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September 2023
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Friday, October 6, 2023
- 9:30 AM7hFall Exhibit — "Making and Unmaking Emancipation in Cuba and the United States"This exhibition explores the fraught, circuitous and unfinished course of emancipation over the nineteenth century in Cuba and the United States. People — enslaved individuals and outside observers, survivors and resistors, and activists and conspirators — made and unmade emancipation, a process that remains unfinished and unrealized. Exhibit Tours Tours of the exhibit may be arranged for classes and other groups by contacting Rachel Bohlmann at (574) 631-1575 or Bohlmann.2@nd.edu. Additional curator-led tours are open to the public at noon on the following Fridays:Sept. 1 Sept. 15 Sept. 22 Oct. 13 Oct. 27 Nov. 17This exhibit is curated by Rachel Bohlmann, American History Librarian and Curator, and Erika Hosselkus, Latin American Studies Curator and Associate University Librarian. This and other exhibits within the Hesburgh Libraries are generously supported by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment. All exhibits are free and open to the public during business hours. Open to undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, faculty, staff, the public, alumni and friends.
- 9:30 AM7hFall Exhibit — "Making and Unmaking Emancipation in Cuba and the United States"This exhibition explores the fraught, circuitous and unfinished course of emancipation over the nineteenth century in Cuba and the United States. People — enslaved individuals and outside observers, survivors and resistors, and activists and conspirators — made and unmade emancipation, a process that remains unfinished and unrealized. Exhibit Tours Tours of the exhibit may be arranged for classes and other groups by contacting Rachel Bohlmann at (574) 631-1575 or Bohlmann.2@nd.edu. Additional curator-led tours are open to the public at noon on the following Fridays:Sept. 1 Sept. 15 Sept. 22 Oct. 13 Oct. 27 Nov. 17This exhibit is curated by Rachel Bohlmann, American History Librarian and Curator, and Erika Hosselkus, Latin American Studies Curator and Associate University Librarian. This and other exhibits within the Hesburgh Libraries are generously supported by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment. All exhibits are free and open to the public during business hours. Open to undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, faculty, staff, the public, alumni and friends.
- 9:30 AM7hFall Exhibit — "Making and Unmaking Emancipation in Cuba and the United States"This exhibition explores the fraught, circuitous and unfinished course of emancipation over the nineteenth century in Cuba and the United States. People — enslaved individuals and outside observers, survivors and resistors, and activists and conspirators — made and unmade emancipation, a process that remains unfinished and unrealized. Exhibit Tours Tours of the exhibit may be arranged for classes and other groups by contacting Rachel Bohlmann at (574) 631-1575 or Bohlmann.2@nd.edu. Additional curator-led tours are open to the public at noon on the following Fridays:Sept. 1 Sept. 15 Sept. 22 Oct. 13 Oct. 27 Nov. 17This exhibit is curated by Rachel Bohlmann, American History Librarian and Curator, and Erika Hosselkus, Latin American Studies Curator and Associate University Librarian. This and other exhibits within the Hesburgh Libraries are generously supported by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment. All exhibits are free and open to the public during business hours. Open to undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, faculty, staff, the public, alumni and friends.
- 9:30 AM7hFall Exhibit — "Making and Unmaking Emancipation in Cuba and the United States"This exhibition explores the fraught, circuitous and unfinished course of emancipation over the nineteenth century in Cuba and the United States. People — enslaved individuals and outside observers, survivors and resistors, and activists and conspirators — made and unmade emancipation, a process that remains unfinished and unrealized. Exhibit Tours Tours of the exhibit may be arranged for classes and other groups by contacting Rachel Bohlmann at (574) 631-1575 or Bohlmann.2@nd.edu. Additional curator-led tours are open to the public at noon on the following Fridays:Sept. 1 Sept. 15 Sept. 22 Oct. 13 Oct. 27 Nov. 17This exhibit is curated by Rachel Bohlmann, American History Librarian and Curator, and Erika Hosselkus, Latin American Studies Curator and Associate University Librarian. This and other exhibits within the Hesburgh Libraries are generously supported by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment. All exhibits are free and open to the public during business hours. Open to undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, faculty, staff, the public, alumni and friends.
- 9:30 AM7hSpotlight Exhibit — "Football and Community at Historically Black Colleges and Universities"From its origins on campus in the late nineteenth century, football at Historically Black Colleges and Universities has held a central place in the African American sporting experience, in the landscape of Black higher education, and in the broader African American community. During the era of Jim Crow segregation, the vast majority of African American college students and student athletes attended HBCUs. Over the first half of the twentieth century, many of the yearly gridiron contests between rival HBCUs developed into highly anticipated annual events that combined football with larger celebrations of African American achievement and excellence. The yearly games brought together members of the African American community and came to include a wide range of associated events including dances, parades, musical shows, fundraising drives, and other festivities. We are pleased to exhibit a selection of sources from the Joyce Sports Research Collection that preserve the history of HBCU football. The programs, media guides, ephemera, guidebooks, and other printed material on display document the athletic accomplishments, the celebrations, the spectacle, and the community-building that accompany football at Historically Black Colleges and Universities. This exhibit is curated by Greg Bond, curator of the Joyce Sports Research Collection and the Sports Subject Specialist for Hesburgh Libraries. This and other exhibits within the Hesburgh Libraries are generously supported by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment. All exhibits are free and open to the public during business hours. Open to undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, faculty, staff, the public, alumni and friends.
- 9:30 AM7hSpotlight Exhibit — "Football and Community at Historically Black Colleges and Universities"From its origins on campus in the late nineteenth century, football at Historically Black Colleges and Universities has held a central place in the African American sporting experience, in the landscape of Black higher education, and in the broader African American community. During the era of Jim Crow segregation, the vast majority of African American college students and student athletes attended HBCUs. Over the first half of the twentieth century, many of the yearly gridiron contests between rival HBCUs developed into highly anticipated annual events that combined football with larger celebrations of African American achievement and excellence. The yearly games brought together members of the African American community and came to include a wide range of associated events including dances, parades, musical shows, fundraising drives, and other festivities. We are pleased to exhibit a selection of sources from the Joyce Sports Research Collection that preserve the history of HBCU football. The programs, media guides, ephemera, guidebooks, and other printed material on display document the athletic accomplishments, the celebrations, the spectacle, and the community-building that accompany football at Historically Black Colleges and Universities. This exhibit is curated by Greg Bond, curator of the Joyce Sports Research Collection and the Sports Subject Specialist for Hesburgh Libraries. This and other exhibits within the Hesburgh Libraries are generously supported by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment. All exhibits are free and open to the public during business hours. Open to undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, faculty, staff, the public, alumni and friends.
