\,scriptsLoaded:!1\,themeScriptsLoaded:!1\,isFormEditor:()=>”function”==typeof InitializeEditor\,callIfLoaded:function(o){return!(!gform.domLoaded||!gform.scriptsLoaded||!gform.themeScriptsLoaded&&!gform.isFormEditor()||(gform.isFormEditor()&&console.warn(“The use of gform.initializeOnLoaded() is deprecated in the form editor context and will be removed in Gravity Forms 3.1.”)\,o()\,0))}\,initializeOnLoaded:function(o){gform.callIfLoaded(o)||(document.addEventListener(“gform_main_scripts_loaded”\,()=>{gform.scriptsLoaded=!0\,gform.callIfLoaded(o)})\,document.addEventListener(“gform/theme/scripts_loaded”\,()=>{gform.themeScriptsLoaded=!0\,gform.callIfLoaded(o)})\,window.addEventListener(“DOMContentLoaded”\,()=>{gform.domLoaded=!0\,gform.callIfLoaded(o)}))}\,hooks:{action:{}\,filter:{}}\,addAction:function(o\,r\,e\,t){gform.addHook(“action”\,o\,r\,e\,t)}\,addFilter:function(o\,r\,e\,t){gform.addHook(“filter”\,o\,r\,e\,t)}\,doAction:function(o){gform.doHook(“action”\,o\,arguments)}\,applyFilters:function(o){return gform.doHook(“filter”\,o\,arguments)}\,removeAction:function(o\,r){gform.removeHook(“action”\,o\,r)}\,removeFilter:function(o\,r\,e){gform.removeHook(“filter”\,o\,r\,e)}\,addHook:function(o\,r\,e\,t\,n){null==gform.hooks[o][r]&&(gform.hooks[o][r]=[]);var d=gform.hooks[o][r];null==n&&(n=r+”_”+d.length)\,gform.hooks[o][r].push({tag:n\,callable:e\,priority:t=null==t?10:t})}\,doHook:function(r\,o\,e){var t;if(e=Array.prototype.slice.call(e\,1)\,null!=gform.hooks[r][o]&&((o=gform.hooks[r][o]).sort(function(o\,r){return o.priority-r.priority})\,o.forEach(function(o){“function”!=typeof(t=o.callable)&&(t=window[t])\,”action”==r?t.apply(null\,e):e[0]=t.apply(null\,e)}))\,”filter”==r)return e[0]}\,removeHook:function(o\,r\,t\,n){var e;null!=gform.hooks[o][r]&&(e=(e=gform.hooks[o][r]).filter(function(o\,r\,e){return!!(null!=n&&n!=o.tag||null!=t&&t!=o.priority)})\,gform.hooks[o][r]=e)}}); \n\n\nThis RSVP form is for both conference days.  Please select the day(s) you are able to attend in person.  The Zoom webinar link to attend the event online is: https://ucla.zoom.us/j/91611647646 \n \n\n\nName*\n\n                             \n                                                    First\n                                                 \n                             \n                                                    Last\n                                                 \n\nEmail*\n\n\nAffiliation*\n\n\n\n				UCLA Student\n			\n\n				UCLA Faculty or Staff\n			\n\n				UCLA Alumnus/Alumna\n			\n\n				Non-UCLA Student\n			\n\n				Non-UCLA Faculty or Staff\n			\n\n				General Public\n			\n\n\n\n\n\nAttending in Person?\n\n\n\n								Thursday\, March 13\n							\n\n								Friday\, March 14\n							\n\n\nPlease select all dates you plan to attend the lectures in-person.\n\nAttending Online?\n\n\n\n								Thursday\, March 13\n							\n\n								Friday\, March 14\n							\n\n\nPlease select all dates you plan to attend the lectures online. \nUse this Zoom webinar link for all days. \nhttps://ucla.zoom.us/j/91611647646 \n\n\n\n\n \n/* = 0;if(!is_postback){return;}var form_content = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘#gform_wrapper_69’);var is_confirmation = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘#gform_confirmation_wrapper_69’).length > 0;var is_redirect = contents.indexOf(‘gformRedirect(){‘) >= 0;var is_form = form_content.length > 0 && ! 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URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/the-bible-in-its-ancient-iranian-context/
LOCATION:306 Royce Hall\, 10745 Dickson Plaza\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Conferences
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://humanities.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Bible-Conference-program-web-image-RjweQd.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250310T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250310T130000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250201T003340Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250203T165923Z
UID:2190356-1741608000-1741611600@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Katherine Philips\, Meta-Metaphysical Poet
DESCRIPTION:Kenneth Karmiole Endowed Graduate Research Fellowship   \nLecture by Arya Sureshbabu\, Ph.D. Candidate in English\, University of California\, Berkeley. Recipient of the 2024–25 Kenneth Karmiole Endowed Graduate Research Fellowship \nKatherine Philips (1632–64) occupies an unusual place in the canon of seventeenth-century poetry. Now alternatively billed as an apostle of female friendship or a proto-sapphic icon\, she was also known in her own time as an exemplary practitioner of intimacy. But a less adulatory strain of reception history reads her verse as overstuffed with hyperbolic praise and extended conceits that fail to sustain readerly interest. This talk suggests that these seemingly contradictory assessments of Philips are in fact connected: her poems and letters express closeness through a disproportionate outpouring of attention to minor details\, petty situations\, and all-too-earthly individuals. Philips’s preoccupation with the interplay between excess and diminution is as stylistic as it is thematic; her copious adaptations of her poetic predecessors index a process of intimate reading in addition to describing intimate relationships among members of her literary coterie. Her self-conscious reflections on the twinned practices of reading and writing are especially evident in her embellishments of John Donne’s poems\, where she iteratively revises his images with an assiduousness that anticipates modern characterizations of the metaphysical conceit’s simultaneous fragility and force. Taking these resonances as a point of departure\, this presentation explores how Philips’s poetics blur the lines between affection\, interpretation\, and creative endeavor—and how eighteenth-century readers’ fleeting encounters with her literary output remix and reactivate its intimate potentials. \nArya Sureshbabu is a PhD candidate in English with a Designated Emphasis in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies at the University of California\, Berkeley. She is completing a dissertation on intimacy and textual minutiae in the poetry\, drama\, and correspondence of the English Renaissance. In addition to the Center & Clark\, her work has been supported by the Beinecke Library\, the Harry Ransom Center\, the UC Humanities Research Institute\, and the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women and Gender. \nFor additional details and to register for the Zoom lecture
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/karmiole_aryas/
