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Slideshow

Tags: Lecture

This installment of the Department of History’s undergraduate lecture series features Timothy Yang speaking on "What's the Difference between a Licit and Illicit Drug?." Yang joined the history faculty this year and teaches courses on the history of East Asia, Japan, science and medicine, capitalism and memory. He is writing a book that explores the connections between medicine, capitalism and empire through a micro-history of a Japanese…
Charter lecture, featuring Roger Hunter, Program Manager, NASA Small Spacecraft Technology Program. On the day of his graduation from UGA with a degree in mathematics in 1978, Hunter was commissioned as an officer in the Air Force, where he served for 22 years. He joined NASA in 2008 and served as project manager for NASA's Kepler Mission, the first mission capable of finding potentially habitable planets in the Milky Way Galaxy. He…
The department of religion presents a lecture by Keon McGuire, assistant professor at Arizona State University, on Tuesday March 26 at 7 p.m. in Peabody Hall, room 115. The lecture, “Religious Afterlife: Race, Gender, and Religion among Black Undergraduates,” is part of the Religion and the Common Good seminar series and open to the public.   McGuire will discuss how narratives concerning institutional and organized religion’s declining…
Industry 4.0 in Germany as Seen from a Cultural and Media Studies Perspective. Lecture by Max Kade Distinguished Visiting Professor Dr. Andreas Böhn discusses the concept of Industry 4.0 in Germany. Known as the "New Industrial Revolution," Industry 4.0 is a mechanization of many tasks that has the potential to elevate workers to more highly technical and advanced positions as the economy shifts. A specialist in modern German…
In recognition of the 2019 national Women’s History Month theme “Visionary Women: Champions of Peace and Nonviolence,” the Institute for Women’s Studies at the University of Georgia will be hosting numerous programs in March. This year’s Women’s History Month Keynote Address will be presented by Layli Maparyan, Executive Director of the Wellesley Centers for Women and Professor of Africana Studies at Wellesley College. Dr. Maparyan is best known…
The African poet, essayist, playwright and nonfiction writer Niyi Osundare will deliver the 2019 African Studies Spring Lecture on Tuesday, March 5, 2019 at 3 p.m. in the auditorium of the Special Collections Library Osundare will be visiting the University of Georgia from Monday, March 4 through Wednesday, March 6, 2019. A winner of numerous awards including the Commonwealth Poetry Prize, two Cadbury Prizes, the…
Under the auspices of the Franklin College International Faculty Exchange Program, the Linguistics Department will host Dr. Lars Meyer from the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, Germany. The visit includes a public lecture on February 20th at 4pm entitled "The Neural Oscillations of Language Processing: Examples from German." Dr. Meyer has a research collaboration at UGA with John Hale; Hale will…
Stephanie McCurry is R. Gordon Hoxie Professor of American History in Honor of Dwight D. Eisenhower at Columbia University. She specializes in the nineteenth century United States, the American South, the American Civil War and the history of women and gender. Her current interests include the history of the United States in the immediate post-Civil War moment, the history of postwar societies and processes of reconstruction in the 19th and 20th…
The department of anthropology presents a lecture, “Climate, Catastrophe, Collapse?: Using Climatic and Cultural History to Understand El Nino’s Role in Ancient Peru," with Dan Sandweiss from the University of Maine. Sandweiss will discuss the stresses and opportunities of El Niño for ancient societies on the Peruvian coast and the relationship between El Niño frequency and cultural change. The climatic perturbation known as El Niño offers…
Freda Scott Giles, associate professor emerita of theatre and film studies and African-American studies, will deliver the 17th annual Founders Day Lecture on Monday, January 28, 1:30-3:30 pm at the UGA Chapel. The Founders Day Lecture is hosted by the UGA Alumni Association in partnership with the Office of the President, Provost’s Office and UGA Emeriti Scholars. The lecture has become a Founders Day tradition, drawing alumni, students, faculty…
LunchTime Time Machine: Was There a Shark Week Before T.V.? This installment of the Department of History’s undergraduate lecture series features Steve Soper and Jake Short. Soper teaches courses on the history of modern Europe, Italy, microhistory and the second half of western civilization. He is working on a new book about political prisoners in southern Italy on the eve of Italian unification. Short also teaches courses on the…
