10 events found.
Apartheid isn’t the Question, Settler Colonialism is: Black South African Thought and the Critique of the International Left’s Apartheid Paradigm
Panashe Chigumadzi, Brandeis University.
Program in African Studies; Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies

Princeton Palestinian Studies Colloquium: Toward Nakba as a Legal Concept
Rabea Eghbariah, Harvard University
Department of Near Eastern Studies

Ghosts and Guests in the Machine: Animism and Technology
Gertrud Koch, Freie Universität Berlin, emerita
Humanities Council's Committee for Film Studies

Spider-Mother: The Fiction and Politics of Rokeya Sakhawat Hossein
Smaran Dayal, Stevens Institute of Technology; Ben Baer, Comparative Literature
M.S. Chadha Center for Global India
PISC no. 3: “A View from the Province: An 18th-century Ottoman’s Reckoning with Science and Religion”
Xiwen Yang, UC Davis
Department of Near Eastern Studies; Department of Religion; Near Eastern Studies Program

Faculty Panel – Helène Aylon: Undercurrent
Rachel Federman, guest curator; Katherine Bussard, Princeton University Art Museum; Esther Schor, Humanities Council and English; and Stacy Wolf, Lewis Center for the Arts
Princeton University Art Museum
Towards AI Models That Can Visually Understand the World’s Cultures
Graham Neubig, Carnegie Mellon University
Center for Digital Humanities

Free Screening of “The Beautiful Spark” + Conversation
Katie Horan, disability scholar
Princeton Film Festival Society; Pace Center for Civic Engagement
Devotional Creatures: Amphibians, Bugs, and Creepy Crawlies in Chinese Religions
Daniel Burton-Rose, Wenzhou-Kean University; Stuart Young, Bucknell University
East Asian Studies Program

Wellbeing and Indigenous Literature in the 21st Century
Oscar Hokeah (Cherokee Nation, Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma), fiction writer; Santee Frazier (Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma), St. Lawrence University
Effron Center for the Study of America
