 |
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Saturday,
July 24, 2004
Collection
Saturdays
9:00 a.m.
- 4:00 p.m. Oxford Senior Citizens
and Community Center 922 Tollgate
Drive (behind Kroger)
Do you
have photographs, letters or
other records relating to Freedom
Summer 1964? Please
click here
for more information about Collection
Saturdays.
To see a preliminary
conference program please
click here.
Please visit the
Finding
Freedom Summer website.
Please click here
to find the locations mentioned
on the program and registration
form. |
 |
Saturday,
August 14, 2004
Collection
Saturdays
9:00 a.m.
- 4:00 p.m. Oxford Senior Citizens
and Community Center 922 Tollgate
Drive (behind Kroger)
Do you
have photographs, letters or
other records relating to Freedom
Summer 1964? Please
click here
for more information about Collection
Saturdays.
|
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Tuesday,
August 24th –Sunday, November
14th, 2004
Blurring
Edges of Identity: Buildings,
Borders, Nation and Landscape
A photographic
essay by Linn Song
MacMillan Hall Lobby, Miami
University
Sponsored by the Citizens of
the World Initiative with support
from The Center for American
and World Cultures, The School
of Fine Arts, The School of
Interdisciplinary Studies/Western
College Program, The Miami Art
Museum and the Department of
German, Russian, and East Asian
Languages.
The borders of
nations are socially/culturally-constructed
edges; barriers that psychologically
and politically demarcate cultural
boundaries and artificially
mark territories that do not
necessarily have any relationship
to the landscape or physical
environment. The conditions,
under which national borders
in Europe were “fronts”
and centers of conflict/battle
over political, cultural, economic,
and military power have shifted
further since the elimination
of border controls through the
Treaty/Aquis of Schengen, such
that cities and the political
arena have become the primary
places and spaces in which disputes
over culture, identity and power
arise and are negotiated. Thus,
the internal, „uncontrolled“
borders of the European Union
are now more rapidly transforming
into a different kind of space
in which the “edges”
have become fuzzy, bringing
with it the potential (or pitfall
as many argue?) of melting together
“natural”, cultivated,
built and acculturated environments.
Digitally manipulated „snapshots“
taken along the western border
of Germany and its French and
Benelux neighbors are a sampling
of the documentation of a changing
border and the focus of this
exhibition. The images are intended
to reveal the artificially constructed
nature of the boundaries we
set and the sometimes strange
juxtapositions that are emerging
out of these evolving spaces.
The photographs also attempt
to expose the hidden sides of
national identities that conflict
with stereotypes, tourist brochures,
the grand aesthetics of landscape
painting as well as political
and cultural rhetoric that espouse
a collective purity, supremacy
and uniqueness; those of resistance,
dissent and desertion as well
as simplicity, modesty…and
banality. |
Wednesday,
September 1, 2004
Brown
Bag Lecture: "Write. Right? Reviewing
Letters from MS."
Noon - 1:00 p.m., Great Room, 212
MacMillan Hall
In this program
facilitated by Dr. Enid LaGesse, we
will view clips from the film, "Murder
in Mississippi" and read letters
from volunteers who were trained in
Oxford and other Freedom Summer training
sites, before embarking on their journey
to Mississippi. We will discuss this
moment in history and reflect upon
its
significance today.
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Thursday,
September 9 - Friday, October
29, 2004
Faces
of Freedom Summer: Photographs
by Herbert Randall
Miami University
Art Museum Galleries 4-5
A photographic journal of race
relations and the Civil Rights
movement in the summer of 1964
from Oxford, Ohio's Freedom
School to voter registration
efforts among disenfranchised
blacks in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
In honor of the 40th anniversary
of Freedom Summer, co-sponsored
by the Center for American and
World Cultures, Department of
, Miami University Art Museum,
and the Talawanda-Miami Partnership.
Opening Reception, Sunday, September
19th at 10 a.m.
in conjunction with the "Voices
of Freedom Summer" Reunion
and Conference
Do you
have photographs, letters or
other records relating to Freedom
Summer 1964? Please
click here
for more information about Collection
Saturdays.
|
Thursday, September
9, 2004
Dr.
Muna B. Ndulo,
Professor, Cornell University Law
School, Director, Institute for African
Development
United Nations, Peace-Keeping and
the Global Crisis on Refugees, Reconstruction
and Security
7:00 p.m. 144 Benton Hall (Oxford
campus)
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Friday,
September 10, 2004
UniDIversity/UniDiversidad/e
Festival
5:00-10:00
p.m. Oxford Uptown Parks (rain
or shine)
Food, music,
and dance; children's activities
and llama petting zoo; arts
and crafts; and more!
We are pleased
to present as part of Art
All Over Gran Corazón,
Great Heart: Portraits
of Courage from Colombia, September
10-24. Please visit the Oxford
Community Arts Center Monday
through Friday 11:00 a.m.-1:00
p.m.
Co-sponsored
by the Center for American and
World Cultures, City of Oxford,
Department of Theatre, Division
of Student Affairs, and Oxford
Visitors and Convention Bureau.
|
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Monday, September
13, 2004
Dr.
Hernando de Soto, President,
Institute for Liberty and Democracy
in Lima, Peru "A
House Is More than a Home"
7:00p.m.
Millett Hall
Co-sponsored by the Center for
American and World Cultures, Citizens
of the World Initiative, Etheridge
Center for Creative Leadership,
Grayson Kirk Distinguished Lecture
Series Fund of the International
Studies Program, Harry T. Wilks
Leadership Institute, Office of
the Provost, and US Bank Distinguished
Lecture Series of the Richard
T. Farmer School of Business Administration |
 |
Tuesday,
September 14, 2004
Dr.
Antonio Curet,
Field Museum of Natural History
“An Ancient History of
the Caribbean: From the Ancestors
to Columbus”
5:00 p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Sponsored by
the Center for American and
World Cultures. |
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Friday,
September 17, 2004
“Voices
of Freedom Summer”
Freedom Summer Reunion and Conference
Representative John Lewis
Plenary Address 8:00 p.m. Hall
Auditorium (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by
the Center for American and
World Cultures, College of Arts
and Science, Department of Theatre,
Division of Student Affairs,
Etheridge Center for Reflective
Leadership, Honors Program,
Office of Continuing Education,
Office of the President, Office
of the Provost, President's
Academic Enrichment Award- Sheriff
Grant, Robert E. Strippel Memorial
Fund, School of Education, School
of Engineering and Applied Science,
School of Iterdisciplinary Studies
- Western College Program, and
Western College Alumni Association.
