Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations
A complete backup of https://websitemagazine.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://anylistapp.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://emballagesmagazine.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://hofburg-innsbruck.at
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://purethemes.net
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://experian.es
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://astig.ph
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://fcmitos.ru
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://brennerchildrens.org
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://askopinion.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://worldworcester.org
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations
A complete backup of rehabilitasyon.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of imageinnovators.co
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of hiphopshuffle.net
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of auto-entrepreneur.fr
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of ofertasynegocios.co
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of dbphilpott.com.au
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of teksbok.blogspot.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
The James Gallery
FOOD - THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Saara Nafici Nafici discussed Value Added Farms in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Founded in 2001, it is a two-site urban farm project devoted to youth empowerment, community engagement, and movement-building on one hand, and the provision of healthy, affordable food to the neighborhood onthe other.
PIONEERS OF AFRICANA PHILOSOPHY Pioneers of Africana Philosophy. Conference. Fri, Mar 19, 2021 – Sat, Mar 20, 2021, 10:00 AM – 07:00 PM. This event will take place online via Zoom. Please register below. TRANSLATING THE FUTURE FINALE: POSTMONOLINGUAL NEW YORK Join us for the finale of Translating the Future, a 20-week series of conversations between translators, with “Postmonolingual New York,” featuring Ava Chin, Jasmine Claude-Narcisse, Damion Searls, and Lisandro Pérez.. To walk down almost any New York City street is to move through a shifting constellation of languages. Nearly half of all New Yorkers speak a language other than English atCLIMATE ACTION LAB
About Climate Action Lab. Climate Action Lab (CAL) brings together activists, researchers, and artists to reimagine climate politics through the lens of the city as both the frontline impact-zone and the potential source of grassroots alternatives informed by the principlesof climate justice.
MARIPOSA MARÍA TERESA FERNÁNDEZ Photo by: Alyssa Peek. Mariposa María Teresa Fernández is an award-winning Afro Puerto Rican poet, spoken word performance artist, visual artist, educator, activist, scholar and Bronx native.. Mariposa’s poetry has been published in numerous anthologies including African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song, a Library of America Anthology, The Norton Anthology of Latino WELFARE REFORM SYLLABUSJEFFREY CULANG
Jeffrey Culang is a doctoral student in History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation focuses on secularism and religion in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Jeffrey just completed archival research in Cairo through the American Research Center in Egypt and is currently a fellow at the Center for Jewish History inNew York.
PATRYK TOMASZEWSKI
Patryk Tomaszewski. Patryk P. Tomaszewski is a PhD candidate in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation examines Socialist Realist art in the former Soviet satellite states, specifically in Poland, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia under the Stalinist regime. By focusing on state-sponsored exhibitions of painting and sculptureTERRI NILLIASCA
Terri Nilliasca has been organizing around issues of class, race, and gender since she was in college. After graduating, she organized welfare recipients and then embarked on a 10-year career as a labor organizer of low-wage workers in the South for the union, UNITE. THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESPROGRAMMINGPUBLIC ENGAGEMENTLOST AND FOUNDJAMES GALLERYOBJECT LIBRARYABOUT The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
FOOD - THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Saara Nafici Nafici discussed Value Added Farms in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Founded in 2001, it is a two-site urban farm project devoted to youth empowerment, community engagement, and movement-building on one hand, and the provision of healthy, affordable food to the neighborhood onthe other.
PIONEERS OF AFRICANA PHILOSOPHY Pioneers of Africana Philosophy. Conference. Fri, Mar 19, 2021 – Sat, Mar 20, 2021, 10:00 AM – 07:00 PM. This event will take place online via Zoom. Please register below. TRANSLATING THE FUTURE FINALE: POSTMONOLINGUAL NEW YORK Join us for the finale of Translating the Future, a 20-week series of conversations between translators, with “Postmonolingual New York,” featuring Ava Chin, Jasmine Claude-Narcisse, Damion Searls, and Lisandro Pérez.. To walk down almost any New York City street is to move through a shifting constellation of languages. Nearly half of all New Yorkers speak a language other than English atCLIMATE ACTION LAB
About Climate Action Lab. Climate Action Lab (CAL) brings together activists, researchers, and artists to reimagine climate politics through the lens of the city as both the frontline impact-zone and the potential source of grassroots alternatives informed by the principlesof climate justice.