LOCATION:ZOOM Lecture
CATEGORIES:Center for 17th & 18th Century Studies,William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250309T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250309T133000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250128T124806Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T162901Z
UID:2190234-1741519800-1741527000@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Bilingual Lecture Series: Women’s Rights and the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran
DESCRIPTION:زن در قانون اساسی ایران  \nWomen’s Rights and the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran\nSunday\, March 9\, 2025 | 11:30 am – 1:30 pm \nZoom Registration: \nhttps://ucla.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_pM3LdrXXSriCfDMGfzVg8w \n\n\n\n \nThe Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran\, ratified after the 1979 Islamic Revolution\, stands as the country’s foundational legal framework\, requiring all subsequent laws to align with its principles. The revolution itself was propelled by widespread calls for social and political reform\, with significant factions advocating for democracy\, human rights\, and gender equality. Iranian women played a prominent role in this movement\, underscoring the aspirations for a more inclusive and equitable society. While the constitution reflects these revolutionary demands by enumerating freedoms and rights modeled after Western constitutions\, it also incorporates elements of Islamic jurisprudence. This duality emerged from the influence of conservative religious factions\, who\, after helping to overthrow the monarchy\, swiftly consolidated power post-revolution. In this talk\, I will examine the provisions within Iran’s constitution that pertain to women’s rights\, focusing on how these provisions intersect with religious and secular legal systems. I will also explore the real-world impact on women’s personal and professional lives\, highlighting the challenges of extreme gender-based oppression under the current system. Finally\, I will discuss pathways for reform and envision how future constitutional efforts can avoid the missteps that have perpetuated inequality for over forty years. \nAbout the Speaker \n\n\n\nPegah Banihashemi is currently a JSD candidate at the University of Chicago Law School\, where she also completed an LL.M. in 2022. Pegah is currently working on the history of the formation of the Iranian Constitution both before and after the Islamic Revolution of 1979. In this project\, she will explore the problems of implementing the constitution in Iran. Part of Pegah’s project is dedicated to the issue of comparing constitutions among different countries. Pegah began her undergraduate studies focusing on French literature in Iran where reading the works of French philosophers and thinkers piqued her interest in the field of law. She completed a second Bachelor’s of Law\, after which\, she earned a Master’s and LL.M. in International Commercial Law and Private Law at Shahid Beheshti University\, achieving a first rank and defending her thesis in international arbitration. In Britain\, she worked on human rights research\, commentary\, and advocacy\, focusing on death sentences\, immigration law\, and women’s and children’s rights in Middle Eastern and Sharia Law. She has worked extensively in the analysis of international law and international human rights and is a regular expert legal analyst with many global media outlets and non-profits. She has also taught several legal courses on topics including women\, economics\, and the law\, human rights advocacy\, and students’ and teachers’ rights.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/bilingual-lecture-series-womens-rights-and-the-constitution-of-the-islamic-republic-of-iran/
CATEGORIES:Bilingual Lecture Series,Iranian,Near Eastern Languages and Cultures
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250308T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250308T123000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250201T002342Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250203T170112Z
UID:2190352-1741428000-1741437000@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Preserving Your Family History
DESCRIPTION:Join us at the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library to learn the basics of understanding and caring for your family heirlooms with the Clark’s librarians and conservators from the UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation Department. \nParticipants may bring up to five paper-based heirlooms (no larger than 18” x 24”) from their own collections. These items will become part of the instructional display\, alongside examples from the Clark Library’s stacks. Using this group display\, librarians and conservators will be able to discuss and show common issues – and provide guidance for next steps and other preservation resources. \nFor more information and to register for this workshop\, please visit our website. \nThis workshop is limited to 30 participants and will be filled on a first-come\, first-served basis. \nRegistration will close on Monday\, February 17 at 5:00 p.m.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/preserving-your-family-history/
LOCATION:William Andrews Clark Memorial Library\, 2520 Cimarron Street\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90018\, United States
CATEGORIES:Center for 17th & 18th Century Studies,William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://humanities.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/KT-Horizontal3-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Clark Library":MAILTO:clark@humnet.ucla.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250306T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250306T130000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250201T001645Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250203T181414Z
UID:2190347-1741262400-1741266000@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:The Codex Osuna: A Landmark Nahua Lawsuit in Early Colonial Mexico City