|
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Saturday,
September 18, 2004
“Voices
of Freedom Summer”
Freedom Summer
Reunion and Conference
Shriver Multipurpose Room (Oxford
campus)
9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Evening of Music
and Drama
8:00 p.m. Hall Auditorium
Co-sponsored
by the Center for American and
World Cultures, College of Arts
and Science, Department of Theatre,
Division of Student Affairs,
Etheridge Center for Reflective
Leadership, Honors Program,
Office of Continuing Education,
Office of the President, Office
of the Provost, President's
Academic Enrichment Award- Sheriff
Grant, Robert E. Strippel Memorial
Fund, School of Education, School
of Engineering and Applied Science,
School of Iterdisciplinary Studies
- Western College Program, and
Western College Alumni Association.
|
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Sunday,
September 19, 2004
“Voices
of Freedom Summer”
Community
Events and Field trip to the
Underground Railroad Museum
and Freedom Center
Co-sponsored
by the Center for American and
World Cultures, College of Arts
and Science, Department of Theatre,
Division of Student Affairs,
Etheridge Center for Reflective
Leadership, Honors Program,
Office of Continuing Education,
Office of the President, Office
of the Provost, President's
Academic Enrichment Award- Sheriff
Grant, Robert E. Strippel Memorial
Fund, School of Education, School
of Engineering and Applied Science,
School of Iterdisciplinary Studies
- Western College Program, and
Western College Alumni Association.
|
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Sunday,
September 19 , 2004
Opening
Reception
10:00 a.m.
Faces
of Freedom Summer: Photographs
by Herbert Randall
Miami University
Art Museum Galleries 4-5
A photographic journal of race
relations and the Civil Rights
movement in the summer of 1964
from Oxford, Ohio's Freedom
School to voter registration
efforts among disenfranchised
blacks in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
In honor of the 40th anniversary
of Freedom Summer, co-sponsored
by the Center for American and
World Cultures, Department of
Theatre, Miami University Art
Museum, and the Talawanda-Miami
Partnership.
in conjunction with the "Voices
of Freedom Summer" Reunion
and Conference
Do you
have photographs, letters or
other records relating to Freedom
Summer 1964? Please
click here
for more information about Collection
Saturdays.
|
 |
Monday,
September 20, 2004
William
L. Partridge, Professor
of Anthropology and Human and
Organizational Development,
Vanderbilt University
“Colombia's
Displaced Population: Return,
Resettlement or Relief”
4:00-5:30 p.m. Room
100 Art Building (Oxford campus)
Sponsored by the Grayson Kirk
Distinguished Lecture Series
Fund of the International Studies
Program.
We are pleased
to present as part of Art
All Over Gran Corazón,
Great Heart: Portraits
of Courage from Colombia, September
10-24. Please visit the Oxford
Community Arts Center Monday
through Friday 11:00 a.m.-1:00
p.m. |
 |

|
Thursday,
September 30, 2004
Dr.
Marjorie Agosín
"Cartographies:
Voyages of the Spirit, Meditations
on Diaspora and Exile"
5:00 p.m.
40 Irvin Hall (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored byThe Center for
American and World Cultures,
Citizens of the World Initiative,
Department of Spanish and Portuguese
and Jewish Studies Program.
Marjorie will also be featured
and speaking at Middletown,
Ohio's Middfest October 1-3,
2004.
|
Friday, October
1, 2004
Global Rhythms
Performance
8:00 p.m. Hall
Auditorium (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by Center for American
and World Cultures, Department of
Music.
 |
Wednesday,
October 6, 2004
Sandra
Fernández,
Ecuadorian artist
7:00 p.m.
Room 100 Art Building. Her work
will be on exhibit in the Hiestand
Gallery during the month of
October.
Co-sponsored by The Center for
American and World Cultures,
Departments of Art and Spanish
and Portuguese. |
 |
Thursday,
October 7, 2004
Dr. Phil
Nyden,
Professor of Sociology and Director,
Center for Urban Research and
Learning, Loyola University
(Chicago)
“University Engagement
with the Community: Passing
Fad or Lasting Change?”
Inaugural lecture for the Sherry
Corbett Memorial Lecture Series
7:00 p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Reception following
Co-sponsored by the Center for
American and World Cultures,
Citizens of the World Initiative,
College of Arts and Science,
Department of Sociology and
Gerontology, and Office of Service
Learning and Civic Leadership. |
|
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|
Friday,
October 8, 2004
Citizens of the World
Concert
8:00
p.m. Hall Auditorium (Oxford
campus)
Alex Viteri, Violin
Agoram
Saravanan, Tavil
Srinivas Krishnan, Tabla
Patrick Hernly, Ghatam
Sunaina Rao, Kathak
dance
Rachmaninoff:
Symphony No. 2, op. 27
in e minor
Mendelssohn: Concerto
for violin op. 64 in e
minor
Soloist: Alex Viteri
Roger Davis: Ragam Ranjani
Co-sponsored
by The Center for American
and World Cultures, Citizens
of the World Initiative,
and Department of Music.
|
Parents' weekend
will be celebrated with this
concert that will explore a
very unique and original type
of performance, combining for
the first time two groups of
apparently very different nature
and aesthetics: the University
Symphony Orchestra and Global
Rhythms, a world music ensemble.
To find out more
about Indian (South Asian) classical
instruments and dance, visit:
Ghatam
Tabla
Tavil
Kathak
Dance
|
 |
Monday,
October 11, 2004
Dr.
Hays Cummins,
Professor of Interdisciplinary
Studies, Western College Program,
Miami University
“Costa
Rica: A Microcosm for Global
Change ”
4:00 p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
|
Monday, October
11, 2004
Professor Sumit
Ganguly,
Rabindranath Tagore Professor of Indian
Cultures and Civilization and Professor
of Political Science, Indiana University
"The Continuing Relevance of
Gandhi"
7:00 p.m. Room 113 Laws Hall (Oxford
campus)
Co-Sponsors:
Department of Philosophy, Department
of Comparative Religion, Office of
International Education, and The Center
for American and World Cultures.
Wednesday, October
13, 2004
Jolene
Smith,
Executive Director, Free The Slaves
"Modern
Slavery in the United States"
12:00 p.m. (noon).
Harry T. Wilks Conference Center (Hamilton
campus)
Co-sponsored by the Offices of the
Executive Director and of Student
Services at Miami Hamilton.
Wednesday, October
13, 2004
"Human
Trafficking and Slavery in the 21
st Century"
Jolene
Smith,
Executive Director, Free The Slaves
"Disposable People: New Slavery
in the Global Economy"
4:00 p.m. Hall Auditorium (Oxford
campus)
Thursday, October 14-Sunday, October
17, 2004
"Mississipi
Civil Rights Tour"
Sponsored
by Student Success and Co-curricular
Programs, The Center for American
and World Cultures, and Miami University
Middletown.
 |
Monday,
October 18, 2004
Dr.