MARIPOSA MARÍA TERESA FERNÁNDEZ Photo by: Alyssa Peek. Mariposa María Teresa Fernández is an award-winning Afro Puerto Rican poet, spoken word performance artist, visual artist, educator, activist, scholar and Bronx native.. Mariposa’s poetry has been published in numerous anthologies including African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song, a Library of America Anthology, The Norton Anthology of Latino WELFARE REFORM SYLLABUSJEFFREY CULANG
Jeffrey Culang is a doctoral student in History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation focuses on secularism and religion in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Jeffrey just completed archival research in Cairo through the American Research Center in Egypt and is currently a fellow at the Center for Jewish History inNew York.
PATRYK TOMASZEWSKI
Patryk Tomaszewski. Patryk P. Tomaszewski is a PhD candidate in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation examines Socialist Realist art in the former Soviet satellite states, specifically in Poland, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia under the Stalinist regime. By focusing on state-sponsored exhibitions of painting and sculptureTERRI NILLIASCA
Terri Nilliasca has been organizing around issues of class, race, and gender since she was in college. After graduating, she organized welfare recipients and then embarked on a 10-year career as a labor organizer of low-wage workers in the South for the union, UNITE. THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
FOOD - THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Saara Nafici Nafici discussed Value Added Farms in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Founded in 2001, it is a two-site urban farm project devoted to youth empowerment, community engagement, and movement-building on one hand, and the provision of healthy, affordable food to the neighborhood onthe other.
THE END OF CHEAP NATURE? Modern history has seen capitalism commodify a series of essential things: nature, money, work, care, food, energy, and lives. In making these essentials increasingly cheap, commerce has transformed and increasingly devastated the planet and the animals, plants, and people who depend on it. Today we face myriad interlocking crises, fromclimate
TERRI NILLIASCA
Terri Nilliasca has been organizing around issues of class, race, and gender since she was in college. After graduating, she organized welfare recipients and then embarked on a 10-year career as a labor organizer of low-wage workers in the South for the union, UNITE. ROBIN WAGNER-PACIFICI Robin Wagner-Pacifici is the University in Exile Professor of Sociology at the New School for Social Research. She is the author of The Art of Surrender: Decomposing Sovereignty at Conflict's End; Theorizing the Standoff: Contingency in Action; Discourse and Destruction: The City of Philadelphia vs MOVE; and The Moro Morality Play: Terrorism as Social Drama.HOWARD MCGARY
Howard McGary is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick. He received his PhD from the University of Minnesota, and his main research interests are African American philosophy, social ECOLOGY, ANCESTRAL HEALING, AND VISUAL ART: A CONVERSATION Join multimedia artist Alexandria Eregbu and Black feminist ecocritic Chelsea Mikael Frazier in a conversation about the intersections of ancestral healing, visual art, and the environment. As all these themes recur in both their work, this discussion will explore the motivations behind their individual creative and intellectual processes while investigating their collective understanding of THE LATVIAN CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART The Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art (LCCA) is the largest institution for contemporary art in Latvia, curating and producing contemporary art events on a national and international scale. Since 1993, it has researched and curated contemporary art processes both in Latvia and abroad, aiming to provoke critical reflection on issuesrelevant
PETER TAUBMAN
Peter Taubman is professor of education in the School of Education at Brooklyn College. He is a co-founder of the Bushwick School for Social Justice, in Brooklyn, New York. His book, Teaching by Numbers: Deconstructing the Discourse of Standards and Accountability in Education, published by Routledge Press, received the 2010 Outstanding Book Award from AERA’s Division B, the 2010 CriticsAXELLE KARERA
Axelle Karera is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy and African American studies at Wesleyan University. Her areas of specialization are in twentieth century continental philosophy, the critical philosophy of race, contemporary critical theories, and the environmental humanities. THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESPROGRAMMINGPUBLIC ENGAGEMENTLOST AND FOUNDJAMES GALLERYOBJECT LIBRARYABOUT The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
PIONEERS OF AFRICANA PHILOSOPHY The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
MARIPOSA MARÍA TERESA FERNÁNDEZ Photo by: Alyssa Peek. Mariposa María Teresa Fernández is an award-winning Afro Puerto Rican poet, spoken word performance artist, visual artist, educator, activist, scholar and Bronx native.. Mariposa’s poetry has been published in numerous anthologies including African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song, a Library of America Anthology, The Norton Anthology of LatinoJEFFREY CULANG
Jeffrey Culang is a doctoral student in History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation focuses on secularism and religion in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Jeffrey just completed archival research in Cairo through the American Research Center in Egypt and is currently a fellow at the Center for Jewish History inNew York.
