Calendar of Events

A71 Louis A. Simpson Building and Zoom

A & A Graduate Symposium Event #4 No End in Sight: The Museum in the Age of COVID

Damon Reaves

Department of Art & Archaeology; Humanities Council; Princeton University Art Museum; Center for Collaborative History; Center for Digital Humanities; Department of African American Studies; Department of German; The Graduate School; GradFUTURES; Department of Anthropology
210 Dickinson Hall and Zoom

Book Talk | “Charged: A History of Batteries and Lessons for a Clean Energy Future”

James Morton Turner

Center for Collaborative History
Wallace Hall, Stokes Library

UCHV Film Forum: Céline Tricart’s The Key (2019)

University Center for Human Values
10 Guyot Hall and Zoom Princeton, NJ, United States

HMEI Faculty Seminar: “‘The Science Is Clear’: Why the Climate Crisis Needs New Narratives”

Allison Carruth

High Meadows Environmental Institute
East Pyne 010 and Zoom Princeton, NJ, United States

“Epic Vulnerability: Anchises in the Aeneid”

James Uden

Department of Classics
219 Aaron Burr Hall Princeton, NJ, United States

Decolonizing Ethnography: Immigrant Rights and Social Science Research

Carolina Alonso Bejarano, Assistant Professor of Law, University of Warwick; Lucia López Juárez, Activist; Mirian A. Mijangos García, activist

Program in Latin American Studies; Department of Anthropology
001 Robertson Hall and Zoom

“Picturing Mathematicians: A History of Geometrical Diagrams and Philosophy of Space”

Vincenzo De Risi

Department of Philosophy; Humanities Council
Livestream NJ, United States

Paper Graveyards: Essays

Eduardo Cadava, English; Spyros Papapetros, Architecture

Program in Media and Modernity; Labyrinth Books
CoLab Gallery, Lewis Arts Complex

Radical Composition/Radical Collaboration: A Conversation with Cameron Rowland and Saidiya Hartman

Cameron Rowland, artist; Saidiya Hartman, Columbia University; Tina Campt, Art & Archaeology, Lewis Center for the Arts

Lewis Center for the Arts' Program in Visual Arts
219 Aaron Burr Hall Princeton, NJ, United States

Inscribing the Criminal Skin: Underworld Aesthetics and the Flesh of Post-Liberal Futures in Honduras

Jon Carter, Appalachian State University

Program in Latin American Studies
Humanities Council Logo
Italian Studies Logo
American Studies Logo
Humanistic Studies Logo
Ancient World Logo
Canadian Studies Logo
ESC Logo
Journalism Logo
Linguistics Logo
Medieval Studies Logo
Renaissance Logo
Film Studies Logo