Josiah Heyman,
Professor of Anthropology, University
of Texas-El Paso
Altagracia
Sánchez-Ruiz, Miami
University
Baldemar
Velásquez,
President, Farm Labor Organizing
Committee
Forum-Debate
“Latin American Immigration:
Good or Bad for our Nation?”
4:00-6:00 p.m. Heritage Room,
Shriver Center (Oxford campus)
Co-Sponsored by
the Association of Latin and
American Students (ALAS), Department
of Anthropology, Department
of Geography, Department of
Sociology, International Studies
Program, Latin American Studies
Program, Richard T. Farmer School
of Business - U.S. Department
of Education Business and International
Education Program Title VIB
Grant, Robert Hamilton Bishop
Debate Society, School of Education
and Allied Professions, and
Sigma Lambda Beta Latino-Based
Fraternity. |
Tuesday October
19, 2004
" The Corporation"
7:00 p.m. Great
Room, 212 MacMillan Hall (Oxford campus)
Sponsored by The Center for American
and World Cultures, The School of
Interdisciplinary Studies, and the
Department of Anthropology.
The description below is from http://www.thecorporation.com/
"One hundred
and fifty years ago, the corporation
was a relatively insignificant entity.
Today, it is a vivid, dramatic and
pervasive presence in all our lives.
Like the Church, the Monarchy and
the Communist Party in other times
and places, the corporation is today's
dominant institution. But history
humbles dominant institutions. All
have been crushed, belittled or absorbed
into some new order. The corporation
is unlikely to be the first to defy
history. In this complex and highly
entertaining documentary, Mark Achbar,
co-director of the influential and
inventive MANUFACTURING CONSENT: NOAM
CHOMSKY AND THE MEDIA, teams up with
co-director Jennifer Abbott and writer
Joel Bakan to examine the far-reaching
repercussions of the corporation's
increasing preeminence. Based on Bakan's
book The Corporation: The Pathological
Pursuit of Profit and Power, the film
is a timely, critical inquiry that
invites CEOs, whistle-blowers, brokers,
gurus, spies, players, pawns and pundits
on a graphic and engaging quest to
reveal the corporation's inner workings,
curious history, controversial impacts
and possible futures. Featuring illuminating
interviews with Noam Chomsky, Michael
Moore, Howard Zinn and many others,
THE CORPORATION charts the spectacular
rise of an institution aimed at achieving
specific economic goals as it also
recounts victories against this apparently
invincible force.
 |
Wednesday,
October 20, 2004
Mrs.
Coretta Scott King
"Injustice
Anywhere is a Threat to
Justice Everywhere: Civil
Rights and Problems of
Inclusion"
8:00 p.m. Millett Hall
(Oxford campus)
Special
performance by the Collegiate
Corale
Ain'a That Good News,
Spiritual arranged by
William Dawson
They Won't Go When I Go,
Stevie Wonder arranged
by Ethan Sperry |
Spectrum, BSAA
and the Office of LGBT Services
proudly present Human Rights
Activist internationally recognized
for her efforts to promote non-violent
social change. Please welcome
the widow of the late Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. Spend an extraordinary
evening with Mrs. Coretta Scott
King.
Co-sponsored by
the Black World Studies Program,
Harry T. Wilks Leadership Institute,
Etheridge Center for Reflective
Leadership, Honors and Scholars
Program, Center for American
and World Cultures, Office of
the Provost, Citizens of the
World Initiative, Community
Advocacy Alliance, The Women's
Center, Women's Studies Program,
Education and Allied Professions,
College of Arts and Science,
Richard T. Farmer School of
Business, The Western College
Program, Office of Equity and
Equal Opportunity, Office of
Residence Life and New Student
Programs, Division of Student
Affairs, and Associated Student
Government.
|
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Wednesday,
October 20, 2004
Dr.
Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra,
Department of History, SUNY-Buffalo
“The
Devil in Nature: Chivalry, Colonization
and New World Landscapes 1500-1700”
7:00 p.m. Room 100 Art Building
(Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by
The Center for American and
World Cultures, Department of
Botany, Department of History,
Department of Spanish and Portuguese,
Institute of Environmental Sciences,
International Studies Program,
and School of Interdisciplinary
Studies-Western College Program. |
Thursday, October
21, 2004
The Disability
Forum: Beginning a Local Conversation
about Disability
4:30 p.m. Great
Room, 212 MacMillan Hall (Oxford campus)
Miami faculty, students,
and staff will discuss various issues
including disability law, what it
is like to be considered "disabled",
and what we are doing on this campus
to improve the intellectual, physical,
and cultural climate for the disabled.
The forum begins a local dialogue
about historical, legal, educational,
and theoretical constructions of disability
that pervade American culture. Sustained,
this conversation could result in
a more inclusive university community
by removing barriers to access and
changing discriminatory attitudes.
Click here
to read "Disability Forum: Beginning
a Local Conversation about Disability"
Presenters:
Jim Cherney, Communications
Kathy Hulgin, Educational Psychology
Kathleen Hutchinson, Speech Pathology
Cindy Lewiecki-Wilson, English
Kathy McMahon-Klosterman,Educational
Psychology
Andrew Zeisler,Office of Disability
Resources
Jay Dolmage, Graduate Student in English
Linsey Milillo, Graduate Student in
English
Co-sponsored by The Center for American
and World Cultures, Committee on Curriculum
Reform/Campus Transformation, and
University Multicultural Council.
For more information, please visit:
http://www.dol.gov/odep/faqs/ndeam.htm
U.S. Department of Labor
Office of Disability Employment Policy
Frequently Asked Questions
QUESTION: What is National Disability
Employment Awareness Month?
ANSWER: Congress designated
each October as National Disability
Employment Awareness Month (NDEAM).
The Office of Disability Employment
Policy has the lead in planning NDEAM
activities and materials to increase
the public's awareness of the contributions
and skills of American workers with
disabilities. Various programs carried
out throughout the month also highlight
the specific employment barriers that
still need to be addressed and removed.
This effort to educate
the American public about issues related
to disability and employment actually
began in 1945, when Congress enacted
a law declaring the first week in
October each year "National Employ
the Physically Handicapped Week."
In 1962, the word "physically"
was removed to acknowledge the employment
needs and contributions of individuals
with all types of disabilities. In
1988, Congress expanded the week to
a month and changed the name to "National
Disability Employment Awareness Month."
Thursday, October
21, 2004
The Great
Dictator
Screening
5:30 p.m. Room 100 Art Building (Oxford
campus)
(1940, 128 minutes)
Written, directed, and
scored by Charlie Chaplin, who also
plays the double role of a persecuted
Jewish barber as well as Adenoid Hynkel,
dictator of Tomania.