ROBIN WAGNER-PACIFICI Robin Wagner-Pacifici is the University in Exile Professor of Sociology at the New School for Social Research. She is the author of The Art of Surrender: Decomposing Sovereignty at Conflict's End; Theorizing the Standoff: Contingency in Action; Discourse and Destruction: The City of Philadelphia vs MOVE; and The Moro Morality Play: Terrorism as Social Drama.PATRYK TOMASZEWSKI
Patryk P. Tomaszewski is a PhD candidate in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation examines Socialist Realist art in the former Soviet satellite states, specifically in Poland, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia under the Stalinist regime.MAKEBA LAVAN
The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
PETER TAUBMAN
Peter Taubman is professor of education in the School of Education at Brooklyn College. He is a co-founder of the Bushwick School for Social Justice, in Brooklyn, New York. His book, Teaching by Numbers: Deconstructing the Discourse of Standards and Accountability in Education, published by Routledge Press, received the 2010 Outstanding Book Award from AERA’s Division B, the 2010 CriticsDANA LILJEGREN
Dana Liljegren is a PhD Candidate in Art History at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her specializations and topics of interest include West African art, global contemporary art, postcolonial theory, environmentalism, and film studies.ELSIE HEUNG
Elsie is a PhD Candidate in the Art History Program at the GC. The working title of her dissertation is "Portraying Women's Suffrage: Visual Arts and the Campaign for the Vote in the United States,1900-1920."
THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESPROGRAMMINGPUBLIC ENGAGEMENTLOST AND FOUNDJAMES GALLERYOBJECT LIBRARYABOUT The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
PIONEERS OF AFRICANA PHILOSOPHY The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
MARIPOSA MARÍA TERESA FERNÁNDEZ Photo by: Alyssa Peek. Mariposa María Teresa Fernández is an award-winning Afro Puerto Rican poet, spoken word performance artist, visual artist, educator, activist, scholar and Bronx native.. Mariposa’s poetry has been published in numerous anthologies including African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song, a Library of America Anthology, The Norton Anthology of LatinoJEFFREY CULANG
Jeffrey Culang is a doctoral student in History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation focuses on secularism and religion in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Jeffrey just completed archival research in Cairo through the American Research Center in Egypt and is currently a fellow at the Center for Jewish History inNew York.
ROBIN WAGNER-PACIFICI Robin Wagner-Pacifici is the University in Exile Professor of Sociology at the New School for Social Research. She is the author of The Art of Surrender: Decomposing Sovereignty at Conflict's End; Theorizing the Standoff: Contingency in Action; Discourse and Destruction: The City of Philadelphia vs MOVE; and The Moro Morality Play: Terrorism as Social Drama.PATRYK TOMASZEWSKI
Patryk P. Tomaszewski is a PhD candidate in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation examines Socialist Realist art in the former Soviet satellite states, specifically in Poland, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia under the Stalinist regime.MAKEBA LAVAN
The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
PETER TAUBMAN
Peter Taubman is professor of education in the School of Education at Brooklyn College. He is a co-founder of the Bushwick School for Social Justice, in Brooklyn, New York. His book, Teaching by Numbers: Deconstructing the Discourse of Standards and Accountability in Education, published by Routledge Press, received the 2010 Outstanding Book Award from AERA’s Division B, the 2010 CriticsDANA LILJEGREN
Dana Liljegren is a PhD Candidate in Art History at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her specializations and topics of interest include West African art, global contemporary art, postcolonial theory, environmentalism, and film studies.ELSIE HEUNG
Elsie is a PhD Candidate in the Art History Program at the GC. The working title of her dissertation is "Portraying Women's Suffrage: Visual Arts and the Campaign for the Vote in the United States,1900-1920."
FOOD - THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Saara Nafici Nafici discussed Value Added Farms in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Founded in 2001, it is a two-site urban farm project devoted to youth empowerment, community engagement, and movement-building on one hand, and the provision of healthy, affordable food to the neighborhood onthe other.
TRANSLATING THE FUTURE FINALE: POSTMONOLINGUAL NEW YORK Join us for the finale of Translating the Future, a 20-week series of conversations between translators, with “Postmonolingual New York,” featuring Ava Chin, Jasmine Claude-Narcisse, Damion Searls, and Lisandro Pérez.. To walk down almost any New York City street is to move through a shifting constellation of languages. Nearly half of all New Yorkers speak a language other than English at 2021 UKRAINIAN CONTEMPORARY MUSIC FESTIVAL Fri, Mar 5, 2021 – Sun, Mar 7, 2021, 07:00 PM – 04:30 PM This event will be livestreamed. Please register to attend below. About the 2021 Ukrainian Contemporary Music Festival THE END OF CHEAP NATURE? Deforestation in Indonesia. By Aidenvironment, via flickr Riau/Wakx. About the event. Modern history has seen capitalism commodify a series of essential things: nature, money, work, care, food, energy, andlives.