- 9:30 AM7hSpotlight Exhibit — "Football and Community at Historically Black Colleges and Universities"From its origins on campus in the late nineteenth century, football at Historically Black Colleges and Universities has held a central place in the African American sporting experience, in the landscape of Black higher education, and in the broader African American community. During the era of Jim Crow segregation, the vast majority of African American college students and student athletes attended HBCUs. Over the first half of the twentieth century, many of the yearly gridiron contests between rival HBCUs developed into highly anticipated annual events that combined football with larger celebrations of African American achievement and excellence. The yearly games brought together members of the African American community and came to include a wide range of associated events including dances, parades, musical shows, fundraising drives, and other festivities. We are pleased to exhibit a selection of sources from the Joyce Sports Research Collection that preserve the history of HBCU football. The programs, media guides, ephemera, guidebooks, and other printed material on display document the athletic accomplishments, the celebrations, the spectacle, and the community-building that accompany football at Historically Black Colleges and Universities. This exhibit is curated by Greg Bond, curator of the Joyce Sports Research Collection and the Sports Subject Specialist for Hesburgh Libraries. This and other exhibits within the Hesburgh Libraries are generously supported by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment. All exhibits are free and open to the public during business hours. Open to undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, faculty, staff, the public, alumni and friends.
- 10:00 AM1h 15mPanel Discussion: "Mobility, Infrastructure, and Affective Worlds In and Out of the Himalayas"What is the relationship between body, land, and place in a world of unknown future risk? The Himalayas are a region where people forge strong ties of belonging to place. However, disasters such as the 2015 earthquakes epicentred in central Nepal, coupled with increasingly common environmental catastrophes, have forced people to consider relocation due to risk, including that generated by post-disaster reconstruction. At the same time, education- and labor-driven outmigration, coupled with an aging rural population, raises intimate issues of concern related to place, in which homes must be retrofitted, or left entirely as aging bodies are no longer able to navigate traditional architectures and care for themselves on their own. This event brings together two distinguished scholars of Himalayan studies—Sienna Craig, anthropology professor at Dartmouth College, and Sara Shneiderman, associate professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia, to explore movement, mobility, and connection to place in the Himalayas across multiple scales—from the aging body to the displaced community. This panel discussion is part of the Liu Institute's lecture series Global Affairs from the Top of the World: Himalayan Asia Today, which is cosponsored by the Liu Institute's South Asia Group. Brunch will be served. Craig and Shneiderman will participate in the workshop that follows the panel discussion and the link to that event can be found HERE.Sienna Craig is the Orvil Dryfoos Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She has been conducting ethnographic and public-health oriented research with Himalayan and Tibetan communities between Nepal and North America for more than twenty-five years. A writer whose work spans multiple genres, she is the author, most recently, of The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan Lives between Nepal and New York (University of Washington Press, 2020). For the panel, Craig will present "Aging, Care, and Place: Himalayan Elders in an Era of Migration" ABSTRACT: In many places on this planet, we are getting older. Global population aging is increasing in intensity and the structures human communities have relied upon for generations to care for the elderly are cracking and shifting, for many reasons. This presentation emerges from more than two decades of research and relationship with people from Mustang, Nepal –including those who now live in urban Nepal and New York City. I describe preliminary fieldwork conducted in Summer 2023, toward a longer-term comparative and collaborative project that asks: How do individuals, families, communities, and institutions adapt to demographic and socioeconomic changes to allow people to age in a culturally appropriate manner? This work recognize that elder care, support, and wellbeing are crucial issues that require creative responses at times when education and labor-driven migration, climate change induced displacement, and political marginalization will continue to impact the viability of Himalayan communities and shape the lives of their diasporic counterparts. Current and future research aims to contribute to an anthropology of aging and the discipline’s burgeoning concern with care by assessing what ‘successful’ aging means, how ‘aging in place’ is experienced in times of migration and displacement, and how the ‘inner architectures’ afforded by Buddhist concepts such as impermanence and interdependence intersect with the material conditions of rural life — including the homes that anchor people to place and lineage — within a broader context of migration and social change.Sara Shneiderman is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, where she co-leads the Himalaya Program and Disaster Resilience Research Network. She has been conducting ethnographic and policy-engaged research in the Himalaya and South Asia for over 25 years, and is the author of ":Rituals of Ethnicity: Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India" (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), along with many journal articles, most recently focusing on Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction. For the panel, Shneiderman will present "Anchoring Mobility, Embodying Risk: Houses as Intimate Infrastructure in Nepal’s Ongoing Transformation"ABSTRACT: How do we ground ourselves in the face of uncertainty? Drawing upon 25 years of research in several districts of rural Nepal, this presentation explores the relationships between people, their houses, and the landscapes in which they live to consider how we comprehend risk and plan for the future amidst radical change. In this photographically illustrated talk, I track how houses have served as an anchor through the social transformations wrought by political conflict and expanded mobility, as well as the environmental upheaval of the 2015 earthquakes and the accelerated infrastructural development that followed in conjunction with reconstruction. At the same time, houses are a bellwether of future risk, as people consider where and how to invest their material, emotional, and labour resources in building shelter, that most fundamental form of infrastructure. Yet all too often, scholarly and political discussions of housing for marginalized communities foreground its functionality at the expense of understanding houses as a site of creativity that bring people into intimate relation with both the terrain and state in which they live. Here, I take a holistic approach that sees both houses and the people who build them as embodied subjects in ongoing processes of transformation, whose ability to thrive in complex sociopolitical and natural environments is dependent upon a balance between structural stability and the capacity to change.Moderator Aidan Seale-Feldman, an assistant professor of anthropology at Notre Dame and a Liu Institute faculty fellow, is a medical anthropologist interested in affliction and its treatments. Grounded in ethnographic explorations of disaster, mental health, and mass hysteria, her research asks how to approach forms of affliction that are not bound within the individual but instead move across bodies, environments, and generations. Originally published at asia.nd.edu.