(In advance of David
Bathrick’s lecture “Charlie
Chaplin, Leni Riefenstahl, and The
Great Dictator,” 5 PM Thursday,
October 28, Alumni 1)
This film is about a
modest, unassuming proprietor of a
small barber shop in the Jewish ghetto
of Tomania, and that country's maniacal
dictator Adenoid Hynkel. The barber
spends two decades in a mental hospital
suffering from amnesia induced by
a World War I battle injury. He then
returns to his Jewish neighborhood
oblivious to the changes that have
occurred in his country since the
dictator Hynkel has come to power.
The battle he and his neighbors wage
to outwit the marauding storm troopers
provides a basis for the first half
of the film. Through a complicated
set of circumstances, Hynkel and the
barber become mistaken for each another
by Hynkel's troops. Forced into an
impersonation of Hynkel at a mass
rally celebrating Tomania's successful
invasion of Australia, the barber
steps even further out of character
and becomes Charlie Chaplin.
 |
Thursday,
October 21, 2004
CANCELLED
Dr.
Nalini Nadkarni,
Evergreen State College, Co-founder
of the International Canopy
Network, Costa Rica
Hefner
Lecture: “Beyond Tarzan
and Jane: New Perspectives in
the Emerging Field of Forest
Canopy Research”
8:00
p.m. 144 Benton Hall (Oxford
campus)
The
Hefner Lecture was established
in memory of Robert A. Hefner,
former professor and chair of
the Department of Zoology. Presented
by the Department of Zoology
and the Hefner Zoology Museum,
the Lecture enjoys co-sponsorship
from across the University,
including the Center for Environmental
Education and Natural History,
the Department of Botany and
the Center for American and
World Cultures, among others.
For more information on the
Hefner Lecture, contact Lisa
Rosenberger at the Hefner Zoology
Museum at 529-6086.
Friday,
October 22, 2004
CANCELLED
Dr.
Nalini Nadkarni,
Evergreen State College, Co-founder
of the International Canopy
Network, Costa Rica.
Technical
lecture: “Development
of the Research Ambassador Program
to Disseminate Science to Non-Scientists:
Case Studies from Forest Canopy
Research”
3:00
p.m. 112 Pearson Hall (Oxford
campus)
Co-sponsored by
the Center for Environmental
Education and Natural History
and the Department of Botany. |
Wednesday, October
27, 2004
Donna
Gabaccia,
Mellon Professor of History at the
University of Pittsburgh
"Nations
of Immigrants"
4:30 p.m. Room 40 Irvin Hall (Oxford
campus)
Co-sponsored by the
Honors and Scholars Program, School
of Education and Allied Professions,
Italian Studies Program, History Department,
International Studies Program, Center
for American and World Cultures, and
Women's Studies Program.
Thursday, October
28, 2004
Professor
David Bathrick,
Cornell University
"Charlie
Chaplin, Leni Riefenstahl and The
Great Dictator"
Part of the Jewish Studies Lectures
2004-2005
5:00 p.m. Room 1 Alumni Hall (Oxford
campus)
Sponsored by the
Program in Jewish Studies with the
Program in Film Studies, the Department
of German, Russian, and East Asian
Languages, the Center for American
and World Cultures, the Miami Hillel
Foundation, and in connection with
Hebrew Union College's Center for
Holocaust and Humanity Education lecture
series "America and the Holocaust."
Saturday, October
30, 2004
Diwali
Hall Auditorium
The show is from 3:00-5:30 p.m. There
is a North Indian dinner immediately
after the show at Talawanda Middle
School. Tickets are at Shriver, $12
(show and dinner), $8 student tickets
(show and dinner), and $5 students/general
(show only).
To
top
 |
Wednesday,
November 3, 2004
Dr.
Clyde Snow,
Emeritus Professor Anthropology,
University of Oklahoma
“Bones
of Contention: Forensic Anthropology
in the Investigation of Human
Rights”
8 :00 p.m. 144 Benton Hall (Oxford
campus)
Co-sponsored
by The Center for American and
World Cultures and Department
of Anthropology.
|
Thursday, November
11, 2004
Dr.
Katherine O'Donnell,
sociologist/anthropologist/social
activist at Hartwick College
"Ideas
of Solidarity and Accompaniment: A
Feminist talk on Economic and Social
Justice"
Brown Bag Lunchtime Discussion
Noon. Great Room, 212 MacMillan Hall
(Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by
the Center for American and World
Cultures and the Women's Center.
 |
Thursday,
November 11, 2004
7:00 p.m.
Leonard Theater, Peabody Hall
(Oxford campus)
Co-sponosored
by The Center for American and
World Cultures, Women's Center,
Citizens of the World Initiative,
Office of International Programs,
and School of Interdisciplinary
Studies-Western College Program.
|
Sunila Kale,
UT Austin - will talk on Outsourcing
Jobs to India Sunila has won numerous
awards for her scholarly work including
a prestigious award from the University
of Chicago to pursue research in India
for over a year. She graduated from
the University of Chicago majoring
in South Asia Studies and is a scholar
relating to Political Science and
Economics.
Dr. Premlata Shankar,
Harvard University Medical School
- as a native of India, how she completed
all her education in India and got
to lead a major initiative on Bioterrorism
at Harvard University. Premlata and
her husband Dr. Manjunath Swamy are
both on the research faculty at Harvard
Medical School. They have been very
successful in securing millions of
dollars for Harvard Medical School
through NIH and other research organizations.
Dr. Christian
Lee Novetzke
- University of Pennsylvania - will
talk on how he secured grants to study
abroad (in India) and his multiple
project experiences.
Christian is a scholar in comparative
religions who has completed his education
at Columbia and Harvard University.
Raja
Krishnamoorthy -
Film Actor and Management Consultant
- how family
values and beliefs are challenged
with the emergence of the American
businesses in India. Raja has acted
in 38 India films including Bombay,
Nayakan, Dhalapati (all films made
by the celebrated director Mani Ratnam)
and has been Associate Director to
Mani Ratnam on several projects including
Roja and Nayakan.
Saturday, November
13, 2004
ROBERT
E. STRIPPEL MEMORIAL CONTINUING DIALOGUE
ON SOCIAL JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Field trip to Over-the-Rhine and Field
Trip to Urban Cincinnati and Discussions
with Community Activists at Miami
University's Center for Community
Engagement in Over-the-Rhine and the
Drop Inn Center
Tom Dutton, Professor
of Architecture and Interior Design
and Center Director, Don Whitehead,
National Director of the National
Coalition for the Homeless, and Pat
Clifford Drop Inn Center.