DESCRIPTION:Early Modern Research Group  Works-in-Progress Session \nPresented by Sofia Yazpik\, Ph.D. Student\, University of California\, Los Angeles \nThe Codex Osuna\, or the Pintura del gobernador\, alcaldes y regidores de México (Painting of the Municipal Governor\, Judges\, and Councilors of Mexico)\, is a pictorial and Nahuatl-language text produced by Nahuas for a legal dispute in Mexico City during the sixteenth century. It is a valuable resource for deepening our understanding of how the Spanish legal system functioned in New Spain and how Indigenous litigants strategically presented their cases to defend their rights and property within this colonial institution\, particularly during the politically tumultuous period of the 1560s. By focusing on pictorial writing in particular\, Yazpik’s research project seeks to demonstrate the Codex Osuna’s historical significance in the early colonial period by examining how Indigenous peoples utilized their own creative forms of expression within the Spanish legal system. \nSofía Yazpik is a third-year Ph.D. student in History at UCLA. Her research focuses on Mesoamerican codices\, presently examining an early colonial legal pictorial and alphabetic-writing manuscript from central Mexico. She is interested in Indigenous productions of knowledge\, the relationship between pictorial and alphabetic writing systems\, and early modern collecting practices. \nFor additional details and to register for the Zoom lecture\, visit the website.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/wip_yazpik/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Center for 17th & 18th Century Studies,William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://humanities.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/WiP_Yazpik_PostIMAGE.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250302T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250302T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250201T000628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250203T170742Z
UID:2190343-1740924000-1740931200@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Chamber Music at the Clark 30th Anniversary presents\, Ariel Quartet
DESCRIPTION:Distinguished by its virtuosity\, probing musical insight\, and impassioned\, fiery performances\, the Ariel Quartet has garnered critical praise worldwide for more than twenty years. The Quartet serves as the Faculty Quartet-in-Residence at the University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music\, where they direct the chamber music program and present a concert series in addition to maintaining a busy touring schedule in the United States and abroad. \nRecent highlights include the Ariel Quartet’s Carnegie Hall debut\, as well as the release of a Brahms and Bartók album for Avie Records. In 2020\, the Ariel gave the U.S. premiere of the Quintet for Piano and Strings by Daniil Trifonov (with the composer as pianist). Ariel Quartet has won numerous international prizes\, including the Cleveland Quartet Award: Grand Prize at the 2006 Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition. \nFurther details and the full program are on our website. Competition \nPhoto: Ariel Quartet by Marco Borggreve
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/ariel-quartet/
LOCATION:William Andrews Clark Memorial Library\, 2520 Cimarron Street\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90018\, United States
CATEGORIES:Center for 17th & 18th Century Studies,William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://humanities.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Ariel-Quartet_Marco-Borggreve_FLYER.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Clark Library":MAILTO:clark@humnet.ucla.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250228T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250228T150000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20241221T013515Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T100306Z
UID:2189373-1740747600-1740754800@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:“The Same Frame of Mind\, but a Different Villain”: Conspiracist Narratology and the Decolonization of Africa
DESCRIPTION:A workshop with Christian David Alvarado\n \nKAPLAN HALL ROOM #348\n1:00-2:30pm Workshop\n2:30-3:00pm Reception\n  \nThis workshop is open to UCLA Comparative Literature graduate students\, UCLA English graduate students\, and UCLA African Studies Center students. \n\n\n\nRSVP \n \n\n\n\nName(Required)\n\n                            \n                                                    First \n                                                 \n                            \n                                                            Last \n                                                         \n\n\nEmail(Required)\n\n                                \n                                    Enter Email \n                                \n                                \n                                    Confirm Email \n                                 \n\n \n\nAffiliation(Required) \nUCLA Comparative Literature graduate studentUCLA English graduate studentUCLA African Studies Center studentUCLA facultyUCLA staff\n\n\n\n\n \n/* = 0;if(!is_postback){return;}var form_content = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘#gform_wrapper_26’);var is_confirmation = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘#gform_confirmation_wrapper_26’).length > 0;var is_redirect = contents.indexOf(‘gformRedirect(){‘) >= 0;var is_form = form_content.length > 0 && ! is_redirect && ! is_confirmation;var mt = parseInt(jQuery(‘html’).css(‘margin-top’)\, 10) + parseInt(jQuery(‘body’).css(‘margin-top’)\, 10) + 100;if(is_form){jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_26’).html(form_content.html());if(form_content.hasClass(‘gform_validation_error’)){jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_26’).addClass(‘gform_validation_error’);} else {jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_26’).removeClass(‘gform_validation_error’);}setTimeout( function() { /* delay the scroll by 50 milliseconds to fix a bug in chrome */ jQuery(document).scrollTop(jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_26’).offset().top – mt); }\, 50 );if(window[‘gformInitDatepicker’]) {gformInitDatepicker();}if(window[‘gformInitPriceFields’]) {gformInitPriceFields();}var current_page = jQuery(‘#gform_source_page_number_26’).val();gformInitSpinner( 26\, ‘https://complit.ucla.edu/wp-content/plugins/gravityforms/images/spinner.svg’\, true );jQuery(document).trigger(‘gform_page_loaded’\, [26\, current_page]);window[‘gf_submitting_26’] = false;}else if(!is_redirect){var confirmation_content = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘.GF_AJAX_POSTBACK’).html();if(!confirmation_content){confirmation_content = contents;}jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_26’).replaceWith(confirmation_content);jQuery(document).scrollTop(jQuery(‘#gf_26’).offset().top – mt);jQuery(document).trigger(‘gform_confirmation_loaded’\, [26]);window[‘gf_submitting_26’] = false;wp.a11y.speak(jQuery(‘#gform_confirmation_message_26’).text());}else{jQuery(‘#gform_26’).append(contents);if(window[‘gformRedirect’]) {gformRedirect();}}jQuery(document).trigger(“gform_pre_post_render”\, [{ formId: “26”\, currentPage: “current_page”\, abort: function() { this.preventDefault(); } }]);                if (event && event.defaultPrevented) {                return;         }        const gformWrapperDiv = document.getElementById( “gform_wrapper_26” );        if ( gformWrapperDiv ) {            const visibilitySpan = document.createElement( “span” );            visibilitySpan.id = “gform_visibility_test_26”;            gformWrapperDiv.insertAdjacentElement( “afterend”\, visibilitySpan );        }        const visibilityTestDiv = document.getElementById( “gform_visibility_test_26” );        let postRenderFired = false;                function triggerPostRender() {            if ( postRenderFired ) {                return;            }            postRenderFired = true;            jQuery( document ).trigger( ‘gform_post_render’\, [26\, current_page] );            gform.utils.trigger( { event: ‘gform/postRender’\, native: false\, data: { formId: 26\, currentPage: current_page } } );            gform.utils.trigger( { event: ‘gform/post_render’\, native: false\, data: { formId: 26\, currentPage: current_page } } );            if ( visibilityTestDiv ) {                visibilityTestDiv.parentNode.removeChild( visibilityTestDiv );            }        }        function debounce( func\, wait\, immediate ) {            var timeout;            return function() {                var context = this\, args = arguments;                var later = function() {                    timeout = null;                    if ( !immediate ) func.apply( context\, args );                };                var callNow = immediate && !timeout;                clearTimeout( timeout );                timeout = setTimeout( later\, wait );                if ( callNow ) func.apply( context\, args );            };        }        const debouncedTriggerPostRender = debounce( function() {            triggerPostRender();        }\, 200 );        if ( visibilityTestDiv && visibilityTestDiv.offsetParent === null ) {            const observer = new MutationObserver( ( mutations ) => {                mutations.forEach( ( mutation ) => {                    if ( mutation.type === ‘attributes’ && visibilityTestDiv.offsetParent !== null ) {                        debouncedTriggerPostRender();                        observer.disconnect();                    }                });            });            observer.observe( document.body\, {                attributes: true\,                childList: false\,                subtree: true\,                attributeFilter: [ ‘style’\, ‘class’ ]\,            });        } else {            triggerPostRender();        }    } );} );\n/* ]]> */ \n  \nRelated Document: Workshop Chapter \nThe chapter we will be discussing in this workshop examines a key episode in the history of global conspiracist thought: speculative accounts and narratives regarding the Mau Mau Uprising in Kenya across mid-20th century Britain and its empire. In it\, I argue that contemporary allegations about the uprising’s aim of “white genocide\,” the Satanic rituals conducted by those who participated in it\, and its role in global Communist plots should all be read as conspiracy theories which fundamentally shaped its history and attempts to suppress it. Reframing them as such allows us to see how speculative thinking about Mau Mau is part of a longer tradition of reading world events that continues to inform many of the most prominent iterations of conspiracism that shape Western politics and culture today. Developing this chapter also led to my second major research project\, which aims to understand how the history of conspiracist literary production in European and African contexts shaped imperial governance and engagements with processes of decolonization on both of these continents. \n\nAbout the Speaker\nChristian Alvarado received his PhD in History of Consciousness at the University of California\, Santa Cruz and is President’s and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow in the African American and African Studies Department at the University of California\, Davis. His current book project situates the event most commonly known as the Mau Mau Uprising in late-colonial Kenya within the broader historical and narratological landscape of 20th century Africa. By tracing how understandings of this event circulated across transnational networks and cultural formations\, his work aims to show how the frameworks to which Mau Mau is put illuminate novel insights into the global dimensions of knowledge production regarding African decolonization.\n \n 
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/the-same-frame-of-mind-but-a-different-villain-conspiracist-narratology-and-the-decolonization-of-africa/
LOCATION:Kaplan Hall 348\, 415 Portola Plaza\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250228T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250228T133000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250213T233250Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T003327Z
UID:2190726-1740744000-1740749400@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Global Antiquity Faculty Lunch Series- “Por Mares Nunca D’antes Navegados…”: Poetic Primacy in Arcadian Epic and Caminões’s The Lusiads with Adriana Vazquez
DESCRIPTION:Global Antiquity is pleased to invite you to the next in its 2024–2025 Faculty Lunch Series talks\, featuring Professor Adriana Vazquez (Classics\, UCLA). On Friday\, February 28 from 12:00–1:30 pm in Royce 306\, she will deliver a lecture titled “Por Mores Nunca D’antes Navegados…”: Poetic Primacy in Arcadian Epic and Caminões’s The Lusiads. Lunch and refreshments will be served at 12:00 pm followed immediately by the talk and discussion. All are welcome\, and we hope to see you there! \nAbstract: This presentation is an excerpt of a monograph on the poetry of the Brazilian colonial period and its reception of antiquity\, titled “Arcadia Ultramarina: Studies in the Neoclassical Literature of Portuguese America.” The talk highlights statements of poetic primacy in two epics produced under the umbrella of 18th century Brazilian Arcadianism\, each of which considers moments in the Portuguese settlement of Brazil. I argue that both epics conceive of poetic primacy as an adaptation of colonial concepts of ‘newness\,’ reflecting the crisis in European thinking ignited by the apparent lacunae in ancient geographic knowledge concerning the so-called New World. I additionally consider the intermediary of Camões’ The Lusiads as instrumental to the formalization of a lexicon of poetic primacy in the Arcadian epics. \nAbout the Speaker: Adriana Vazquez is an assistant professor of Classics at UCLA specializing in Latin literature of the Augustan period\, with particular interest in its legacy in the Lusophone literature of the 17th- and 18th-centuries. She is currently working on a monograph on the legacy of Latin literature in the poetry of colonial Brazil\, which analyzes the literary output of the poets of the Arcadia Ultramarina\, a literary academy that placed itself in dialogue with the ancient poetic tradition. She is a cofounder and former steering committee member of Hesperides: Classics in the Luso-hispanic World\, an interest group focusing on Ibero-global reception.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/global-antiquity-faculty-lunch-series-por-mares-nunca-dantes-navegados-poetic-primacy-in-arcadian-epic-and-caminoess-the-lusiads-with-adriana-vazquez/