- 10:00 AM1h 15mPanel Discussion: "Mobility, Infrastructure, and Affective Worlds In and Out of the Himalayas"What is the relationship between body, land, and place in a world of unknown future risk? The Himalayas are a region where people forge strong ties of belonging to place. However, disasters such as the 2015 earthquakes epicentred in central Nepal, coupled with increasingly common environmental catastrophes, have forced people to consider relocation due to risk, including that generated by post-disaster reconstruction. At the same time, education- and labor-driven outmigration, coupled with an aging rural population, raises intimate issues of concern related to place, in which homes must be retrofitted, or left entirely as aging bodies are no longer able to navigate traditional architectures and care for themselves on their own. This event brings together two distinguished scholars of Himalayan studies—Sienna Craig, anthropology professor at Dartmouth College, and Sara Shneiderman, associate professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia, to explore movement, mobility, and connection to place in the Himalayas across multiple scales—from the aging body to the displaced community. This panel discussion is part of the Liu Institute's lecture series Global Affairs from the Top of the World: Himalayan Asia Today, which is cosponsored by the Liu Institute's South Asia Group. Brunch will be served. Craig and Shneiderman will participate in the workshop that follows the panel discussion and the link to that event can be found HERE.Sienna Craig is the Orvil Dryfoos Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She has been conducting ethnographic and public-health oriented research with Himalayan and Tibetan communities between Nepal and North America for more than twenty-five years. A writer whose work spans multiple genres, she is the author, most recently, of The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan Lives between Nepal and New York (University of Washington Press, 2020). For the panel, Craig will present "Aging, Care, and Place: Himalayan Elders in an Era of Migration" ABSTRACT: In many places on this planet, we are getting older. Global population aging is increasing in intensity and the structures human communities have relied upon for generations to care for the elderly are cracking and shifting, for many reasons. This presentation emerges from more than two decades of research and relationship with people from Mustang, Nepal –including those who now live in urban Nepal and New York City. I describe preliminary fieldwork conducted in Summer 2023, toward a longer-term comparative and collaborative project that asks: How do individuals, families, communities, and institutions adapt to demographic and socioeconomic changes to allow people to age in a culturally appropriate manner? This work recognize that elder care, support, and wellbeing are crucial issues that require creative responses at times when education and labor-driven migration, climate change induced displacement, and political marginalization will continue to impact the viability of Himalayan communities and shape the lives of their diasporic counterparts. Current and future research aims to contribute to an anthropology of aging and the discipline’s burgeoning concern with care by assessing what ‘successful’ aging means, how ‘aging in place’ is experienced in times of migration and displacement, and how the ‘inner architectures’ afforded by Buddhist concepts such as impermanence and interdependence intersect with the material conditions of rural life — including the homes that anchor people to place and lineage — within a broader context of migration and social change.Sara Shneiderman is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, where she co-leads the Himalaya Program and Disaster Resilience Research Network. She has been conducting ethnographic and policy-engaged research in the Himalaya and South Asia for over 25 years, and is the author of ":Rituals of Ethnicity: Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India" (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), along with many journal articles, most recently focusing on Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction. For the panel, Shneiderman will present "Anchoring Mobility, Embodying Risk: Houses as Intimate Infrastructure in Nepal’s Ongoing Transformation"ABSTRACT: How do we ground ourselves in the face of uncertainty? Drawing upon 25 years of research in several districts of rural Nepal, this presentation explores the relationships between people, their houses, and the landscapes in which they live to consider how we comprehend risk and plan for the future amidst radical change. In this photographically illustrated talk, I track how houses have served as an anchor through the social transformations wrought by political conflict and expanded mobility, as well as the environmental upheaval of the 2015 earthquakes and the accelerated infrastructural development that followed in conjunction with reconstruction. At the same time, houses are a bellwether of future risk, as people consider where and how to invest their material, emotional, and labour resources in building shelter, that most fundamental form of infrastructure. Yet all too often, scholarly and political discussions of housing for marginalized communities foreground its functionality at the expense of understanding houses as a site of creativity that bring people into intimate relation with both the terrain and state in which they live. Here, I take a holistic approach that sees both houses and the people who build them as embodied subjects in ongoing processes of transformation, whose ability to thrive in complex sociopolitical and natural environments is dependent upon a balance between structural stability and the capacity to change.Moderator Aidan Seale-Feldman, an assistant professor of anthropology at Notre Dame and a Liu Institute faculty fellow, is a medical anthropologist interested in affliction and its treatments. Grounded in ethnographic explorations of disaster, mental health, and mass hysteria, her research asks how to approach forms of affliction that are not bound within the individual but instead move across bodies, environments, and generations. Originally published at asia.nd.edu.
- 10:00 AM1h 15mPanel Discussion: "Mobility, Infrastructure, and Affective Worlds In and Out of the Himalayas"What is the relationship between body, land, and place in a world of unknown future risk? The Himalayas are a region where people forge strong ties of belonging to place. However, disasters such as the 2015 earthquakes epicentred in central Nepal, coupled with increasingly common environmental catastrophes, have forced people to consider relocation due to risk, including that generated by post-disaster reconstruction. At the same time, education- and labor-driven outmigration, coupled with an aging rural population, raises intimate issues of concern related to place, in which homes must be retrofitted, or left entirely as aging bodies are no longer able to navigate traditional architectures and care for themselves on their own. This event brings together two distinguished scholars of Himalayan studies—Sienna Craig, anthropology professor at Dartmouth College, and Sara Shneiderman, associate professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia, to explore movement, mobility, and connection to place in the Himalayas across multiple scales—from the aging body to the displaced community. This panel discussion is part of the Liu Institute's lecture series Global Affairs from the Top of the World: Himalayan Asia Today, which is cosponsored by the Liu Institute's South Asia Group. Brunch will be served. Craig and Shneiderman will participate in the workshop that follows the panel discussion and the link to that event can be found HERE.Sienna Craig is the Orvil Dryfoos Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She has been conducting ethnographic and public-health oriented research with Himalayan and Tibetan communities between Nepal and North America for more than twenty-five years. A writer whose work spans multiple genres, she is the author, most recently, of The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan Lives between Nepal and New York (University of Washington Press, 2020). For the panel, Craig will present "Aging, Care, and Place: Himalayan Elders in an Era of Migration" ABSTRACT: In many places on this planet, we are getting older. Global population aging is increasing in intensity and the structures human communities have relied upon for generations to care for the elderly are cracking and shifting, for many reasons. This presentation emerges from more than two decades of research and relationship with people from Mustang, Nepal –including those who now live in urban Nepal and New York City. I describe preliminary fieldwork conducted in Summer 2023, toward a longer-term comparative and collaborative project that asks: How do individuals, families, communities, and institutions adapt to demographic and socioeconomic changes to allow people to age in a culturally appropriate manner? This work recognize that elder care, support, and wellbeing are crucial issues that require creative responses at times when education and labor-driven migration, climate change induced displacement, and political marginalization will continue to impact the viability of Himalayan communities and shape the lives of