Loading view. Events Search and Views Navigation Search Enter Keyword. Search for Events by Keyword. Find Events Event Views Navigation List List Today 04/02/2025 Wed, 4/2 - 04/03/2025 Thu, 4/3 Select date. Wed, 4/2 · 9:00 am—6:00 pm Various Princeton, NJ, United States Film Festival – Euzhan Palcy, A Pioneer of Transnational Cinema Princeton Film Festival Society Wed, 4/2 · 12:00 pm—1:15 pm School of Architecture Mellon Forum // Fishers, Foragers, and Fine Diners: Narrating Food Sovereignty and its Discontents in South Africa’s Western Cape Ben Jamieson Stanley, University of Delaware; Blessings Masuku, Princeton-Mellon Fellow Princeton Mellon Initiative in Architecture, Urbanism & the Humanities Wed, 4/2 · 4:30 pm—6:00 pm 202 Jones Hall I Dream, Therefore, I Write: A Reflection on the Dreaming Mind and the Process of Literary Creation in Early Modern China Yiren Zheng, Dartmouth College Program in East Asian Studies Wed, 4/2 · 4:30 pm—6:00 pm 010 East Pyne Jews, Enslavement, and Rape: Social Realities and Literary Representations in the Early Modern Era Tamar Herzig, Tel Aviv University Program in Judaic Studies; Center for Collaborative History Wed, 4/2 · 5:00 pm—7:30 pm Arthur Lewis Auditorium, Robertson Hall NJ “The Value of an Unflinching Gaze: Portraiture, Enslavement, and the Process of Locating Black Women in the 16th Century.” Jennifer L. Morgan, New York University Program in Gender and Sexuality Studies Wed, 4/2 · 6:00 pm—7:00 pm Labyrinth Books 122 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ, United States How To Lose A Country: Seven Steps from Democracy To Dictatorship Ece Temelkuran, journalist; Razia Iqbal, SPIA Labyrinth Books; Program in Law and Normative Thinking; Program for the History of Political Thought Wed, 4/2 · 7:00 pm—8:30 pm Drapkin Studio at Lewis Arts complex Princeton, NJ, United States When Pages Breathe: Screening—When My Sleeping Dragon Woke Lewis Center for the Arts’ Program in Theater; Princeton University Library Thu, 4/3 · 4:30 pm—6:00 pm 010 East Pyne Euripides’ Proliferative Aesthetic Naomi A. Weiss, Harvard University Department of Classics Thu, 4/3 · 4:30 pm—6:00 pm 202 Jones Hall Literature for the Masses: Japanese Period Fiction, 1913-1941 James Reichert, Stanford University Program in East Asian Studies; Department of East Asian Studies Thu, 4/3 · 4:30 pm—6:00 pm Book Talk: The Organic Line: On Weak Links and Plagiotropic Relations Irene V. Small, Art & Archaeology; Luis Pérez Oramas, independent curator, essayist and poet Program in Latin American Studies Previous Events Today Next Events Subscribe to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live Export .ics file Export Outlook .ics file