LOCATION:Royce Hall 306\, 10745 Dickson Court\, Los Angeles\, California\, 90095
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://humanities.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Faculty-Lunch-Series-Vazquez-web-image-uZ9OKM.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250227T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250227T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250103T031831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T100305Z
UID:2189624-1740675600-1740686400@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:What is this thing called Mau Mau? The “Storm in Kenya” in Global Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:A Talk by Christian David Alvarado\n \nKaplan Hall Room #348\n5:00-8:00 PM\n\nvar gform;gform||(document.addEventListener(“gform_main_scripts_loaded”\,function(){gform.scriptsLoaded=!0})\,document.addEventListener(“gform/theme/scripts_loaded”\,function(){gform.themeScriptsLoaded=!0})\,window.addEventListener(“DOMContentLoaded”\,function(){gform.domLoaded=!0})\,gform={domLoaded:!1\,scriptsLoaded:!1\,themeScriptsLoaded:!1\,isFormEditor:()=>”function”==typeof InitializeEditor\,callIfLoaded:function(o){return!(!gform.domLoaded||!gform.scriptsLoaded||!gform.themeScriptsLoaded&&!gform.isFormEditor()||(gform.isFormEditor()&&console.warn(“The use of gform.initializeOnLoaded() is deprecated in the form editor context and will be removed in Gravity Forms 3.1.”)\,o()\,0))}\,initializeOnLoaded:function(o){gform.callIfLoaded(o)||(document.addEventListener(“gform_main_scripts_loaded”\,()=>{gform.scriptsLoaded=!0\,gform.callIfLoaded(o)})\,document.addEventListener(“gform/theme/scripts_loaded”\,()=>{gform.themeScriptsLoaded=!0\,gform.callIfLoaded(o)})\,window.addEventListener(“DOMContentLoaded”\,()=>{gform.domLoaded=!0\,gform.callIfLoaded(o)}))}\,hooks:{action:{}\,filter:{}}\,addAction:function(o\,r\,e\,t){gform.addHook(“action”\,o\,r\,e\,t)}\,addFilter:function(o\,r\,e\,t){gform.addHook(“filter”\,o\,r\,e\,t)}\,doAction:function(o){gform.doHook(“action”\,o\,arguments)}\,applyFilters:function(o){return gform.doHook(“filter”\,o\,arguments)}\,removeAction:function(o\,r){gform.removeHook(“action”\,o\,r)}\,removeFilter:function(o\,r\,e){gform.removeHook(“filter”\,o\,r\,e)}\,addHook:function(o\,r\,e\,t\,n){null==gform.hooks[o][r]&&(gform.hooks[o][r]=[]);var d=gform.hooks[o][r];null==n&&(n=r+”_”+d.length)\,gform.hooks[o][r].push({tag:n\,callable:e\,priority:t=null==t?10:t})}\,doHook:function(r\,o\,e){var t;if(e=Array.prototype.slice.call(e\,1)\,null!=gform.hooks[r][o]&&((o=gform.hooks[r][o]).sort(function(o\,r){return o.priority-r.priority})\,o.forEach(function(o){“function”!=typeof(t=o.callable)&&(t=window[t])\,”action”==r?t.apply(null\,e):e[0]=t.apply(null\,e)}))\,”filter”==r)return e[0]}\,removeHook:function(o\,r\,t\,n){var e;null!=gform.hooks[o][r]&&(e=(e=gform.hooks[o][r]).filter(function(o\,r\,e){return!!(null!=n&&n!=o.tag||null!=t&&t!=o.priority)})\,gform.hooks[o][r]=e)}}); \n\n\n\nRSVP \n \n\n\n\nName(Required)\n\n                            \n                                                    First \n                                                 \n                            \n                                                            Last \n                                                         \n\n\nEmail(Required)\n\n                                \n                                    Enter Email \n                                \n                                \n                                    Confirm Email \n                                 \n\n \n\nAffiliation(Required) \nUCLA Comparative Literature undergraduate studentUCLA undergraduate student elsewhereUCLA Comparative Literature graduate studentUCLA graduate student elsewhereUCLA facultyUCLA staffcampus visitor\n\n\n\n\n \n/* = 0;if(!is_postback){return;}var form_content = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘#gform_wrapper_25’);var is_confirmation = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘#gform_confirmation_wrapper_25’).length > 0;var is_redirect = contents.indexOf(‘gformRedirect(){‘) >= 0;var is_form = form_content.length > 0 && ! is_redirect && ! is_confirmation;var mt = parseInt(jQuery(‘html’).css(‘margin-top’)\, 10) + parseInt(jQuery(‘body’).css(‘margin-top’)\, 10) + 100;if(is_form){jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_25’).html(form_content.html());if(form_content.hasClass(‘gform_validation_error’)){jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_25’).addClass(‘gform_validation_error’);} else {jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_25’).removeClass(‘gform_validation_error’);}setTimeout( function() { /* delay the scroll by 50 milliseconds to fix a bug in chrome */ jQuery(document).scrollTop(jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_25’).offset().top – mt); }\, 50 );if(window[‘gformInitDatepicker’]) {gformInitDatepicker();}if(window[‘gformInitPriceFields’]) {gformInitPriceFields();}var current_page = jQuery(‘#gform_source_page_number_25’).val();gformInitSpinner( 25\, ‘https://complit.ucla.edu/wp-content/plugins/gravityforms/images/spinner.svg’\, true );jQuery(document).trigger(‘gform_page_loaded’\, [25\, current_page]);window[‘gf_submitting_25’] = false;}else if(!is_redirect){var confirmation_content = jQuery(this).contents().find(‘.GF_AJAX_POSTBACK’).html();if(!confirmation_content){confirmation_content = contents;}jQuery(‘#gform_wrapper_25’).replaceWith(confirmation_content);jQuery(document).scrollTop(jQuery(‘#gf_25’).offset().top – mt);jQuery(document).trigger(‘gform_confirmation_loaded’\, [25]);window[‘gf_submitting_25’] = false;wp.a11y.speak(jQuery(‘#gform_confirmation_message_25’).text());}else{jQuery(‘#gform_25’).append(contents);if(window[‘gformRedirect’]) {gformRedirect();}}jQuery(document).trigger(“gform_pre_post_render”\, [{ formId: “25”\, currentPage: “current_page”\, abort: function() { this.preventDefault(); } }]);                