their diasporic counterparts. Current and future research aims to contribute to an anthropology of aging and the discipline’s burgeoning concern with care by assessing what ‘successful’ aging means, how ‘aging in place’ is experienced in times of migration and displacement, and how the ‘inner architectures’ afforded by Buddhist concepts such as impermanence and interdependence intersect with the material conditions of rural life — including the homes that anchor people to place and lineage — within a broader context of migration and social change.Sara Shneiderman is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, where she co-leads the Himalaya Program and Disaster Resilience Research Network. She has been conducting ethnographic and policy-engaged research in the Himalaya and South Asia for over 25 years, and is the author of ":Rituals of Ethnicity: Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India" (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), along with many journal articles, most recently focusing on Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction. For the panel, Shneiderman will present "Anchoring Mobility, Embodying Risk: Houses as Intimate Infrastructure in Nepal’s Ongoing Transformation"ABSTRACT: How do we ground ourselves in the face of uncertainty? Drawing upon 25 years of research in several districts of rural Nepal, this presentation explores the relationships between people, their houses, and the landscapes in which they live to consider how we comprehend risk and plan for the future amidst radical change. In this photographically illustrated talk, I track how houses have served as an anchor through the social transformations wrought by political conflict and expanded mobility, as well as the environmental upheaval of the 2015 earthquakes and the accelerated infrastructural development that followed in conjunction with reconstruction. At the same time, houses are a bellwether of future risk, as people consider where and how to invest their material, emotional, and labour resources in building shelter, that most fundamental form of infrastructure. Yet all too often, scholarly and political discussions of housing for marginalized communities foreground its functionality at the expense of understanding houses as a site of creativity that bring people into intimate relation with both the terrain and state in which they live. Here, I take a holistic approach that sees both houses and the people who build them as embodied subjects in ongoing processes of transformation, whose ability to thrive in complex sociopolitical and natural environments is dependent upon a balance between structural stability and the capacity to change.Moderator Aidan Seale-Feldman, an assistant professor of anthropology at Notre Dame and a Liu Institute faculty fellow, is a medical anthropologist interested in affliction and its treatments. Grounded in ethnographic explorations of disaster, mental health, and mass hysteria, her research asks how to approach forms of affliction that are not bound within the individual but instead move across bodies, environments, and generations. Originally published at asia.nd.edu.
- 10:00 AM1h 15mPanel Discussion: "Mobility, Infrastructure, and Affective Worlds In and Out of the Himalayas"What is the relationship between body, land, and place in a world of unknown future risk? The Himalayas are a region where people forge strong ties of belonging to place. However, disasters such as the 2015 earthquakes epicentred in central Nepal, coupled with increasingly common environmental catastrophes, have forced people to consider relocation due to risk, including that generated by post-disaster reconstruction. At the same time, education- and labor-driven outmigration, coupled with an aging rural population, raises intimate issues of concern related to place, in which homes must be retrofitted, or left entirely as aging bodies are no longer able to navigate traditional architectures and care for themselves on their own. This event brings together two distinguished scholars of Himalayan studies—Sienna Craig, anthropology professor at Dartmouth College, and Sara Shneiderman, associate professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia, to explore movement, mobility, and connection to place in the Himalayas across multiple scales—from the aging body to the displaced community. This panel discussion is part of the Liu Institute's lecture series Global Affairs from the Top of the World: Himalayan Asia Today, which is cosponsored by the Liu Institute's South Asia Group. Brunch will be served. Craig and Shneiderman will participate in the workshop that follows the panel discussion and the link to that event can be found HERE.Sienna Craig is the Orvil Dryfoos Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She has been conducting ethnographic and public-health oriented research with Himalayan and Tibetan communities between Nepal and North America for more than twenty-five years. A writer whose work spans multiple genres, she is the author, most recently, of The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan Lives between Nepal and New York (University of Washington Press, 2020). For the panel, Craig will present "Aging, Care, and Place: Himalayan Elders in an Era of Migration" ABSTRACT: In many places on this planet, we are getting older. Global population aging is increasing in intensity and the structures human communities have relied upon for generations to care for the elderly are cracking and shifting, for many reasons. This presentation emerges from more than two decades of research and relationship with people from Mustang, Nepal –including those who now live in urban Nepal and New York City. I describe preliminary fieldwork conducted in Summer 2023, toward a longer-term comparative and collaborative project that asks: How do individuals, families, communities, and institutions adapt to demographic and socioeconomic changes to allow people to age in a culturally appropriate manner? This work recognize that elder care, support, and wellbeing are crucial issues that require creative responses at times when education and labor-driven migration, climate change induced displacement, and political marginalization will continue to impact the viability of Himalayan communities and shape the lives of their diasporic counterparts. Current and future research aims to contribute to an anthropology of aging and the discipline’s burgeoning concern with care by assessing what ‘successful’ aging means, how ‘aging in place’ is experienced in times of migration and displacement, and how the ‘inner architectures’ afforded by Buddhist concepts such as impermanence and interdependence intersect with the material conditions of rural life — including the homes that anchor people to place and lineage — within a broader context of migration and social change.Sara Shneiderman is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, where she co-leads the Himalaya Program and Disaster Resilience Research Network. She has been conducting ethnographic and policy-engaged research in the Himalaya and South Asia for over 25 years, and is the author of ":Rituals of Ethnicity: Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India" (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), along with many journal articles, most recently focusing on Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction. For the panel, Shneiderman will present "Anchoring Mobility, Embodying Risk: Houses as Intimate Infrastructure in Nepal’s Ongoing Transformation"ABSTRACT: How do we ground ourselves in the face of uncertainty? Drawing upon 25 years of research in several districts of rural Nepal, this presentation explores the relationships between people, their houses, and the landscapes in which they live to consider how we comprehend risk and plan for the future amidst radical change. In this photographically illustrated talk, I track how houses have served as an anchor through the social transformations wrought by political conflict and expanded mobility, as well as the environmental upheaval of the 2015 earthquakes and the accelerated infrastructural development that followed in conjunction with reconstruction. At the same time, houses are a bellwether of future risk, as people consider where and how to invest their material, emotional, and labour resources in building shelter, that most fundamental form of infrastructure. Yet all too often, scholarly and political discussions of housing for marginalized communities foreground its functionality at the expense of understanding houses as a site of creativity that bring people into intimate relation with both the terrain and state in which they live. Here, I take a holistic approach that sees both houses and the people who build them as embodied subjects in ongoing processes of transformation, whose ability to thrive in complex sociopolitical and natural environments is dependent upon a balance between structural stability and the capacity to change.Moderator Aidan Seale-Feldman, an assistant professor of anthropology at Notre Dame and a Liu Institute faculty fellow, is a medical anthropologist interested in affliction and its treatments. Grounded in ethnographic explorations of disaster, mental health, and mass hysteria, her research asks how to approach forms of affliction that are not bound within the individual but instead move across bodies, environments, and generations. Originally published at asia.nd.edu.
