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Tuesday, April 22, 2025
- 3:30 PM1hExhibit Tour – "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture"Meet and speak with curators of the spring exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic studies librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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.
- 3:30 PM1hExhibit Tour – "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture"Meet and speak with curators of the spring exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic studies librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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.
- 3:30 PM1hExhibit Tour – "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture"Meet and speak with curators of the spring exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic studies librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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.
- 3:30 PM1hExhibit Tour – "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture"Meet and speak with curators of the spring exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic studies librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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.
- 4:00 PM1h 30mLecture—"The Politics of Not Speaking: Thinking the Political as Logoclasm"According to a common conception, politics is based on discussion and debate, the exchange of ideas, and rational argumentation, i.e., “logos.” Based on an analysis of the weaponization of antisemitism and other issues, Elad Lapidot, professor for Hebraic Studies at the University of Lille, France, will argue that contemporary political thought is just as importantly premised on the opposite conception: that politics is based not on speaking, but on the suspension of conversation, on the break of rational discourse — on “logoclasm,” or the politics of not speaking. Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.
- 4:00 PM1h 30mLecture—"The Politics of Not Speaking: Thinking the Political as Logoclasm"According to a common conception, politics is based on discussion and debate, the exchange of ideas, and rational argumentation, i.e., “logos.” Based on an analysis of the weaponization of antisemitism and other issues, Elad Lapidot, professor for Hebraic Studies at the University of Lille, France, will argue that contemporary political thought is just as importantly premised on the opposite conception: that politics is based not on speaking, but on the suspension of conversation, on the break of rational discourse — on “logoclasm,” or the politics of not speaking. Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.
- 4:00 PM1h 30mLecture—"The Politics of Not Speaking: Thinking the Political as Logoclasm"According to a common conception, politics is based on discussion and debate, the exchange of ideas, and rational argumentation, i.e., “logos.” Based on an analysis of the weaponization of antisemitism and other issues, Elad Lapidot, professor for Hebraic Studies at the University of Lille, France, will argue that contemporary political thought is just as importantly premised on the opposite conception: that politics is based not on speaking, but on the suspension of conversation, on the break of rational discourse — on “logoclasm,” or the politics of not speaking. Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.
- 4:00 PM1h 30mLecture—"The Politics of Not Speaking: Thinking the Political as Logoclasm"According to a common conception, politics is based on discussion and debate, the exchange of ideas, and rational argumentation, i.e., “logos.” Based on an analysis of the weaponization of antisemitism and other issues, Elad Lapidot, professor for Hebraic Studies at the University of Lille, France, will argue that contemporary political thought is just as importantly premised on the opposite conception: that politics is based not on speaking, but on the suspension of conversation, on the break of rational discourse — on “logoclasm,” or the politics of not speaking. Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.
- 4:30 PM1hYom HaShoah Program to Commemorate the Victims of HolocaustIn honor of Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), Anne Slovin, soprano, University of Notre Dame, and Jason Gresl, clarinet, instructor at Saint Mary's College, will perform I Never Saw Another Butterfly by Lori Laitman. This piece features musical settings of texts by children living in the Theresienstadt ghetto. Following the performance, a discussion on the spiritual resistance of the arts during the Shoah will be led by Philip B. Bohlman (Ludwig Rosenberger Distinguished Service Professor in Jewish History, Music and Humanities, University of Chicago) and Nicolette van den Bogerd (Postdoctoral scholar in Jewish Studies, Indiana University). This program is generously supported in part by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment, the Nanovic Institute for European Studies and the Sacred Music Program. It is being held in conjunction with the spring Rare Books and Special Collection exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, Curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic Studies Librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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, faculty, staff, postdocs, alumni, friends, and the pulbic.