DANA LILJEGREN
Dana Liljegren is a PhD Candidate in Art History at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her specializations and topics of interest include West African art, global contemporary art, postcolonial theory, environmentalism, and film studies.MAKEBA LAVAN
The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
BEN VERSHBOW
Ben Vershbow is a New York-based digital humanities geek and theater artist.For four years, he was editorial director at the Institute for the Future of the Book, working with Bob Stein. Currently, he is manager of NYPL Labs, a digital innovation unit at The New York Public Library, and runs a theater collective, Group Theory.ELSIE HEUNG
Elsie is a PhD Candidate in the Art History Program at the GC. The working title of her dissertation is "Portraying Women's Suffrage: Visual Arts and the Campaign for the Vote in the United States,1900-1920."
MAUD JACQUIN
Maud Jacquin is an art historian and curator based in Paris and New York. With Sébastien Pluot, she is co-director of Art by Translation, an international research program in art and curatorial practices that involves participating students and host institutions in fourcountries.
IEMANJÁ BROWN
Iemanjá Brown has worked as an educator in various settings, organizing around environmental justice through direct action and artistic projects with young people. An English PhD student at the Graduate Center, CUNY, she teaches at Queens College. Her research focuses on queer poetic attunement to the Anthropocene. THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESPROGRAMMINGPUBLIC ENGAGEMENTLOST AND FOUNDJAMES GALLERYOBJECT LIBRARYABOUTHALL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNATIONAL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNYU CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESARVADA CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESSIMPSON CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESUNH CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
PIONEERS OF AFRICANA PHILOSOPHY Pioneers of Africana Philosophy. Conference. Fri, Mar 19, 2021 – Sat, Mar 20, 2021, 10:00 AM – 07:00 PM. This event will take place online via Zoom. Please register below. LIGHT RELIEF FROM LOST & FOUND The lightness of “Light Relief” also extends to the work itself—readily available fragments from works in progress, or works completed, rather than extensive work or reproductions from the archive. The goal of Light Relief from Lost & Found, and the core of our work as a whole lies in careful attention to the interplay ofpoetry, poetics
JEFFREY CULANG
Jeffrey Culang is a doctoral student in History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation focuses on secularism and religion in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Jeffrey just completed archival research in Cairo through the American Research Center in Egypt and is currently a fellow at the Center for Jewish History inNew York.
ROBIN WAGNER-PACIFICI Robin Wagner-Pacifici is the University in Exile Professor of Sociology at the New School for Social Research. She is the author of The Art of Surrender: Decomposing Sovereignty at Conflict's End; Theorizing the Standoff: Contingency in Action; Discourse and Destruction: The City of Philadelphia vs MOVE; and The Moro Morality Play: Terrorism as Social Drama.PATRYK TOMASZEWSKI
Patryk Tomaszewski. Patryk P. Tomaszewski is a PhD candidate in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation examines Socialist Realist art in the former Soviet satellite states, specifically in Poland, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia under the Stalinist regime. By focusing on state-sponsored exhibitions of painting and sculptureDANA LILJEGREN
Dana Liljegren is a PhD Candidate in Art History at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her specializations and topics of interest include West African art, global contemporary art, postcolonial theory, environmentalism, and film studies.PETER TAUBMAN
Peter Taubman is professor of education in the School of Education at Brooklyn College. He is a co-founder of the Bushwick School for Social Justice, in Brooklyn, New York. His book, Teaching by Numbers: Deconstructing the Discourse of Standards and Accountability in Education, published by Routledge Press, received the 2010 Outstanding Book Award from AERA’s Division B, the 2010 CriticsMAKEBA LAVAN
The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
ELSIE HEUNG
Elsie Heung. Elsie is a PhD Candidate in the Art History Program at the GC. The working title of her dissertation is "Portraying Women's Suffrage: Visual Arts and the Campaign for the Vote in the United States, 1900-1920." She designed, manages and maintains the websitefor
THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESPROGRAMMINGPUBLIC ENGAGEMENTLOST AND FOUNDJAMES GALLERYOBJECT LIBRARYABOUTHALL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNATIONAL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNYU CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESARVADA CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESSIMPSON CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESUNH CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
PIONEERS OF AFRICANA PHILOSOPHY Pioneers of Africana Philosophy. Conference. Fri, Mar 19, 2021 – Sat, Mar 20, 2021, 10:00 AM – 07:00 PM. This event will take place online via Zoom. Please register below. LIGHT RELIEF FROM LOST & FOUND The lightness of “Light Relief” also extends to the work itself—readily available fragments from works in progress, or works completed, rather than extensive work or reproductions from the archive. The goal of Light Relief from Lost & Found, and the core of our work as a whole lies in careful attention to the interplay ofpoetry, poetics
JEFFREY CULANG
Jeffrey Culang is a doctoral student in History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation focuses on secularism and religion in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Jeffrey just completed archival research in Cairo through the American Research Center in Egypt and is currently a fellow at the Center for Jewish History inNew York.