- 11:45 AM1h 15mWorkshop — “Complex Collaborations: Knowledge Production as Shared Practice”Workshop Abstract: What does it mean to design and implement collaborative research, particularly across the differences and inequalities inherent in complex multisited partnerships (international or otherwise)? How does collaborative writing get done in such contexts? Where do concepts of trans-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary scholarship intersect with and depart from inter-disciplinary efforts? How does collaboration intersect with a mixed-methods approach to research design? What are some of the unique possibilities and pitfalls related to language, positionality, and power dynamics that collaborative research among multiple, differently situated partners, can at once address and/or reinforce? What are some strategies that have proven useful in navigating the complexities of collaboration? This worksop will be guided by two anthropologists of the Himalaya — Sienna Craig and Sara Shneiderman — who have led and participated in a range of collaborative endeavors. This workshop invites participants to review one relevant article co-authored by each speaker, and come prepared to share their own example for discussion — in the form of a small case study, a core question, or a methodological approach. Register for workshop HERE This workshop follows the panel discussion "Mobility, Infrastructure, and Affective Worlds in and out of the Himalayas," and the link to the discussion event can be found HERE. Recommended reading:Aijazi, O., Amburgey, E., Limbu, B., Suji, M., Binks, J., Balaz-Munn, C., Rankin, K.Shneiderman, S. (2021). The Ethnography of Collaboration: Navigating Power Relationships inJoint Research. Collaborative Anthropologies 13(2), 56-99. doi:10.1353/cla.2021.0003 Childs, G., Craig, S., Dhakal, D.N., Donohue, M., & Hildebrandt, K. (2017). Narrating Disasterthrough Participatory Research: Perspectives from Post-Earthquake Nepal. CollaborativeAnthropologies 10(1), 207-236. doi:10.1353/cla.2017.0009Sienna Craig is the Orvil Dryfoos Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She has been conducting ethnographic and public-health oriented research with Himalayan and Tibetan communities between Nepal and North America for more than twenty-five years. A writer whose work spans multiple genres, she is the author, most recently, of The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan Lives between Nepal and New York (University of Washington Press, 2020). Sara Shneiderman is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, where she co-leads the Himalaya Program and Disaster Resilience Research Network. She has been conducting ethnographic and policy-engaged research in the Himalaya and South Asia for over 25 years, and is the author of Rituals of Ethnicity: Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), along with many journal articles, most recently focusing on Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction. Originally published at asia.nd.edu.
- 11:45 AM1h 15mWorkshop — “Complex Collaborations: Knowledge Production as Shared Practice”Workshop Abstract: What does it mean to design and implement collaborative research, particularly across the differences and inequalities inherent in complex multisited partnerships (international or otherwise)? How does collaborative writing get done in such contexts? Where do concepts of trans-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary scholarship intersect with and depart from inter-disciplinary efforts? How does collaboration intersect with a mixed-methods approach to research design? What are some of the unique possibilities and pitfalls related to language, positionality, and power dynamics that collaborative research among multiple, differently situated partners, can at once address and/or reinforce? What are some strategies that have proven useful in navigating the complexities of collaboration? This worksop will be guided by two anthropologists of the Himalaya — Sienna Craig and Sara Shneiderman — who have led and participated in a range of collaborative endeavors. This workshop invites participants to review one relevant article co-authored by each speaker, and come prepared to share their own example for discussion — in the form of a small case study, a core question, or a methodological approach. Register for workshop HERE This workshop follows the panel discussion "Mobility, Infrastructure, and Affective Worlds in and out of the Himalayas," and the link to the discussion event can be found HERE. Recommended reading:Aijazi, O., Amburgey, E., Limbu, B., Suji, M., Binks, J., Balaz-Munn, C., Rankin, K.Shneiderman, S. (2021). The Ethnography of Collaboration: Navigating Power Relationships inJoint Research. Collaborative Anthropologies 13(2), 56-99. doi:10.1353/cla.2021.0003 Childs, G., Craig, S., Dhakal, D.N., Donohue, M., & Hildebrandt, K. (2017). Narrating Disasterthrough Participatory Research: Perspectives from Post-Earthquake Nepal. CollaborativeAnthropologies 10(1), 207-236. doi:10.1353/cla.2017.0009Sienna Craig is the Orvil Dryfoos Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She has been conducting ethnographic and public-health oriented research with Himalayan and Tibetan communities between Nepal and North America for more than twenty-five years. A writer whose work spans multiple genres, she is the author, most recently, of The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan Lives between Nepal and New York (University of Washington Press, 2020). Sara Shneiderman is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, where she co-leads the Himalaya Program and Disaster Resilience Research Network. She has been conducting ethnographic and policy-engaged research in the Himalaya and South Asia for over 25 years, and is the author of Rituals of Ethnicity: Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), along with many journal articles, most recently focusing on Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction. Originally published at asia.nd.edu.
- 11:45 AM1h 15mWorkshop — “Complex Collaborations: Knowledge Production as Shared Practice”Workshop Abstract: What does it mean to design and implement collaborative research, particularly across the differences and inequalities inherent in complex multisited partnerships (international or otherwise)? How does collaborative writing get done in such contexts? Where do concepts of trans-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary scholarship intersect with and depart from inter-disciplinary efforts? How does collaboration intersect with a mixed-methods approach to research design? What are some of the unique possibilities and pitfalls related to language, positionality, and power dynamics that collaborative research among multiple, differently situated partners, can at once address and/or reinforce? What are some strategies that have proven useful in navigating the complexities of collaboration? This worksop will be guided by two anthropologists of the Himalaya — Sienna Craig and Sara Shneiderman — who have led and participated in a range of collaborative endeavors. This workshop invites participants to review one relevant article co-authored by each speaker, and come prepared to share their own example for discussion — in the form of a small case study, a core question, or a methodological approach. Register for workshop HERE This workshop follows the panel discussion "Mobility, Infrastructure, and Affective Worlds in and out of the Himalayas," and the link to the discussion event can be found HERE. Recommended reading:Aijazi, O., Amburgey, E., Limbu, B., Suji, M., Binks, J., Balaz-Munn, C., Rankin, K.Shneiderman, S. (2021). The Ethnography of Collaboration: Navigating Power Relationships inJoint Research. Collaborative Anthropologies 13(2), 56-99. doi:10.1353/cla.2021.0003 Childs, G., Craig, S., Dhakal, D.N., Donohue, M., & Hildebrandt, K. (2017). Narrating Disasterthrough Participatory Research: Perspectives from Post-Earthquake Nepal. CollaborativeAnthropologies 10(1), 207-236. doi:10.1353/cla.2017.0009Sienna Craig is the Orvil Dryfoos Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She has been conducting ethnographic and public-health oriented research with Himalayan and Tibetan communities between Nepal and North America for more than twenty-five years. A writer whose work spans multiple genres, she is the author, most recently, of The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan Lives between Nepal and New York (University of Washington Press, 2020). Sara Shneiderman is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, where she co-leads the Himalaya Program and Disaster Resilience Research Network. She has been conducting ethnographic and policy-engaged research in the Himalaya and South Asia for over 25 years, and is the author of Rituals of Ethnicity: Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), along with many journal articles, most recently focusing on Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction. Originally published at asia.nd.edu.