Sunday, November
14, 2004
National Theatre
of the Deaf
"Poetry in Motion"
"Fingers Around the World"
4:00 p.m. and 6:00
p.m. Presser Hall Theater (Oxford
campus)
"Poetry in Motion" Put yourself
in the hands of The Little Theatre
of the Deaf and take a whole new look
a poetry in their show, Poetry in
Motion The Little Theatre of the Deaf
will make pictures in your mind as
poetry is sculpted out of the air.
See, Hear, and Imagine, as poetry
is unfolded before your eyes. The
Little Theatre of the Deaf, combining
the spoken word with the visually
dramatic American Sign Language adds
a depth to poetry that will long be
remembered.
"Fingers Around
the World" From year to year,
this series will take you across the
five continents of the globe. This
season, the first finger points to
our opening destination, the mysterious
Orient, featuring the Far East'sAdaptation
of Alice in Wonderand. The Little
Theatre of the Deaf will take you
on a journey into the Wonderland of
the East as well as adding tidbits
of culture and history for the young
and young at heart. The audience will
not only meet some old friends from
Lewis Carroll's beloved classic, but
also be entertained by short folktales
from different countries in the region.
This entire 50-60 minute show is something
you don't want to miss!
Additional Information:
The Tony-Award winning company will
begin each
50-60 minute program with a sign language
warm-up. For those who know sign language,
it entertains; for those who don't
know sign language, it educates as
well as entertains by providing an
opportunity to learn some signs and
have a greater understanding and appreciation
of the program that follows. (Interpreters
will be provided to voice the content
of the show; an understanding of sign
language is not required to attend)
Co-sponsored by
Miami University Sign Language and
Deaf Awareness Club.
 |
Monday,
November 15 – Friday,
November 19, 2004
Artistic
Residency: Nego Gato
Tickets for Nego
Gato Music & Dance Ensemble
are available now at the Miami
University Box Office in Shriver
Center , M-F, 8:00-6:00 p.m.,
529-3200, www.tickets.muohio.edu.
Adult $10, Sr. Citizen $9, MU
Student/Youth $5
Nego Gato is a Brazilian group
that will do interactive performances,
demonstrations and presentations
on capoeira and candomblé
at Miami University and and
K-12 schools.
Co-sponsored by
the Center for American and
World Cultures and Performing
Arts Series and supported by
a grant from the Pennsylvania
Performing Arts on Tour
|
Workshops/Interactive:
To
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Monday, December
6, 2004
Gael Hannan
"Unheard
Voices"
8:00 p.m. Room
128 Pearson Hall
"Unheard
Voices" is a candid and compassionate
portrayal of people coping with the
life-changing impact of hearing loss.
Gael Hannon, an actor with profound
hearing loss, gives a powerful performance
in this adaptation of her popular
one-woman play. The characters in
"Unheard Voices" cover the
human spectrum of hearing loss - children,
adults, women, men, and professionals.
The stories are both funny and moving,
as ordinary words become eloquent
descriptions of how hearing loss makes
us feel and behave.
Co-sponsored by Miami University Chapter
of the National Student Speech, Language,
and Hearing Association (NSSLHA).
 |
Wednesday,
January 19, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of House
of Sand and Fog
7:00
p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Thursday,
January 20, 2005
Native American
Film Festival
Dances with Wolves
7:00-9:00 pm.
Miami University Art Museum Auditorium
Discussion following
Co-sponsored by The
Center for American and World Cultures,
Film Studies Program, Miami University
Art Museum, and Miami University Art
Museum Student Volunteers.
Saturday, January
22, 2005
Mosaic
Theatre of Detroit
The Tesserae One Act Play Festival
7:00 p.m. Hall
Auditorium (Oxford campus)
These are the plays
that will be performed:
Bang
Bang You're Dead
by William Mastrosimone
Cagebirds
by David Campton
Playwriting
101: The Rooftop Lesson
by Rich Orloff
This is the definition
of Tesserae. We call the Festival
this because:
Tesserae (Latin) are:
1. A piece of glass,
stone, or tile used to create a mosaic.
2. A small tile used as a ticket to
the theatre in ancient times.
3. A collection of one act plays performed
by Detroit's most talented troupe
of young artists.
This is a quote the
director chose to summarize the theme
of this years festival:
A man can be free even
within prison walls. Freedom is something
spiritual.
Whoever has once had it, can never
lose it.
There are some people who are never
free outside a prison.
-Unknown
Co-sponsored by
The Center for American and World
Cultures, College of Arts and Science,
Department of Music, Department of
Theatre, Miami University Parents
Fund, Office of Admissions, Office
of Residence Life and Housing, and
School of Fine Arts.
Sunday, January
23, 2005
Mosaic
Singers
2:00 p.m. Hall
Auditorium (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by The Center for American
and World Cultures, College of Arts
and Science, Department of Music,
Department of Theatre, Miami University
Parents Fund, Office of Admissions,
Office of Residence Life and Housing,
and School of Fine Arts.
 |
Tuesday,
January 25, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of Home
Movies
11:00
a.m.- 1:00 p.m. Multicultural
Center (Hamilton campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Monday, January
31, 2005
Esera
Tuaolo,
Former NFL Football Player
7:30 p.m. Room 100 Laws Hall
Co-Sponsored by the Office of Student
Affairs “Let’s Talk”
Dialogue Series, Center for American
and World Cultures, Women’s
Center, LGBT (Spectrum), Multicultural
Student Enrichment, CHAMPS/Life Skills,
and Student Counseling Service.
To
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Tuesday, February
1, 2005
David
W. Haines,
Associate Professor of Anthropology,
George Mason University, past
chair of the American Anthropological
Association's Committee on Refugees
and Immigrants
"America
and Refugees: Moralities, Programs,
and Political Realities in
Historical Perspective"
4:00 p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
This lecture is part
of the Diaspora, Immigration and Transnational
Lives Series that is co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program, Black
World Studies Program, Center for
American and World Cultures, International
Studies Program, Latin American Studies
Program, Women's Studies Program.
 |
Wednesday,
February 2, 2005
Immigration, Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing of Monsieur
Ibrahim
7:00 p.m.
Great Room,
212 MacMillan Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative. |
Thursday, February
3, 2005 - Friday,
February 4, 2005
Environmental
& Public Health in Haiti
Great Room,
212 MacMillan Hall (Oxford campus)
Keynote Speaker Dr.
Arachu Castro, Academic Director
of the Program in Infectious Disease
and Social Change in the Department
of Social Medicine, Harvard University
"Between
Poverty and a Hard Place: Haiti's
Environment and AIDS"
Please click here
for a complete symposium schedule.