if (event && event.defaultPrevented) {                return;         }        const gformWrapperDiv = document.getElementById( “gform_wrapper_25” );        if ( gformWrapperDiv ) {            const visibilitySpan = document.createElement( “span” );            visibilitySpan.id = “gform_visibility_test_25”;            gformWrapperDiv.insertAdjacentElement( “afterend”\, visibilitySpan );        }        const visibilityTestDiv = document.getElementById( “gform_visibility_test_25” );        let postRenderFired = false;                function triggerPostRender() {            if ( postRenderFired ) {                return;            }            postRenderFired = true;            jQuery( document ).trigger( ‘gform_post_render’\, [25\, current_page] );            gform.utils.trigger( { event: ‘gform/postRender’\, native: false\, data: { formId: 25\, currentPage: current_page } } );            gform.utils.trigger( { event: ‘gform/post_render’\, native: false\, data: { formId: 25\, currentPage: current_page } } );            if ( visibilityTestDiv ) {                visibilityTestDiv.parentNode.removeChild( visibilityTestDiv );            }        }        function debounce( func\, wait\, immediate ) {            var timeout;            return function() {                var context = this\, args = arguments;                var later = function() {                    timeout = null;                    if ( !immediate ) func.apply( context\, args );                };                var callNow = immediate && !timeout;                clearTimeout( timeout );                timeout = setTimeout( later\, wait );                if ( callNow ) func.apply( context\, args );            };        }        const debouncedTriggerPostRender = debounce( function() {            triggerPostRender();        }\, 200 );        if ( visibilityTestDiv && visibilityTestDiv.offsetParent === null ) {            const observer = new MutationObserver( ( mutations ) => {                mutations.forEach( ( mutation ) => {                    if ( mutation.type === ‘attributes’ && visibilityTestDiv.offsetParent !== null ) {                        debouncedTriggerPostRender();                        observer.disconnect();                    }                });            });            observer.observe( document.body\, {                attributes: true\,                childList: false\,                subtree: true\,                attributeFilter: [ ‘style’\, ‘class’ ]\,            });        } else {            triggerPostRender();        }    } );} );\n/* ]]> */ \nIn the opening pages of Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o’s 1967 novel A Grain of Wheat\, a European district officer asks a version of the question at the core of discourse about the anticolonial movement that gripped Kenya in the 1950s: “What is this thing called Mau Mau?” As an icon of violent resistance to colonial domination\, one answer regarding the armed struggle that defined late-colonial Kenya has been to read it as an “unfinished revolution” whose decolonial aims remain unfulfilled (or\, more precisely\, betrayed). This talk attends to Mau Mau’s symbolic place in cultural politics in Kenya and beyond by exploring how narratives interpreting it as such have shaped transnational understandings of postcolonialism and decolonization. By tracing the rhetorical politics that cohere around it\, I argue that we should consider the invocation of the idea of Mau Mau — whether it be central to a text or present as an offhand reference — as a catalyst through which broader claims are made. I link how African and diasporic writers have positioned Mau Mau as an episode in the greater “African Revolution” to the challenge it represents to existing racial and ethnic structures. Drawing from Kenyan\, South African\, and American sources\, this talk explores how these dual interpretations have shaped Mau Mau’s prominent position in cultural production and the politics of dissent across the world. \n\nAbout the Speaker\nChristian Alvarado received his PhD in History of Consciousness at the University of California\, Santa Cruz and is President’s and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow in the African American and African Studies Department at the University of California\, Davis. His current book project situates the event most commonly known as the Mau Mau Uprising in late-colonial Kenya within the broader historical and narratological landscape of 20th century Africa. By tracing how understandings of this event circulated across transnational networks and cultural formations\, his work aims to show how the frameworks to which Mau Mau is put illuminate novel insights into the global dimensions of knowledge production regarding African decolonization.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/what-is-this-thing-called-mau-mau-the-storm-in-kenya-in-global-perspectives/
LOCATION:Kaplan Hall 348\, 415 Portola Plaza\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250226T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250226T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20241219T060255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250108T070312Z
UID:2189312-1740589200-1740596400@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:HPASS: Kathleen Creel\, Northeastern University
DESCRIPTION:February 26\, 2025 | 5:00PM – 7:00PM\nDodd Hall 248 & Zoom\nRSVP HERE\n  \nJoin us on Wednesday\, February 26\, 2025 in Dodd Hall 248 for a talk by Kathleen Creel\, Northeastern University\, as part of the History\, Philosophy\, and Science of Science (HPASS) speaker series. \n  \nTalk title\, abstract\, and speaker bio coming soon. \n\n  \n  \n\nRSVP HERE\n\n  \n  \n  \nJoin our mailing list!\nSign up for our mailing list to stay up-to-date with future UCLA Philosophy events\, conferences\, and colloquia! \nSIGN UP HERE
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/hpass-kathleen-creel-northeastern-university/
LOCATION:Dodd Hall 248
CATEGORIES:Colloquia
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://humanities.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/HPASS-Wordpress-Images-900-x-600-px-jbR01a.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250225T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250225T130000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250131T235909Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250203T180422Z
UID:2190337-1740484800-1740488400@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:‘Wild and Ungovernable Passions’: Emotional Scripts and the Fate of U.S. Expansion in the Vigilante Rocky Mountain West\, 1864–1866