ROBIN WAGNER-PACIFICI Robin Wagner-Pacifici is the University in Exile Professor of Sociology at the New School for Social Research. She is the author of The Art of Surrender: Decomposing Sovereignty at Conflict's End; Theorizing the Standoff: Contingency in Action; Discourse and Destruction: The City of Philadelphia vs MOVE; and The Moro Morality Play: Terrorism as Social Drama.PATRYK TOMASZEWSKI
Patryk Tomaszewski. Patryk P. Tomaszewski is a PhD candidate in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation examines Socialist Realist art in the former Soviet satellite states, specifically in Poland, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia under the Stalinist regime. By focusing on state-sponsored exhibitions of painting and sculptureDANA LILJEGREN
Dana Liljegren is a PhD Candidate in Art History at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her specializations and topics of interest include West African art, global contemporary art, postcolonial theory, environmentalism, and film studies.PETER TAUBMAN
Peter Taubman is professor of education in the School of Education at Brooklyn College. He is a co-founder of the Bushwick School for Social Justice, in Brooklyn, New York. His book, Teaching by Numbers: Deconstructing the Discourse of Standards and Accountability in Education, published by Routledge Press, received the 2010 Outstanding Book Award from AERA’s Division B, the 2010 CriticsMAKEBA LAVAN
The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
ELSIE HEUNG
Elsie Heung. Elsie is a PhD Candidate in the Art History Program at the GC. The working title of her dissertation is "Portraying Women's Suffrage: Visual Arts and the Campaign for the Vote in the United States, 1900-1920." She designed, manages and maintains the websitefor
THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
FOOD - THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Saara Nafici Nafici discussed Value Added Farms in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Founded in 2001, it is a two-site urban farm project devoted to youth empowerment, community engagement, and movement-building on one hand, and the provision of healthy, affordable food to the neighborhood onthe other.
2021 UKRAINIAN CONTEMPORARY MUSIC FESTIVAL Tags Music. The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005 The James Gallery TRANSLATING THE FUTURE FINALE: POSTMONOLINGUAL NEW YORK Join us for the finale of Translating the Future, a 20-week series of conversations between translators, with “Postmonolingual New York,” featuring Ava Chin, Jasmine Claude-Narcisse, Damion Searls, and Lisandro Pérez.. To walk down almost any New York City street is to move through a shifting constellation of languages. Nearly half of all New Yorkers speak a language other than English atBEN VERSHBOW
Ben Vershbow is a New York-based digital humanities geek and theater artist.For four years, he was editorial director at the Institute for the Future of the Book, working with Bob Stein. Currently, he is manager of NYPL Labs, a digital innovation unit at The New York Public Library, and runs a theater collective, Group Theory.FRANK M. KIRKLAND
Frank M. Kirkland is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Hunter College and the Graduate Center, both of the City University of New York (CUNY). He is the co-editor, with D.P. Chattopadhaya, of Phenomenology: East and West: Essays in Honor of J.N. Mohanty (Springer, 1993) and the co-editor, with Bill E. Lawson, of Frederick Douglass: A Critical Reader (Blackwell, 1999).BERNARD R. BOXILL
Bernard R. Boxill received a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from LaSalle College in 1961 and a doctorate in philosophy from UCLA in 1971.His main philosophical interests are African American political philosophy and political philosophy in general. He has taught philosophy at several universities in the U.S., including UC Dominguez Hills, UC Santa Barbara, UCLA, the University of SouthTERRI NILLIASCA
Terri Nilliasca has been organizing around issues of class, race, and gender since she was in college. After graduating, she organized welfare recipients and then embarked on a 10-year career as a labor organizer of low-wage workers in the South for the union, UNITE.MAUD JACQUIN
Maud Jacquin is an art historian and curator based in Paris and New York. With Sébastien Pluot, she is co-director of Art by Translation, an international research program in art and curatorial practices that involves participating students and host institutions in fourcountries.