Wednesday, February
2, 2005 - Monday,
February 7, 2005
Awareness
Week
Please click here
to read press release.
 |
Thursday,
February 10, 2005
Muslims
and the Media Forum
Amir
Hussain,
Professor of Religion, California
State Northridge
Rubina
Ramji,
Department of Classics and Religious
Studies, University of Ottawa
Daniel
Varisco,
Associate Professor of Anthropology,
Hofstra University
Geneive
Abdo, Center
for Muslim-Christian Understanding,
Georgetown University
Please click
here
for a complete forum schedule.
Great Room, 212 MacMillan Hall
(Oxford campus)
|
Co-sponsored by The
Center for American and World Cultures,
Citizens of the World Initiative,
Departments of Comparative Religion,
Geography, History, Spanish and Portuguese,
International Studies Program, Journalism
Program, and Muslim Students Association
with support from John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in Residence Fund.
 |
Thursday,
February 10, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of My
Son, the Fanatic
7:00
p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Saturday, February 12,
2005
Annual Afrocentric Celebration "The
Evolution of Black Music"
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.
7:30 -10:00 p.m. Shriver Multipurpose
Room (Oxford campus)
Dr. Tammy Kernodle
-Dancers: West African mostly from
Nigeria "Wo-yingi African Drum
and Dance Group"
-Musical Performances
-Soul Food and African Cuisine will
be provided
Cost: $3 per person
-Most of the proceeds will be going
to Thika Memorial Hospital in Niarobi,
Kenya.
Co-Sponsored by Delta Sigma Theta
Sorotity, African Student Union, and
The
Center for American and World Cutlures.
 |
Wednesday,
February 16, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of El
Norte
7:00
p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Thursday, February
17, 2005
Native
American Film Festival
The
Last of the Mohicans
7:00-9:00 pm.
Miami University Art Museum Auditorium
Discussion following
Co-sponsored by The
Center for American and World Cultures,
Film Studies Program, Miami University
Art Museum, and Miami University Art
Museum Student Volunteers.
Tuesday, February
22, 2005
"Deterring
Nuclear Proliferation. What is the
Role and Importance of the United
Nations?"
8:00 p.m. Room
144 Benton Hall (Oxford campus)
Sponsored by the
Miami University Model United Nations
with support from The Center for American
and World Cultures, College of Arts
and Science, International Studies
Program, and School of Interdisciplinary
Studies, Western College Program.
Thursday, February
24 and Friday, February 25, 2005
Symposium
Race, Gender, Class, Sexuality: The
Power of Intersectionality
Keynote Speakers:
Dr. Susan Jarratt,
Professor of English and Comparative
Literature, University of California,
Irvine, and
Dr. Gwendolyn
Pough, Associate
Professor of Women’s Studies
and Writing, Syracuse University
Co-sponsored by The
Center for American and World Cultures,
the Black World Studies Program, the
Women’s Studies Program.
For more information,
please visit the symposium's website.
Monday,
February 28, 2005
Pedro
Noguera, Professor, Steinhardt
School of Education, New York University
"Challenging Racial Inequality
in Our Schools"
7:30 pm. Room 144 Benton Hall (Oxford
campus)
Cancelled
Co-sponsored by The Center for American
and World Cultures, Harry Armogida
Memorial Lecture Series, and School
of Education and Allied Professions.
Tuesday,
March 1, 2005
“The
Climate for Women at Miami University”
Forum
4:00 p.m. Heritage Room, Shriver Center
(Oxford campus)
The university setting
remains very “gendered”
for students, faculty, and staff.
Last month, Harvard University President,
Lawrence Summers, added to the controversy
when he stated inherent differences
between women and men were possible
reasons why fewer women are successful
in math, science, and engineering.
Empirical evidence suggests that a
“chilly climate” is present
within many coeducational universities.
The Forum is an effort to assess what
steps have been taken to address challenges
for women at Miami and what work remains
to be done.
Please click here
to read "Forum: The Climate for
Women at Miami: Challenges and Opportunities."
Brad Bates, Director
Intercollegiate Athletics. "What
Were We Thinking? Viewing Title IX
and Women's Intercollegiate Athletics
through the Lens of Identity Theory"
Moderator: Sally Lloyd, Acting Dean
of School of Education and Allied
Professions, Professor of Educational
Leadership, former director of the
Women's Studies Program. "The
Climate for Women at Miami: Much Work
Remains"
Mary Woodworth, Senior Associate Provost,
Associate Vice President, Professor
of Microbiology. "The
Hiring and Retention of Female Faculty:
Advances and Challenges"
Bethany Weber, Student, Center for
Service Learning and Civic Leadership
Jan Yarrison-Rice, Associate Professor
of Physics. "The Climate
for Women in STEM at Miami"
Representatives from
the Women's Center, Association for
Women's Students, and the Office of
Equity and Equal Opportunity will
be on hand to answer questions following
the presentations and audience discussion.
Co-sponsored
by the Center for American and World
Cultures, University Multicultural
Council, and the Committee on Curriculum
Reform and Campus Transformation.
Wednesday,
March 2, 2005
Women of Color
Luncheon
Keynote Speaker:
Dr. Sharon Lee
11:00 a.m. -1:00
p.m. Shriver Multipurpose Room (Oxford
campus)
The annual Women of
Color Celebration and Luncheon was
launched in 1992 as an event designed
to bring people together to celebrate
the cultural diversity and accomplishments
of women of color in the University
and in the larger community. Typically
held around March 1 as a bridge between
Black History Month (February) and
Women's Herstory Month (March), this
event features a keynote speaker,
student testimonials, an international
buffet, award cermony and scholarship
presentation. Tickets are required
for this event.
Sponsored by the Women’s
Center with support from the Center
for American and World Cultures.
Wednesday,
March 2,
2005
Marian
Wright Edelman
"Where Is America Going?: A Call
for Justice for Children and the Poor"
4:30 p.m. Hall Auditorium (Oxford
campus)
There is no admission charge; however,
tickets, which are required for admissions,
are available at the Shriver Center
Box Office four working days before
the event.
Co-sponsored The Center
for American and World Cultures, Harry
Armogida Memorial Lecture Series,
and School of Education and Allied
Professions.
 |
Wednesday,
March 2, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of El
Espíritu de mi mamá
7:00
p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Thursday, March
3, 2005
Anne
Finger, Disabilities Author and
Advocate
"Hiding
in Plain Sight: Disability in the
Curriculum"
7:00 p.m. Great
Room, MacMillan Hall 212 (Oxford campus)
A reception will
precede the talk beginning at 6:30
p.m.
Co-sponsored by the Center for American
and World Cultures, Department
of Communication, Department of Educational
Psychology, Department of
English, Department of Sociology/Gerontology,
and Department of Speech Pathology
and Audiology.
Monday, March 7,
2005
Robert
Reid-Pharr,
Professor of English, Graduate Center
of the City
University of New York
"Sweet
Black Bad Ass or What is this Queer
in Queer Black Studies?"