"Breaking In and Having It All: Black Women and the Hollywood Jim Crow," Maryann Erigha, African American Studies and Sociology. Part of the Women's Studies Friday Speaker Series. Eigha is the author of "The Hollywood Jim Crow." A description of the book is below: The story of racial hierarchy in the American film industry  The #OscarsSoWhite campaign, and the content of the leaked Sony emails which revealed, among many other things, that a…
“From University Press to Public Exhibition: Finding Multiple Audiences for Historical Research," Tamar Carrol, associate pProfessor and acting department chair, Department of History, Rochester Institute of Technology. Carroll’s research bridges the fields of U.S. political and women’s and gender history, with a focus on the post-1945 period. Her book,Mobilizing New York: AIDS, Antipoverty, and Feminist Activism, examines the history and…
In her talk entitled “Seeing Appalachia,” writer and public historian Elizabeth Catte will take a critical look at representations of the region in contemporary writing, photography and reporting, underscoring how the visual archive of Appalachia often renders a diverse and complicated place into a series of problems that threaten the nation's progress. Catte is author of What You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia, and is currently co-…
Rebecca Rutstein, an artist whose work spans painting, sculpture, installation, and public art and explores abstraction inspired by science, data and maps, will visit the University of Georgia as the third Delta Visiting Chair for Global Understanding. Rutstein will visit UGA twice during the upcoming academic year: in November as part of the national conference of the Alliance for the Arts in Research Universities (a2ru), and again in…
“Oh Say Can You See: American Art, Propaganda and the First World War,” David Lubin, Charlotte C. Weber Professor of Art at Wake Forest University and Terra Foundation for American Art Visiting Professor at Oxford University. Presented in conjunction with “For Home and Country: World War I Posters from the Collection of Murray and Ann Blum.” Lubin considers how patriotism, religion, gender, banking and pacifism were all called into play visually…
The Gregory Distinguished Lecture series presents Andrea Wulf, New York Times bestselling author of The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World. Wulf’s writing reveals the  life of the visionary German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859) and how he created the way we understand nature today.
Sushil Prasad, professor of computer science at Georgia State University, director of the Distributed and Mobile Systems Lab and NSF program director, will present a lecture entitled, “Innovations in NSF Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Research Workforce Development and Education Programs.” He has carried out theoretical as well as experimental research in parallel and distributed computing, resulting in more than 140 refereed…
Eidson Distinguished Professor in American Literature LeAnne Howe presents scholar and author Chadwick Allen for her annual American Indian Returnings (AIR) Talk. This year's AIR Talk, "Across and Through These Lands: Earthworks, Indigenous Identity, and Return," will take place on the autumnal equinox in the M. Smith Griffith Auditorium of the Georgia Museum. This event is free and open to the public. Allen is the Russell F. Stark University…
Parker Curator of Russian Art Asen Kirin will give a lecture in conjunction with the exhibition One Heart, One Way: The Journey of a Princely Art Collection.
Artist Daisy Craddock (MFA, UGA) will give a lecture on her work, which is on view in the M. Smith Griffith Grand Hall.
Join Sage Kincaid, assistant curator of education, for an in-depth discussion of Theresa Pollak’s “Art Studio,” a work of art from Central to Their Lives: Southern Women Artists in the Johnson Collection.
Currently the Morris Eminent Scholar in Art at Augusta University, artist Cheryl Goldsleger has had work in exhibitions at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C, the American Academy in New York, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, the Brooklyn Museum, the National Museum of Women in the Arts and many other institutions. She has two works currently on display at the Georgia Museum of Art.
Energy and Matter at the Origin of Life:  Nick Lane, a faculty member at the University College London, will present the 2018 Ljungdahl Lecture April 27 at 3:30 p.m. in Room C127 of the Davison Life Sciences Building. Open free to the public, Lane will discuss “Energy and Matter at the Origin of Life.” Renowned as an excellent communicator, Lane is an evolutionary biochemist and writer in the genetics, evolution and environment…
Awards season celebrates many of our best and the accolades continue for Franklin College faculty and students. Among the many honors, inductions and elections: Janet Westpheling, professor of genetics in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, is president-electof the Society for Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology. SIMB is a nonprofit, international association dedicated to the advancement of microbiological sciences,…

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