- 11:45 AM1h 15mWorkshop — “Complex Collaborations: Knowledge Production as Shared Practice”Workshop Abstract: What does it mean to design and implement collaborative research, particularly across the differences and inequalities inherent in complex multisited partnerships (international or otherwise)? How does collaborative writing get done in such contexts? Where do concepts of trans-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary scholarship intersect with and depart from inter-disciplinary efforts? How does collaboration intersect with a mixed-methods approach to research design? What are some of the unique possibilities and pitfalls related to language, positionality, and power dynamics that collaborative research among multiple, differently situated partners, can at once address and/or reinforce? What are some strategies that have proven useful in navigating the complexities of collaboration? This worksop will be guided by two anthropologists of the Himalaya — Sienna Craig and Sara Shneiderman — who have led and participated in a range of collaborative endeavors. This workshop invites participants to review one relevant article co-authored by each speaker, and come prepared to share their own example for discussion — in the form of a small case study, a core question, or a methodological approach. Register for workshop HERE This workshop follows the panel discussion "Mobility, Infrastructure, and Affective Worlds in and out of the Himalayas," and the link to the discussion event can be found HERE. Recommended reading:Aijazi, O., Amburgey, E., Limbu, B., Suji, M., Binks, J., Balaz-Munn, C., Rankin, K.Shneiderman, S. (2021). The Ethnography of Collaboration: Navigating Power Relationships inJoint Research. Collaborative Anthropologies 13(2), 56-99. doi:10.1353/cla.2021.0003 Childs, G., Craig, S., Dhakal, D.N., Donohue, M., & Hildebrandt, K. (2017). Narrating Disasterthrough Participatory Research: Perspectives from Post-Earthquake Nepal. CollaborativeAnthropologies 10(1), 207-236. doi:10.1353/cla.2017.0009Sienna Craig is the Orvil Dryfoos Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She has been conducting ethnographic and public-health oriented research with Himalayan and Tibetan communities between Nepal and North America for more than twenty-five years. A writer whose work spans multiple genres, she is the author, most recently, of The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan Lives between Nepal and New York (University of Washington Press, 2020). Sara Shneiderman is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, where she co-leads the Himalaya Program and Disaster Resilience Research Network. She has been conducting ethnographic and policy-engaged research in the Himalaya and South Asia for over 25 years, and is the author of Rituals of Ethnicity: Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), along with many journal articles, most recently focusing on Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction. Originally published at asia.nd.edu.
- 12:00 PM1hSigns of the Times Series — South Bend Mayor James Mueller: "Sustainability for the Future"The Signs of the Times series connects campus to community experts around justice topics. The theme for the 2023-24 series is "Poverty and Power."For October's "Signs of the Times" lecture, we will be hosting James Mueller, Mayor of South Bend, Indiana.Originally posted at socialconcerns.nd.edu.
- 12:00 PM1hSigns of the Times Series — South Bend Mayor James Mueller: "Sustainability for the Future"The Signs of the Times series connects campus to community experts around justice topics. The theme for the 2023-24 series is "Poverty and Power."For October's "Signs of the Times" lecture, we will be hosting James Mueller, Mayor of South Bend, Indiana.Originally posted at socialconcerns.nd.edu.
- 12:00 PM1hSigns of the Times Series — South Bend Mayor James Mueller: "Sustainability for the Future"The Signs of the Times series connects campus to community experts around justice topics. The theme for the 2023-24 series is "Poverty and Power."For October's "Signs of the Times" lecture, we will be hosting James Mueller, Mayor of South Bend, Indiana.Originally posted at socialconcerns.nd.edu.
- 12:00 PM1hSigns of the Times Series — South Bend Mayor James Mueller: "Sustainability for the Future"The Signs of the Times series connects campus to community experts around justice topics. The theme for the 2023-24 series is "Poverty and Power."For October's "Signs of the Times" lecture, we will be hosting James Mueller, Mayor of South Bend, Indiana.Originally posted at socialconcerns.nd.edu.
- 12:00 PM1hSt. Francis Week, Sign of the Times: Sustainability for the FutureSouth Bend Mayor James Mueller will be on campus to discuss intersections of community, justice, and sustainability in the region. Be sure to bring your lunch!Hosted by the Center for Social Concerns
- 12:30 PM1hDecolonizing Scholarship Lecture Series: "The Possibilities and Limits of Decolonizing Anthropology: Ethics, Methods, and Blind Spots"Join the Nanovic Institute as it continues its series on Decolonizing Scholarship with a lecture titled "The Possibilities and Limits of Decolonizing Anthropology: Ethics, Methods, and Blind Spots." All Notre Dame faculty, staff, and students are invited to join us for this lunch-time lecture advancing the ongoing scholarly dialogue of this series. About the Speaker Nitzan Shoshan is a cultural anthropologist and professor at the Centro de Estudios Sociológicos at El Colegio de México in Mexico City. His work has focused on nationalism, populism, and right-wing extremism in Germany and beyond, on urban politics and governance in Berlin and Mexico City, and more recently on political conflict in Latin America. His prize-winning book The Management of Hate: Nation, Affect, and the Governance of Right-Wing Extremism in Germany (Princeton University Press, 2016) is an ethnographic study of young nationalists in Berlin’s eastern peripheries. Shoshan has written on the ethics of ethnographic research, on the politics of hate and Islamophobia in Europe, on post-Fordist affect and the temporality of loss, and on urban activism and the semiotics of the cityscape, among other topics. His most recent projects have examined notions of Heimat (home, homeland) in German nationalism and political polarization in Mexico. About the Series The Nanovic Institute, with its strategic emphasis on “peripheries” and de-centering the center, is committed to fostering research and teaching that presents European studies in a new light. The Nanovic Institute is pleased to announce our fall 2023 lecture series, Decolonizing Scholarship. This series will feature scholars from various academic disciplines at the top of their fields engaging issues in disciplines including Philosophy, Theology, French and Francophone Studies, Ethnic Studies, and more. Attend the Event This event is free and open to the public. Lunch will be available on a first-come, first-served basis starting 30 minutes before the lecture (at noon). Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1hDecolonizing Scholarship Lecture Series: "The Possibilities and Limits of Decolonizing Anthropology: Ethics, Methods, and Blind Spots"Join the Nanovic Institute as it continues its series on Decolonizing Scholarship with a lecture titled "The Possibilities and Limits of Decolonizing Anthropology: Ethics, Methods, and Blind Spots." All Notre Dame faculty, staff, and students are invited to join us for this lunch-time lecture advancing the ongoing scholarly dialogue of this series. About the Speaker Nitzan Shoshan is a cultural anthropologist and professor at the Centro de Estudios Sociológicos at El Colegio de México in Mexico City. His work has focused on nationalism, populism, and right-wing extremism in Germany and beyond, on urban politics and governance in Berlin and Mexico City, and more recently on political conflict in Latin America. His prize-winning book The Management of Hate: Nation, Affect, and the Governance of Right-Wing Extremism in Germany (Princeton University Press, 2016) is an ethnographic study of young nationalists in Berlin’s eastern peripheries. Shoshan has written on the ethics of ethnographic research, on the politics of hate and Islamophobia in Europe, on post-Fordist affect and the temporality of loss, and on urban activism and the semiotics of the cityscape, among other topics. His most recent projects have examined notions of Heimat (home, homeland) in German nationalism and political polarization in Mexico. About the Series The Nanovic Institute, with its strategic emphasis on “peripheries” and de-centering the center, is committed to fostering research and teaching that presents European studies in a new light. The Nanovic Institute is pleased to announce our fall 2023 lecture series, Decolonizing Scholarship. This series will feature scholars from various academic disciplines at the top of their fields engaging issues in disciplines including Philosophy, Theology, French and Francophone Studies, Ethnic Studies, and more. Attend the Event This event is free and open to the public. Lunch will be available on a first-come, first-served basis starting 30 minutes before the lecture (at noon). Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1hDecolonizing Scholarship Lecture Series: "The Possibilities and Limits of Decolonizing Anthropology: Ethics, Methods, and Blind Spots"Join the Nanovic Institute as it continues its series on Decolonizing Scholarship with a lecture titled "The Possibilities and Limits of Decolonizing Anthropology: Ethics, Methods, and Blind Spots." All Notre Dame faculty, staff, and students are invited to join us for this lunch-time lecture advancing the ongoing scholarly dialogue of this series. About the Speaker Nitzan Shoshan is a cultural anthropologist and professor at the Centro de Estudios Sociológicos at El Colegio de México in Mexico City. His work has focused on nationalism, populism, and right-wing extremism in Germany and beyond, on urban politics and governance in Berlin and Mexico City, and more recently on political conflict in Latin America. His prize-winning book The Management of Hate: Nation, Affect, and the Governance of Right-Wing Extremism in Germany (Princeton University Press, 2016) is an ethnographic study of young nationalists in Berlin’s eastern peripheries. Shoshan has written on the ethics of ethnographic research, on the politics of hate and Islamophobia in Europe, on post-Fordist affect and the temporality of loss, and on urban activism and the semiotics of the cityscape, among other topics. His most recent projects have examined notions of Heimat (home, homeland) in German nationalism and political polarization in Mexico. About the Series The Nanovic Institute, with its strategic emphasis on “peripheries” and de-centering the center, is committed to fostering research and teaching that presents European studies in a new light. The Nanovic Institute is pleased to announce our fall 2023 lecture series, Decolonizing Scholarship. This series will feature scholars from various academic disciplines at the top of their fields engaging issues in disciplines including Philosophy, Theology, French and Francophone Studies, Ethnic Studies, and more. Attend the Event This event is free and open to the public. Lunch will be available on a first-come, first-served basis starting 30 minutes before the lecture (at noon). Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1hDecolonizing Scholarship Lecture Series: "The Possibilities and Limits of Decolonizing Anthropology: Ethics, Methods, and Blind Spots"Join the Nanovic Institute as it continues its series on Decolonizing Scholarship with a lecture titled "The Possibilities and Limits of Decolonizing Anthropology: Ethics, Methods, and Blind Spots." All Notre Dame faculty, staff, and students are invited to join us for this lunch-time lecture advancing the ongoing scholarly dialogue of this series. About the Speaker Nitzan Shoshan is a cultural anthropologist and professor at the Centro de Estudios Sociológicos at El Colegio de México in Mexico City. His work has focused on nationalism, populism, and right-wing extremism in Germany and beyond, on urban politics and governance in Berlin and Mexico City, and more recently on political conflict in Latin America. His prize-winning book The Management of Hate: Nation, Affect, and the Governance of Right-Wing Extremism in Germany (Princeton University Press, 2016) is an ethnographic study of young nationalists in Berlin’s eastern peripheries. Shoshan has written on the ethics of ethnographic research, on the politics of hate and Islamophobia in Europe, on post-Fordist affect and the temporality of loss, and on urban activism and the semiotics of the cityscape, among other topics. His most recent projects have examined notions of Heimat (home, homeland) in German nationalism and political polarization in Mexico. About the Series The Nanovic Institute, with its strategic emphasis on “peripheries” and de-centering the center, is committed to fostering research and teaching that presents European studies in a new light. The Nanovic Institute is pleased to announce our fall 2023 lecture series, Decolonizing Scholarship. This series will feature scholars from various academic disciplines at the top of their fields engaging issues in disciplines including Philosophy, Theology, French and Francophone Studies, Ethnic Studies, and more. Attend the Event This event is free and open to the public. Lunch will be available on a first-come, first-served basis starting 30 minutes before the lecture (at noon). Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1hLecture/Discussion: "Cancer Alley"Building an Anti-Racist Vocabulary Join the Klau Institute for Civil and Human Rights as Devin Lowell, Pam Spees, and their clients discuss “Cancer Alley,” a locale where residents, primarily Black Americans, face substantially higher rates of cancer and other adverse health outcomes than their peers. Lowell is with the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic. In private practice he has litigated a variety of complex matters in both state and federal court, including environmental damage claims, workplace asbestos injuries, pharmaceutical product liability, and consumer class actions. Spees is a senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights. Her work focuses on addressing gender-based violence, persecution on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity, and the support of environmental justice movements and the right to protest. Building an Anti-Racist Vocabulary is a weekly lecture series presenting preeminent scholars, thought leaders, and public intellectuals to guide our community through topics necessary to a deeper understanding of systemic racism and racial justice. Lectures are available to the Notre Dame community via Zoom. Registration with a valid nd.edu or alumni.nd.edu is required. Register for the series here Originally published at klau.