DESCRIPTION:Lecture by Abby Gibson\, Ph.D. Candidate in History\, University of Southern California. Recipient of the 2024–25 Kenneth Karmiole Endowed Graduate Research Fellowship \nThe Montana Vigilantes\, as they have become known within the popular nostalgia of the Wild West\, were almost immediately and are still often hailed as heroes of the frontier in their brave efforts to fill in for the American justice system in the wild days before statehood. In 1866\, English schoolteacher and recent arrival to Montana Territory\, Thomas J. Dimsdale\, published a passionate defense of the events of January and February 1864–The Montana Vigilantes!–which is held in the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library’s vast collection of Montana memorabilia. Dimsdale’s book is among the most cited firsthand accounts of the Montana Vigilantes\, but in this presentation Gibson will take a different angle on his work by bringing to the fore his extensive commentary on the disorderly emotional climate of Montana Territory that made the extremism of the vigilante violence possible. With this affective lens trained on Dimsdale’s account\, Gibson will discuss not only an implicit ambivalence in his descriptions of the Vigilantes\, but consider the larger story of emotional containment and U.S. expansion in the Rocky Mountain West contained within this work. \nAbby Gibson is a Ph.D. candidate in the Van Hunnick History Department at the University of Southern California and an Editorial Assistant for The Huntington Library Quarterly. Before arriving at USC\, she received her Master’s degree in the history of the American West at the University of Oklahoma\, where she worked as one of two Editorial Fellows for The Western Historical Quarterly during her two years at OU. Abby’s dissertation\, “Fearful Land: Managing Terror in the American West\, 1820–1920” lies at the intersection of the history of U.S. westward expansion and the history of emotions. \nFor additional details and to register for the Zoom lecture\, please visit the website
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/karmiole_gibson/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Center for 17th & 18th Century Studies,William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250222T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250222T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20241124T060353Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250222T170328Z
UID:2188664-1740216600-1740240000@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:California Medieval Seminar (Winter 2025)
DESCRIPTION:Participation in the Seminar consists of group discussion of pre-circulated papers\, typically drafts of articles\, book chapters\, or dissertation chapters (with complete apparatus). Two of the papers are ordinarily by emerging scholars (including PhD students) and the other two are by established scholars. We allocate one hour per paper and presenters should anticipate substantial\, and substantive\, feedback. Calls for presenters are circulated via e-mail from the Center approximately two months prior to each meeting and papers are accepted on a first-come basis. \nMore information can be found here. \nRegister to attend in Royce 306 \nRegister to attend via Zoom
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/california-medieval-seminar-winter-2025/
LOCATION:Royce 306
CATEGORIES:California Medieval History Seminar,Humanities
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250221T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250222T133000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250131T234610Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250205T221741Z
UID:2190330-1740132000-1740231000@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Early Global Caribbean: Conference 2: Convictions
DESCRIPTION:Conference organized by Carla Gardina Pestana (UCLA) and Gabriel de Avilez Rocha (Brown University) \nCo-sponsored by the Joyce Appleby Endowed Chair of America in the World \nThe diverse peoples who converged on the Caribbean before 1700 held a range of differing beliefs\, ideas about the natural world\, and understandings of social\, political\, and spiritual order. Considering how Indigenous\, African\, and European systems of thought and faith clashed\, adapted\, and transformed will be the focus of this second meeting. We invite participants to consider how culturally specific systems of knowledge were expressed and transformed under emergent rubrics of what would become known as religion\, science\, and law. We will likewise reflect on how these ideas animated the creation and maintenance of institutions of governance and knowledge production both in the Caribbean and extending beyond it. This conference grants an opportunity to weigh how the globalization of the early Caribbean marked historical changes in beliefs and ideas but also witnessed continuities that cut across the 1492 divide. In the process\, a multitude of convictions about spiritual\, natural\, corporal\, social\, and political order helped shape (and were reshaped by) encounters in the Basin. \nFor the list of speakers and the program schedule\, please visit the website.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/egc-c2-convictions/
LOCATION:William Andrews Clark Memorial Library\, 2520 Cimarron Street\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90018\, United States
CATEGORIES:Center for 17th & 18th Century Studies,William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250219T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250219T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250211T153618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250219T155011Z
UID:2190641-1739980800-1739984400@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:The Great Search with John Philip Newell