4:00 p.m. Bachelor
Reading Room, Bachelor Hall (Oxford
campus)
Co-sponsored
by the Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World Cultures,
Department of English, Miami University
Graduate School, Office of GLBT Services,
School of Interdisciplinary Studies-
Western College Program, Women's Center.
Tuesday, March
8, 2005
Claudia
Stevens, “A Table Before
Me”
8:00 p.m. Studio 88, School of Fine
Arts (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by the Center for American
and World Cultures, Jewish Studies
Program, Women Studies Program and
the Departments of History, GREAL,
and Music.
 |
Wednesday,
March 9, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of Journey
of Hope
7:00
p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Tuesday, March
22, 2005
Audrey
Smedley,
Professor Emerita, Virginia Commonwealth
University and Binghamton University
"Was There ‘Race’
Before Slavery: An Ethnographic Perspective
On Colonial North America"
4:00 p.m. Hall Auditorium (Oxford
campus)
Co-sponsored by the
Black History Celebration Committee
and The Center for American and World
Cultures.
 |
Tuesday,
March 22, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of Frida
11:00
a.m.- 1:00 p.m. Multicultural
Center (Hamilton campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Wednesday,
March 23, 2005
Gary
Wheeler
"Sacred Clowns and Contemporary
American Indian Painting"
4:30 p.m. Miami
University Art Museum (Oxford campus)
Please note that
this event was originally scheduled
at 4:00 p.m.
Sponsored by the Center
for American and World Cultures.
 |
Wednesday,
March 23,
2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of Kandahar
7:00
p.m. Miami University Art Museum
(Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Wednesday,
March 23, 2005
Professor Arturo
Arias,
Director and Professor of Latin American
Studies, University of Redlands
"Race and
Ethnicity in Central America and the
US"
7:15 - 8:45 p.m.
Wilks Conference Center (Hamilton
campus)
Followed by Reception.
Wednesday, March
30, 2005
Hansen Lecture
Sandy
Osawa,
American Indian Film Producer and
Director
7:00 p.m. Great
Room, 212 MacMillan Hall (Oxford campus)
Osawa will be showing
a cut of her latest film for this
Hansen lecture; it's about Princess
Angeline (daughter of Chief Seattle).
Before the film she will address the
audience and following this she will
take questions.
"Lighting
the Seventh Fire" (Osawa) 12:00
p.m.
Pepper's Pow wow" (Osawa) 1:00
p.m.
"On and off the Rez with Charlie
Hill" (Osawa) 2:15 p.m.
“Lady Warriors" (John Goheen)
3:30 p.m.
Co-sponsored by
the Center for American and World
Cultures, Film Studies Program, Miami
University Art Museum, Miami University
Art Museum Student Volunteers, and
the Hansen Lecture Series.
 |
Wednesday,
March 30, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of Picture
Bride
7:00
p.m. Room 114 MacMillan Hall
(Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Thursday, March
31, 2005
Dr.
Jonathan Hess,
Professor of German and Director of
the Jewish Center at University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"Literature
and the Imagination of Jewish Ethnicity:
The Case of Ludwig Jacobowski's Werther
the Jew"
Part of the Jewish Studies Lectures
2004-2005
5:00 p.m. Room 1 Alumni Hall
(Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by
the Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of German, Russian,
and East Asian Languages, Department
of History, Jewish Studies Program,
and Miami Hillel Foundation.
To
top
 |
Friday,
April 1 –Monday, May 9,
2005
Globalization
Gone Wild, Inspired by Travels
to Nicaragua
Nicaragua
Photo Exhibition
MacMillan Hall Lobby (Oxford
campus) & Kofenya (Uptown
Oxford)
Co-sponsored
by ASG, Oxford Citizens for
Peace and Justice, The Center
for American & World Cultures,
College of Arts & Science,
Western College Program, Community
Living Council, Unitarian Universalists,
International Studies, Department
of Spanish and Portuguese, Department
of Sociology and Gerontology,
Institute of Environmental Sciences,
and Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
 |
Monday,
April 4, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of Buena
Vista Social Club
1:00
p.m. Room 2 Thesken Hall (Middletown
campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
 |
Monday,
April 4, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Forum
Stuart
Rockefeller,
Department of Anthropology,
Haverford College
“Migrations
and Movements Across Latin America:
Finding the Agency in Global
Flows”
Tania
Forte,
Department of Anthropology,
MacCalester College
“Selves,
Politics and Theory Across Borders:
Why Study Shopping in Israel/Palestine?”
4:00 p.m.
Room 215 Shidler Hall (Oxford
campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Monday,
April 4, 2005
Dr.
Roberto Segre
"Architecture of Hispanic America
in the Last Decade of the XXth Century"
5:00 p.m. Room
115 Shideler Hall (Oxford
campus)
Co-sponsored by
the Department of Architecture and
Interior Design, The Center for American
and World Cultures, and the Latin
American Studies program
Tuesday,
April 5,
2005
Dr.
Roberto Segre
"Historical Evolution of Housing
in Cuba"
Noon. Room 201 Alumni Hall
(Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by the
Department of Architecture and Interior
Design, The Center for American and
World Cultures, and the Latin American
Studies program
 |
Tuesday,
April 5, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Roundtable and Reception
5:00
p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Please click here
to read the biographies of the
roundtable participants.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Wednesday, April
6, 2005
Artist
Tammy Garcia
"On
Rains for the Harvest"
7:00 p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored
by The Center for American and World
Cultures and the Women’s Center.
 |
Wednesday,
April 6, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of Barbecue
Muslims
and Death
Threat
7:00
p.m. Miami University Art Musem
(Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
|
Thursday, April
7, 2005
Olu
Oguibe
"The Artist
in an Ever-Changing Art World"
7:30 p.m. Room 100 Art Building (Oxford
campus)
Sponsored by the Center for American
and World Cultures and the Department
of Art.
Saturday, April
9, 2005
The African
Gala
The Presence
and Essence of Africa
6 :00 -10:00 p.m.
Lower Alexander on Western Campus
(Oxford campus)
FREE and open to
everyone
*The party will
continue on until 2am for those who
want to dance. There
will be a live DJ.
There will be
food, presentations, dances, and poetry
from the various African countries
represented on this campus. There
will also be a fashion show. Additionally,
the African Student Unions from both
Earlham University and Ohio State
University will be performing as well.
This event is open to everyone and
so we attract students, faculty and
members of the Oxford community and
beyond. The purpose is to share with
others our culture through food, music
and presentations. There will be presenters
from other student organizations on
campus who will be looking for additional
support in their endeavors to be active
members of the global community. These
two groups are: African School Advancement
Program that was organized to raise
funds and supplies for those African
schools that are without, and SaveDarfur
which seeks to raise both funds and
awareness on the general campus about
the conflict in the Sudan. We hope
that is will be both an enjoyable
and educational experience for all
those who attend.