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1hLecture/Discussion: "Cancer Alley"Building an Anti-Racist Vocabulary Join the Klau Institute for Civil and Human Rights as Devin Lowell, Pam Spees, and their clients discuss “Cancer Alley,” a locale where residents, primarily Black Americans, face substantially higher rates of cancer and other adverse health outcomes than their peers. Lowell is with the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic. In private practice he has litigated a variety of complex matters in both state and federal court, including environmental damage claims, workplace asbestos injuries, pharmaceutical product liability, and consumer class actions. Spees is a senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights. Her work focuses on addressing gender-based violence, persecution on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity, and the support of environmental justice movements and the right to protest. Building an Anti-Racist Vocabulary is a weekly lecture series presenting preeminent scholars, thought leaders, and public intellectuals to guide our community through topics necessary to a deeper understanding of systemic racism and racial justice. Lectures are available to the Notre Dame community via Zoom. Registration with a valid nd.edu or alumni.nd.edu is required. Register for the series here Originally published at klau.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1hLecture/Discussion: "Cancer Alley"Building an Anti-Racist Vocabulary Join the Klau Institute for Civil and Human Rights as Devin Lowell, Pam Spees, and their clients discuss “Cancer Alley,” a locale where residents, primarily Black Americans, face substantially higher rates of cancer and other adverse health outcomes than their peers. Lowell is with the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic. In private practice he has litigated a variety of complex matters in both state and federal court, including environmental damage claims, workplace asbestos injuries, pharmaceutical product liability, and consumer class actions. Spees is a senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights. Her work focuses on addressing gender-based violence, persecution on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity, and the support of environmental justice movements and the right to protest. Building an Anti-Racist Vocabulary is a weekly lecture series presenting preeminent scholars, thought leaders, and public intellectuals to guide our community through topics necessary to a deeper understanding of systemic racism and racial justice. Lectures are available to the Notre Dame community via Zoom. Registration with a valid nd.edu or alumni.nd.edu is required. Register for the series here Originally published at klau.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1hLecture/Discussion: "Cancer Alley"Building an Anti-Racist Vocabulary Join the Klau Institute for Civil and Human Rights as Devin Lowell, Pam Spees, and their clients discuss “Cancer Alley,” a locale where residents, primarily Black Americans, face substantially higher rates of cancer and other adverse health outcomes than their peers. Lowell is with the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic. In private practice he has litigated a variety of complex matters in both state and federal court, including environmental damage claims, workplace asbestos injuries, pharmaceutical product liability, and consumer class actions. Spees is a senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights. Her work focuses on addressing gender-based violence, persecution on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity, and the support of environmental justice movements and the right to protest. Building an Anti-Racist Vocabulary is a weekly lecture series presenting preeminent scholars, thought leaders, and public intellectuals to guide our community through topics necessary to a deeper understanding of systemic racism and racial justice. Lectures are available to the Notre Dame community via Zoom. Registration with a valid nd.edu or alumni.nd.edu is required. Register for the series here Originally published at klau.nd.edu.
- 7:00 PM2hHymn Festival of Healing and HopeND Children's Choir is delighted to once again join Christ the King Lutheran Church in supporting mental health ministries in their annual Hymn Festival of Healing and Hope. The Chamber, Seraphim and Liturgical Choirs will perform hymns with CTKLC music ensembles and a local choir. All are invited to this free family-friendly event. https://ctkluth.com/event/hymn-festival-of-healing-and-hope/ Originally published at sma.nd.edu.
- 7:00 PM2hHymn Festival of Healing and HopeND Children's Choir is delighted to once again join Christ the King Lutheran Church in supporting mental health ministries in their annual Hymn Festival of Healing and Hope. The Chamber, Seraphim and Liturgical Choirs will perform hymns with CTKLC music ensembles and a local choir. All are invited to this free family-friendly event. https://ctkluth.com/event/hymn-festival-of-healing-and-hope/ Originally published at sma.nd.edu.
- 7:00 PM2hHymn Festival of Healing and HopeND Children's Choir is delighted to once again join Christ the King Lutheran Church in supporting mental health ministries in their annual Hymn Festival of Healing and Hope. The Chamber, Seraphim and Liturgical Choirs will perform hymns with CTKLC music ensembles and a local choir. All are invited to this free family-friendly event. https://ctkluth.com/event/hymn-festival-of-healing-and-hope/ Originally published at sma.nd.edu.
- 7:00 PM2hHymn Festival of Healing and HopeND Children's Choir is delighted to once again join Christ the King Lutheran Church in supporting mental health ministries in their annual Hymn Festival of Healing and Hope. The Chamber, Seraphim and Liturgical Choirs will perform hymns with CTKLC music ensembles and a local choir. All are invited to this free family-friendly event. https://ctkluth.com/event/hymn-festival-of-healing-and-hope/ Originally published at sma.nd.edu.
- 7:00 PM2hHymn Festival of Healing and HopeND Children's Choir is delighted to once again join Christ the King Lutheran Church in supporting mental health ministries in their annual Hymn Festival of Healing and Hope. The Chamber, Seraphim and Liturgical Choirs will perform hymns with CTKLC music ensembles and a local choir. All are invited to this free family-friendly event. https://ctkluth.com/event/hymn-festival-of-healing-and-hope/ Originally published at sma.nd.edu.
- 8:30 PM1hFall Concert: Notre Dame Symphony OrchestraNDSO presents its early fall concert preceded by a chamber music reception. The program will include Beethoven’s ebullient Symphony No. 4. For tickets call 574-631-2800 or visit performingarts.nd.edu. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- 8:30 PM1hFall Concert: Notre Dame Symphony OrchestraNDSO presents its early fall concert preceded by a chamber music reception. The program will include Beethoven’s ebullient Symphony No. 4. For tickets call 574-631-2800 or visit performingarts.nd.edu. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- 8:30 PM1hFall Concert: Notre Dame Symphony OrchestraNDSO presents its early fall concert preceded by a chamber music reception. The program will include Beethoven’s ebullient Symphony No. 4. For tickets call 574-631-2800 or visit performingarts.nd.edu. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- 8:30 PM1hFall Concert: Notre Dame Symphony OrchestraNDSO presents its early fall concert preceded by a chamber music reception. The program will include Beethoven’s ebullient Symphony No. 4. For tickets call 574-631-2800 or visit performingarts.nd.edu. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- 8:30 PM1hFall Concert: Notre Dame Symphony OrchestraNDSO presents its early fall concert preceded by a chamber music reception. The program will include Beethoven’s ebullient Symphony No. 4. For tickets call 574-631-2800 or visit performingarts.nd.edu. Originally published at music.nd.edu.