ELSIE HEUNG
Elsie Heung. Elsie is a PhD Candidate in the Art History Program at the GC. The working title of her dissertation is "Portraying Women's Suffrage: Visual Arts and the Campaign for the Vote in the United States, 1900-1920." She designed, manages and maintains the websitefor
THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESPROGRAMMINGPUBLIC ENGAGEMENTLOST AND FOUNDJAMES GALLERYOBJECT LIBRARYABOUTHALL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNATIONAL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNYU CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESARVADA CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESSIMPSON CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESUNH CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
FOOD - THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESEXAMPLES OF HUMANITIESSTUDY OF HUMANITIESFOOD JUSTICE ARTICLESFOOD INJUSTICE IN AMERICAFOOD JUSTICE TOPICSTHE FOOD JUSTICE INITIATIVE Saara Nafici Nafici discussed Value Added Farms in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Founded in 2001, it is a two-site urban farm project devoted to youth empowerment, community engagement, and movement-building on one hand, and the provision of healthy, affordable food to the neighborhood onthe other.
SHARED SACRED SITES
The Shared Sacred Sites exhibitions, which draw on anthropological research based on fieldwork, propose a contemporary “pilgrimage” in Manhattan through three venues: The New York Public Library, the Morgan Library and Museum, and the James Gallery at the Graduate Center, CUNY. The displays at each institution will highlight historic PIONEERS OF AFRICANA PHILOSOPHY Pioneers of Africana Philosophy. Conference. Fri, Mar 19, 2021 – Sat, Mar 20, 2021, 10:00 AM – 07:00 PM. This event will take place online via Zoom. Please register below.CLIMATE ACTION LAB
About Climate Action Lab. Climate Action Lab (CAL) brings together activists, researchers, and artists to reimagine climate politics through the lens of the city as both the frontline impact-zone and the potential source of grassroots alternatives informed by the principlesof climate justice.
TRANSLATING THE FUTURE FINALE: POSTMONOLINGUAL NEW YORK Join us for the finale of Translating the Future, a 20-week series of conversations between translators, with “Postmonolingual New York,” featuring Ava Chin, Jasmine Claude-Narcisse, Damion Searls, and Lisandro Pérez.. To walk down almost any New York City street is to move through a shifting constellation of languages. Nearly half of all New Yorkers speak a language other than English at MARIPOSA MARÍA TERESA FERNÁNDEZ Photo by: Alyssa Peek. Mariposa María Teresa Fernández is an award-winning Afro Puerto Rican poet, spoken word performance artist, visual artist, educator, activist, scholar and Bronx native.. Mariposa’s poetry has been published in numerous anthologies including African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song, a Library of America Anthology, The Norton Anthology of LatinoJEFFREY CULANG
Jeffrey Culang is a doctoral student in History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation focuses on secularism and religion in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Jeffrey just completed archival research in Cairo through the American Research Center in Egypt and is currently a fellow at the Center for Jewish History inNew York.
PATRYK TOMASZEWSKI
Patryk Tomaszewski. Patryk P. Tomaszewski is a PhD candidate in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation examines Socialist Realist art in the former Soviet satellite states, specifically in Poland, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia under the Stalinist regime. By focusing on state-sponsored exhibitions of painting and sculptureTERRI NILLIASCA
Terri Nilliasca has been organizing around issues of class, race, and gender since she was in college. After graduating, she organized welfare recipients and then embarked on a 10-year career as a labor organizer of low-wage workers in the South for the union, UNITE. THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESPROGRAMMINGPUBLIC ENGAGEMENTLOST AND FOUNDJAMES GALLERYOBJECT LIBRARYABOUTHALL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNATIONAL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNYU CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESARVADA CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESSIMPSON CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESUNH CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
FOOD - THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESEXAMPLES OF HUMANITIESSTUDY OF HUMANITIESFOOD JUSTICE ARTICLESFOOD INJUSTICE IN AMERICAFOOD JUSTICE TOPICSTHE FOOD JUSTICE INITIATIVE Saara Nafici Nafici discussed Value Added Farms in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Founded in 2001, it is a two-site urban farm project devoted to youth empowerment, community engagement, and movement-building on one hand, and the provision of healthy, affordable food to the neighborhood onthe other.
