More from Today's Events
- Oct 259:00 AMCM Staff Prayer - Please join when your schedule permitsWhat: Campus Ministry Staff Prayer Description: Please join in this staff prayer when your schedule permits. When: Tuesday Morning from 9 AM - 9:30 AM Where: CoMo Chapel
- Nov 19:00 AMCM Staff Prayer - Please join when your schedule permitsWhat: Campus Ministry Staff Prayer Description: Please join in this staff prayer when your schedule permits. When: Tuesday Morning from 9 AM - 9:30 AM Where: CoMo Chapel
- Apr 13All dayWellness and Resilience Program (aka Penn Resilience Program at Notre Dame) Student Section E *requires registration*The Penn Resilience Program (PRP) is a 6-session training that equips individuals with a set of empirically supported skills that can be applied in everyday life to strengthen the ability to navigate adversity and challenges, manage stress, and thrive in their personal and professional lives. PRP is not a treatment program; rather, it is a skills program that is designed to prevent anxiety and depression and to increase well-being. The PRP skill set draws from two fields in psychology: cognitive behavioral psychology and positive psychology. Register HereSee schedule for this offering below. All students are welcome to attend. Attendance at all sessions, especially Session #1 is advised, as subsequent sessions build upon previous material. Friday, 4/12 - 2:00pm - 5:00pm Saturday, 4/13 - 12:00pm - 3:00pm Sunday, 4/14 - 12:00 pm - 3:00pmYou do not need to use any other UCC service or attend a drop-in appointment to come to any workshop or support space.
- May 19:00 AMOPEN
- Apr 1310:00 AMMini-Conference: "Listening to Kafka"Paper Session 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m.Paper Session 2: 12:00 p.m.-1 p.m.Roundtable: 2 p.m.-3:30 p.m.Keynote Address: 4 p.m.-5:30 p.m. "Listening to Kafka at 100" attends to the sonic landscape of Kafka that has emerged in the century since his death. Despite his self-confessed unmusicality, Kafka's associations with sound, noise, and music have become the subject of recent scholarship. In addition to these sonic affiliations, Kafka’s voice continues to echo through art and literature, philosophy and psychology, theory and politics. The conference seeks not only to explore the sonic symptoms of modernity resonating in Kafka’s oeuvre, but to make audible echoes of the Kafkaesque that continue to reverberate throughout global culture, both high and low.There will be two panels of papers, and a keynote address given by Kata Gellen, associate professor of German studies and Jewish studies at Duke University. This mini-conference is free and open to the public. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- Nov 112:00 PMCM Staff lunch (optional) - All are welcome to bring lunch and enjoy some time together in 3rd floor break room