- 4:30 PM1hYom HaShoah Program to Commemorate the Victims of HolocaustIn honor of Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), Anne Slovin, soprano, University of Notre Dame, and Jason Gresl, clarinet, instructor at Saint Mary's College, will perform I Never Saw Another Butterfly by Lori Laitman. This piece features musical settings of texts by children living in the Theresienstadt ghetto. Following the performance, a discussion on the spiritual resistance of the arts during the Shoah will be led by Philip B. Bohlman (Ludwig Rosenberger Distinguished Service Professor in Jewish History, Music and Humanities, University of Chicago) and Nicolette van den Bogerd (Postdoctoral scholar in Jewish Studies, Indiana University). This program is generously supported in part by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment, the Nanovic Institute for European Studies and the Sacred Music Program. It is being held in conjunction with the spring Rare Books and Special Collection exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, Curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic Studies Librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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, faculty, staff, postdocs, alumni, friends, and the pulbic.
- 4:30 PM1hYom HaShoah Program to Commemorate the Victims of HolocaustIn honor of Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), Anne Slovin, soprano, University of Notre Dame, and Jason Gresl, clarinet, instructor at Saint Mary's College, will perform I Never Saw Another Butterfly by Lori Laitman. This piece features musical settings of texts by children living in the Theresienstadt ghetto. Following the performance, a discussion on the spiritual resistance of the arts during the Shoah will be led by Philip B. Bohlman (Ludwig Rosenberger Distinguished Service Professor in Jewish History, Music and Humanities, University of Chicago) and Nicolette van den Bogerd (Postdoctoral scholar in Jewish Studies, Indiana University). This program is generously supported in part by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment, the Nanovic Institute for European Studies and the Sacred Music Program. It is being held in conjunction with the spring Rare Books and Special Collection exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, Curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic Studies Librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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, faculty, staff, postdocs, alumni, friends, and the pulbic.
- 4:30 PM1hYom HaShoah Program to Commemorate the Victims of HolocaustIn honor of Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), Anne Slovin, soprano, University of Notre Dame, and Jason Gresl, clarinet, instructor at Saint Mary's College, will perform I Never Saw Another Butterfly by Lori Laitman. This piece features musical settings of texts by children living in the Theresienstadt ghetto. Following the performance, a discussion on the spiritual resistance of the arts during the Shoah will be led by Philip B. Bohlman (Ludwig Rosenberger Distinguished Service Professor in Jewish History, Music and Humanities, University of Chicago) and Nicolette van den Bogerd (Postdoctoral scholar in Jewish Studies, Indiana University). This program is generously supported in part by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment, the Nanovic Institute for European Studies and the Sacred Music Program. It is being held in conjunction with the spring Rare Books and Special Collection exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, Curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic Studies Librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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, faculty, staff, postdocs, alumni, friends, and the pulbic.
- 4:30 PM1hYom HaShoah Program to Commemorate the Victims of HolocaustIn honor of Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), Anne Slovin, soprano, University of Notre Dame, and Jason Gresl, clarinet, instructor at Saint Mary's College, will perform I Never Saw Another Butterfly by Lori Laitman. This piece features musical settings of texts by children living in the Theresienstadt ghetto. Following the performance, a discussion on the spiritual resistance of the arts during the Shoah will be led by Philip B. Bohlman (Ludwig Rosenberger Distinguished Service Professor in Jewish History, Music and Humanities, University of Chicago) and Nicolette van den Bogerd (Postdoctoral scholar in Jewish Studies, Indiana University). This program is generously supported in part by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment, the Nanovic Institute for European Studies and the Sacred Music Program. It is being held in conjunction with the spring Rare Books and Special Collection exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, Curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic Studies Librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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, faculty, staff, postdocs, alumni, friends, and the pulbic.