DESCRIPTION:The story of Adam and Eve’s fall from innocence in the Garden of Eden is a mythical account of humanity’s broken relationship with the divine\, with Earth\, and with themselves. \nIn contrast\, Celtic wisdom is built on a strong bond with Earth. In the prophetic figures that author John Philip Newell draws from in his book The Great Search\, the Garden of Eden represents the inner garden of our souls and the outer garden of Earth\, which are seen as essentially one. To live in relation to what is deepest in us is to live in relation to the ground from which we and all things have come. Where are we today\, in relation to our true selves and the sacredness of Earth? And how are we to find our way home again? \nNewell’s talk will explore some of these questions raised in his book at this moment of great spiritual awakening\, an era characterized by religious exile on a vast scale. \nRSVP here for the in-person talk (Royce 314). \nRegister here for the Zoom link for the event \nJohn Philip Newell is a Celtic teacher and author of spirituality who calls the modern world to reawaken to the sacredness of Earth and every human being. His PhD is from the University of Edinburgh and he has authored over fifteen books\, including his award-winning publication\, Sacred Earth Sacred Soul\, which was the 2022 Gold Winner of the Nautilus Book Award for Spirituality and Religious Thought of the West. His new book is The Great Search (August 2024)\, in which he looks at the great spiritual yearnings of humanity today in the context of the decline of religion as we have known it. \nNewell speaks of himself as ‘a wandering teacher’ following the ancient path of many lone teachers before him in the Celtic world\, ‘wandering Scots’ (or scotus vagans as they were called) seeking the wellbeing of the world. He has been described as having ‘the heart of a Celtic bard and the mind of a Celtic scholar’\, combining in his teachings the poetic and the intellectual\, the head as well as the heart\, and spiritual awareness as well as political and ecological concern. His writings have been translated into seven languages. In 2020 he relinquished his ordination as a minister of the Church of Scotland as no longer reflecting the heart of his belief in the sacredness of Earth and every human being. He continues\, however\, to see himself as ‘a grateful son of the Christian household’ seeking to be in relationship with the wisdom of humanity’s other great spiritual traditions. \nIn 2016 he began the Earth & Soul initiative and teaches regularly in the United States and Canada as well as leading international pilgrimage weeks on Iona in the Western Isles of Scotland.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/the-great-search-with-john-philip-newell/
LOCATION:314 Royce Hall/Zoom
CATEGORIES:CSR
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250214T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250214T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20241116T054934Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250214T154823Z
UID:2188490-1739527200-1739552400@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:“Lost in Transfer? Misunderstanding\, Miscommunication\, and the Production of Knowledge in the Late Medieval and Early Modern Mediterranean”
DESCRIPTION:Organizers: Stefania Tutino (UCLA)\, Andrea Aldo Robiglio (KU Leuven)\, and Eva Del Soldato (UPenn) \nThe question of how knowledge transfers has become central for understanding the culture of the premodern world in a global perspective. This workshop is interested in exploring the question of what happens when transfer fails: what happens when knowledge is not “translated” properly? What kind of knowledge is produced when the chain of transmission breaks down or malfunctions? We think that miscommunication is as important as communication\, and we propose to explore this theme both by examining specific case studies of miscommunication and by investigating what they tell us about the structure and modes by which knowledge is produced\, which in turn allows us to get to the question of the very category of “transfer” from a philosophical and theoretical perspective. \nRegister to attend in Royce 314 \nPresenter Abstracts \nConference Schedule: \n\n\n\n9:30\nCoffee\, fresh fruit\, pastries\n\n\n10:00\nWelcoming Remarks (Zrinka Stahuljak\, Director CMRS-CEGS) \n\n\n10:15\nPaper 1: Lost in Translation: Early Modern Jesuits and the Creed (Emanuele Colombo\, Boston College)\n\n\n10:45\nPaper 2: Mistranslating Indigenous America in the ‘Age of Reason’: Epistemological Hybridity and Colonial Violence (Diego Pirillo\, University of California\, Berkeley)\n\n\n11:15\nPaper 3: Oikonomia Understood and Misunderstood: The Latin and English Reception of Byzantine Chemical Terminology (Alexandre M. Roberts\, University of Southern California)\n\n\n11:45\nBreak\n\n\n12:00\nDiscussion 1: (Paper 1\, 2\, 3) – Chaired by Matthew Acton (KU Leuven & University of Rome ‘Tor Vergata’)\n\n\n12:45\nLunch Break (on Royce 306 loggia)\n\n\n2:00\nPaper 4: Rebellious\, but Effective Medieval Translations into Arabic (Cecilia Martini Bonadeo\, University of Padua)\n\n\n2:30\nPaper 5: Hang Time: Gambling on the Future in Late Medieval Italy (Karla Mallette\, University of Michigan)\n\n\n3:00\nPaper 6: Communicating in Manuscript\, Miscommunicating in Print: The Siege of Curzola (1571) and Its Media Aftermath (Ivan Lupić\, University of Rijeka)\n\n\n3:30\nBreak\n\n\n3:45\nDiscussion 2: (Paper 4\, 5\, 6) – Chaired by Sarah Marie Leitenberger (University of Pennsylvania)\n\n\n4:30\nClosing Remarks\n\n\n5:00\nReception
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/lost-in-transfer-misunderstanding-miscommunication-and-the-production-of-knowledge-in-the-late-medieval-and-early-modern-mediterranean/
LOCATION:Royce 314\, 10745 Dickson Ct\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsorship,Humanities
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250205T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250205T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T135027
CREATED:20250128T195602Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250205T221553Z
UID:2190238-1738774800-1738774800@humanities.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Grand Theft Eco: Environmental Futures of Los Angeles - 2 screenings with Q&A
DESCRIPTION:Grand Theft Eco: Environmental Futures of Los Angeles repurposes the game engine and design of Grand Theft Auto 5 to creatively imagine environmental change and its consequences for Los Angeles in the year 2050. The first of three “machinima” (video game cinema) episodes\, titled “The iBear in the River\,” will make its debut on February 5 (episode description in image below). \nTo commemorate this release\, LENS will hold two screenings\, each with a production Q&A afterwards. \n\nWHEN: 5:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. (Doors at 4:30 p.m. and 6:15 p.m.\, respectively)\nWHERE: Darren Star Screening Room (Melnitz Hall 1422)\n\nThe Darren Star Screening Room has a 50-seat capacity. Because of the limited capacity\, we ask that you RSVP in advance\, if possible\, for the screening you plan to attend. Standby attendees without an RSVP may be accommodated\, space permitting.
URL:https://humanities.ucla.edu/event/grand-theft-eco-environmental-futures-of-los-angeles-2-screenings-with-qa/
LOCATION:Darren Star Theater (Melnitz Hall 1422)\, 225 Charles E Young Dr E\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90095\, United States
CATEGORIES:LENS,Screening
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