Monday, April 11,
2005
Tom Kopp
"Bluegrass: Misunderstood but
Magnificent"
4:00 p.m. Great
Room, 212 MacMillan Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for information about grassroots learning
for Summer 2005.
This lecture is being
held in conjunction with the Harpin'
n' Pickin' 2005 Appalachian
Folk Festival.
Here are some useful
links:
International
Bluegrass Music Association
Discover Bluegrass
Appalshop
Tuesday, April
12, 2005
The Journey
Less Traveled
7:30 p.m. Begin
in front of King Library (Oxford campus)
The Journey Less Traveled
is an annual event sponsored by the
Office of Residence Life and New Student
Programs. This program is a reflective
walk chronicling and celebrating the
heritage of the African American Community.
With support form
The Center for American and World
Cultures.
Contact Person: Kate Bowers 513-529-6529
Wednesday,
April 13, 2005
Laurel
Leff
"News of
the Holocaust: Why the Press Didn't
Ask?"
5:00 p.m. Room
144 Benton Hall (Oxford campus)
Part of the Holocaust Awareness Observance
Sponsored by the Center
for American and World Cultures and
the Center for Holocaust and Humanity
Education at Hebrew Union College
with support from the College of Arts
and Science, Department of Anthropology,
Department of Communication, Department
of Sociology & Gerontology, Grayson
Kirk Distinguished Lecture Series
Fund of the International Studies
Program, Hillel, Jewish Studies Program,
Lights On Campus, and Office of Residence
Life and New Student Programs .
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Wednesday,
April 13, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of The
New Americans
7:00
p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
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Friday, April
15 and Saturday, April 16, 2005
Freedom to Tell
Language and Literature in African
Women's Writing
English Department Graduate Studies
Institute Conference
Friday, 9:00 a.m.-7:00
p.m. Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-5:45 p.m.
Marcum Conference Center (Oxford campus)
Sokhna Benga, Darkar,
Senegal
Desiree Lewis, University of Cape
Town, South Africa
Obioma Nnaemeka, Indiana University,
Indianapolis
Stanlie James, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Denise Troutman, Michigan State University,
East Lansing
For more information
contact: Dr.
Cheryl Johnson or Dr.
Gwendolyn Etter-Lewis.
Sunday, April
17, 2005
Harpin'
n' Pickin' 2005
Appalachian Folk
Festival
Noon-9:00 p.m. Oxford Uptown Park
For more information,
please visit Harpin'
n' Pickin'.
Co-sponsored by the
American Studies Program, The Center
for American and World Cultures, Division
of Student Affairs, Oxford Community
Arts Center, Oxford Community Foundation,
School of Fine Arts, Spring Street
Auto, and Wildberry
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Monday,
April 18, 2005
Globalization
Gone Wild, Inspired by Travels
to Nicaragua
Free Trade & Power in Central
America
6:00 p.m.Room 001 Upham Hall
(Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored by ASG, Oxford
Citizens for Peace and Justice,
The Center for American &
World Cultures, College of Arts
& Science, Western College
Program, Community Living Council,
Unitarian Universalists, International
Studies, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, Department of
Sociology and Gerontology, Institute
of Environmental Sciences, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
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Tuesday,
April 19, 2005
Globalization
Gone Wild, Inspired by Travels
to Nicaragua
Dying
of Nemagon Workers: effects
of pesticides on people &
environment
6:00 p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored
by ASG, Oxford Citizens for
Peace and Justice, The Center
for American & World Cultures,
College of Arts & Science,
Western College Program, Community
Living Council, Unitarian Universalists,
International Studies, Department
of Spanish and Portuguese, Department
of Sociology and Gerontology,
Institute of Environmental Sciences,
and Citizens of the World Initiative.
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Wednesday,
April 20, 2005
Face
of Fair Trade: Women, Co-ops,
and Global Economy, presented
by Mexico Solidarity Network
6:00 p.m. Great Room, 212 MacMillan
Hall (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored
by ASG, Oxford Citizens for
Peace and Justice, The Center
for American & World Cultures,
College of Arts & Science,
Western College Program, Community
Living Council, Unitarian Universalists,
International Studies, Department
of Spanish and Portuguese, Department
of Sociology and Gerontology,
Institute of Environmental Sciences,
and Citizens of the World Initiative.
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Wednesday,
April 20, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of Salut
Cousin!
7:00
p.m. Miami University Art Museum
(Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative.
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Thursday,
April 21, 2005
Globalization
Gone Wild, Inspired by Travels
to Nicaragua
Water
is Life: The Human Cost of Privatization
6:00 p.m. Room 109 Harrison
Hall (Oxford campus)
Co-sponsored
by ASG, Oxford Citizens for
Peace and Justice, The Center
for American & World Cultures,
College of Arts & Science,
Western College Program, Community
Living Council, Unitarian Universalists,
International Studies, Department
of Spanish and Portuguese, Department
of Sociology and Gerontology,
Institute of Environmental Sciences,
and Citizens of the World Initiative.
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Thursday, April
21, 2005
Native
American Film Festival
The
Business of Fancy Dancing
7:00-9:00 pm. Miami
University Art Museum Auditorium
Discussion following
Co-sponsored by The Center for American
and World Cultures, Film Studies Program,
Miami University Art Museum, and Miami
University Art Museum Student Volunteers.
Thursday,
April 21, 2005
Pradyumna
P. (Paul) Karan, University of Kentucky
"Japan in the 21st Century"
7:00 p.m. Room 115 Shideler Hall (Oxford
campus)
Co-sponsored by the East Asian Languages
minor and Department
of Geography, with support from the
Center for American and World
Cultures
Friday,
April 22, 2005
Pradyumna
P. (Paul) Karan, University of Kentucky
Urban Growth
and Transformation of Lhasa 1950-2004
3:00 p.m. Room 229 Shideler Hall (Oxford
campus)
This is part of an
ongoing research on social, economic
and environmental changes in Tibet
since the Chinese control of the area.
Co-sponsored by the
East Asian Languages minor and Department
of Geography, with support from the
Center for American and World
Cultures
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Wednesday,
April 27, 2005
Immigration,
Diaspora, and Transnational
Lives Film Series
Showing
of A
Door in the Sky
7:00
p.m. Miami University Art Museum
(Oxford campus)
Please click here
for complete program information.
Co-sponsored
by the American Studies Program,
Black World Studies Program,
Center for American and World
Cultures, Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, International
Studies Program, Latin American
Studies Program, Women’s
Studies Program, with support
from the John W. Altman Humanities
Scholar-in-Residence Fund, and
Citizens of the World Initiative
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