- 4:30 PM1hYom HaShoah Program to Commemorate the Victims of HolocaustIn honor of Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), Anne Slovin, soprano, University of Notre Dame, and Jason Gresl, clarinet, instructor at Saint Mary's College, will perform I Never Saw Another Butterfly by Lori Laitman. This piece features musical settings of texts by children living in the Theresienstadt ghetto. Following the performance, a discussion on the spiritual resistance of the arts during the Shoah will be led by Philip B. Bohlman (Ludwig Rosenberger Distinguished Service Professor in Jewish History, Music and Humanities, University of Chicago) and Nicolette van den Bogerd (Postdoctoral scholar in Jewish Studies, Indiana University). This program is generously supported in part by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment, the Nanovic Institute for European Studies and the Sacred Music Program. It is being held in conjunction with the spring Rare Books and Special Collection exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." About the Exhibit This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-1945) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books and Special Collections. It showcases over forty works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, Curator, Rare Books & Special Collections, Jean McManus, Catholic Studies Librarian, University Archives, and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, 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, faculty, staff, postdocs, alumni, friends, and the pulbic.
- 5:00 PM2hArt History SymposiumThe Department of Art, Art History & Design presents the annual Art History Symposium. Serene Wu and Sofia D'Agostino will present their research from their honors theses, followed by a keynote address by Megan Sullivan from the University of Chicago. Her talk, titled "Versions of the Popular: Modernist Painting, Traditional Craft, and Beyond in 20th-Century Peru," will explore artistic traditions in Peru during the 20th century. The formation of a practice of modern painting in early-20th century Peru went hand-in-hand with the creation of a canon of "popular art" formed from selections of regional craft practices. The lecture explores the tense relationship between "high" and "low" that resulted from these parallel constructions, its eventual breakdown in the 1970s, and the reformulations of the idea of the "popular" that followed in the wake of that collapse. Originally published at artdept.nd.edu.
- 5:00 PM2hArt History SymposiumThe Department of Art, Art History & Design presents the annual Art History Symposium. Serene Wu and Sofia D'Agostino will present their research from their honors theses, followed by a keynote address by Megan Sullivan from the University of Chicago. Her talk, titled "Versions of the Popular: Modernist Painting, Traditional Craft, and Beyond in 20th-Century Peru," will explore artistic traditions in Peru during the 20th century. The formation of a practice of modern painting in early-20th century Peru went hand-in-hand with the creation of a canon of "popular art" formed from selections of regional craft practices. The lecture explores the tense relationship between "high" and "low" that resulted from these parallel constructions, its eventual breakdown in the 1970s, and the reformulations of the idea of the "popular" that followed in the wake of that collapse. Originally published at artdept.nd.edu.
- 5:00 PM2hArt History SymposiumThe Department of Art, Art History & Design presents the annual Art History Symposium. Serene Wu and Sofia D'Agostino will present their research from their honors theses, followed by a keynote address by Megan Sullivan from the University of Chicago. Her talk, titled "Versions of the Popular: Modernist Painting, Traditional Craft, and Beyond in 20th-Century Peru," will explore artistic traditions in Peru during the 20th century. The formation of a practice of modern painting in early-20th century Peru went hand-in-hand with the creation of a canon of "popular art" formed from selections of regional craft practices. The lecture explores the tense relationship between "high" and "low" that resulted from these parallel constructions, its eventual breakdown in the 1970s, and the reformulations of the idea of the "popular" that followed in the wake of that collapse. Originally published at artdept.nd.edu.
- 5:00 PM2hArt History SymposiumThe Department of Art, Art History & Design presents the annual Art History Symposium. Serene Wu and Sofia D'Agostino will present their research from their honors theses, followed by a keynote address by Megan Sullivan from the University of Chicago. Her talk, titled "Versions of the Popular: Modernist Painting, Traditional Craft, and Beyond in 20th-Century Peru," will explore artistic traditions in Peru during the 20th century. The formation of a practice of modern painting in early-20th century Peru went hand-in-hand with the creation of a canon of "popular art" formed from selections of regional craft practices. The lecture explores the tense relationship between "high" and "low" that resulted from these parallel constructions, its eventual breakdown in the 1970s, and the reformulations of the idea of the "popular" that followed in the wake of that collapse. Originally published at artdept.nd.edu.