SHARED SACRED SITES
The Shared Sacred Sites exhibitions, which draw on anthropological research based on fieldwork, propose a contemporary “pilgrimage” in Manhattan through three venues: The New York Public Library, the Morgan Library and Museum, and the James Gallery at the Graduate Center, CUNY. The displays at each institution will highlight historic PIONEERS OF AFRICANA PHILOSOPHY Pioneers of Africana Philosophy. Conference. Fri, Mar 19, 2021 – Sat, Mar 20, 2021, 10:00 AM – 07:00 PM. This event will take place online via Zoom. Please register below.CLIMATE ACTION LAB
About Climate Action Lab. Climate Action Lab (CAL) brings together activists, researchers, and artists to reimagine climate politics through the lens of the city as both the frontline impact-zone and the potential source of grassroots alternatives informed by the principlesof climate justice.
TRANSLATING THE FUTURE FINALE: POSTMONOLINGUAL NEW YORK Join us for the finale of Translating the Future, a 20-week series of conversations between translators, with “Postmonolingual New York,” featuring Ava Chin, Jasmine Claude-Narcisse, Damion Searls, and Lisandro Pérez.. To walk down almost any New York City street is to move through a shifting constellation of languages. Nearly half of all New Yorkers speak a language other than English at MARIPOSA MARÍA TERESA FERNÁNDEZ Photo by: Alyssa Peek. Mariposa María Teresa Fernández is an award-winning Afro Puerto Rican poet, spoken word performance artist, visual artist, educator, activist, scholar and Bronx native.. Mariposa’s poetry has been published in numerous anthologies including African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song, a Library of America Anthology, The Norton Anthology of LatinoJEFFREY CULANG
Jeffrey Culang is a doctoral student in History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation focuses on secularism and religion in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Jeffrey just completed archival research in Cairo through the American Research Center in Egypt and is currently a fellow at the Center for Jewish History inNew York.
PATRYK TOMASZEWSKI
Patryk Tomaszewski. Patryk P. Tomaszewski is a PhD candidate in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY. His dissertation examines Socialist Realist art in the former Soviet satellite states, specifically in Poland, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia under the Stalinist regime. By focusing on state-sponsored exhibitions of painting and sculptureTERRI NILLIASCA
Terri Nilliasca has been organizing around issues of class, race, and gender since she was in college. After graduating, she organized welfare recipients and then embarked on a 10-year career as a labor organizer of low-wage workers in the South for the union, UNITE.PROGRAMMING
Through its public programs, seminars, conferences, publications and exhibitions, the Center for the Humanities brings CUNY students and faculty from various disciplines into dialogue with each other and prominent writers, artists, scholars, and civic leaders from around the world. Below is a list of the participants and collaborators wehave
SHARED SACRED SITES
The Shared Sacred Sites exhibitions, which draw on anthropological research based on fieldwork, propose a contemporary “pilgrimage” in Manhattan through three venues: The New York Public Library, the Morgan Library and Museum, and the James Gallery at the Graduate Center, CUNY. The displays at each institution will highlight historic PREFIGURATIVE ACTIVISM AS AN INSPIRATION FOR EXPANDING The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103 New York, NY 10016 (212) 817-2005The James Gallery
DANIEL VALTUEÑA
Daniel Valtueña is a PhD Student in the Latin American, Iberian, and Latino Cultures Department at The Graduate Center, CUNY. He holds a BA in Art History from Universidad Complutense de Madrid and teaches at Hunter College. He does his research on contemporary Iberian cultures, performing arts and queer culture in Spain.HOWARD MCGARY
Howard McGary is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick. He received his PhD from the University of Minnesota, and his main research interests are African American philosophy, socialMICIAH HUSSEY
Miciah Hussey is a PhD candidate in the Program in English and a Presidential Research Fellow at the Center for the Humanities, Graduate Center, CUNY.DANA LILJEGREN
Dana Liljegren is a PhD Candidate in Art History at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her specializations and topics of interest include West African art, global contemporary art, postcolonial theory, environmentalism, and film studies. THE LATVIAN CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART The Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art (LCCA) is the largest institution for contemporary art in Latvia, curating and producing contemporary art events on a national and international scale. Since 1993, it has researched and curated contemporary art processes both in Latvia and abroad, aiming to provoke critical reflection on issuesrelevant
ESTELLE FERRARESE
Estelle Ferrarese is Professor of moral and political philosophy at Picardie-Jules-Verne University (France). She has been a Visiting Professor at the New School for Social Research in New York, an Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation fellow at the Humboldt Universität in Berlin, and a research fellow at the Marc Bloch Franco-German Center of Social Science Research, in Berlin. TRANSLATIONAL AESTHETICS: PATTERNS OF INTERFERENCE Fri, Jan 30, 2015, 04:00 PM – 04:00 PM English Department Lounge (Room 4406) Allegory of Grammar and Style from Antoine Furetière's Nouvelle Allegorique* Home
* Programming
* Calendar
* Archive
* Collections
* Participants and Collaborators* Public Engagement
* About
* Seminar
* Working Groups
* Projects
* Lost and Found
* About Lost & Found* Publications
* Editors
* Press
* Lost & Found Elsewhere * NYC/CUNY Chapbook Festival* Donate
* Board
* James Gallery
* About the gallery
* Past exhibitions
* Visit
* Object Library
*
* About
* History
* Staff
* Fellows
* Board
* Support
* Accessibility
* News
*
* Distributaries
*
* Join the Newsletter* Search
The Graduate Center
THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Conversation and Readin Group Friday, November 20, 2020 READING AUDRE LORDE IN COMMUNITY WITH THE AUDRE LORDE READING GROUPBlog
Sunday, November 22, 2020 ACADEMIA FOR ALL: A PUBLIC HUMANITIES PROJECTOpportunity
Friday, November 13, 2020 CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: CURRICULAR FELLOWSHIP & RESEARCH ASSISTANTSHIP FOR THE PUERTO RICO SYLLABUSSee upcoming events
ARCHIVE
Our archive contains video, audio, and information from previous events, conferences, seminars, and exhibitions.Browse our archive
COLLECTIONS
Selections from our archive are gathered into collections based on ongoing research themes. Browse our collectionsPUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
These projects promote the diverse ways the humanities function in public life as a public good. Learn more about the research we support THE PUERTO RICO SYLLABUSLOST & FOUND
_Lost & Found: The CUNY Poetics Document Initiative_ publishes unexpected, genre-bending works by important 20th century writers. Browse the publications we produce TONI CADE BAMBARA: "REALIZING THE DREAM OF A BLACK UNIVERSITY,” & OTHER WRITINGS (PARTS I & II)JAMES GALLERY
The Amie and Tony James Gallery brings artists and scholars into public dialogue on topics of mutual concern. Find upcoming and past exhibitionsExhibitions
Fri, Mar 26, 2021 – Fri, Jun 17, 2022 ON NATIONALISM: BORDERS AND BELONGINGDISTRIBUTARIES
Monday, November 16, 2020 ACADEMIA FOR ALL: A PUBLIC HUMANITIES PROJECT Friday, October 30, 2020 PREFIGURATIVE ACTIVISM AS AN INSPIRATION FOR EXPANDING PEDAGOGICALPOSSIBILITIES
Monday, September 21, 2020 COMMUNITIES AND EMOTIONS IN THE DIGITAL CLASSROOM1
Monday, November 16, 2020 ACADEMIA FOR ALL: A PUBLIC HUMANITIES PROJECTABOUT
The Center for the Humanities encourages collaborative and creative work in the humanities at CUNY and across the city through public programming, projects, seminars, conferences, publications andexhibitions.
Topics of focus include Accessibility Affect / Cognition ArchivesArt debt
Diaspora / Migration Digital CultureEconomics / Labor
Environment Food
Justice Gender Health History LiterartureLiterature Medical
Humanities Moving ImageMusic Pedagogy
Performance Poetry
Poetry / Literature
Politics
Postcolonialism Public Space Race / Ethnicity ReligionScience Sexuality
Social Justice / ActivismTheatre
Theory / Philosophy TranslationUrban Farming
Urbanism / Public Space Violence /War
Monday, November 16, 2020 ACADEMIA FOR ALL: A PUBLIC HUMANITIES PROJECT Friday, October 30, 2020 PREFIGURATIVE ACTIVISM AS AN INSPIRATION FOR EXPANDING PEDAGOGICALPOSSIBILITIES
Wednesday, September 23, 2020 THE PUBLIC HUMANITIES: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY The Center for the Humanities The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 5103New York, NY 10016
(212) 817-2005
ch@gc.cuny.edu
The James Gallery
The Graduate Center, CUNY 365 Fifth Avenue, First FloorNew York, NY 10016
(212) 817-2020
jamesgallery@gc.cuny.eduSupport the center
Sign up for the newsletterDetails
Copyright © 2024 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0