Sunday, January 26, 2025

Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, January 26, 2025

 

CONFERENCES  AND WORKSHOPS

Disability History Association Graduate Writing Workshop - Spring 2025

https://dishist.org/disability-history-writing-workshop/

The Disability History Association is seeking applications for our annual Disability History Graduate Writing Workshop (DHGWW). This workshop series is designed to support graduate students working on disability history and foster community in the field. The workshop provides participants with valuable feedback on their writing while also offering them a glimpse into the future directions of disability history. This DHGWW will consist of a series of monthly virtual meetings from February to June 2025. Participants will discuss pre-circulated papers during our sessions. Submissions may be conference papers, articles, chapters, or any other work-in-progress by graduate students in any stage of their MA or PhD. To apply for the workshop, please complete the form and upload a one page abstract through the form. Deadline for applications is February 1, 2025.

Questions can be directed to the DHA Director of Graduate Student Affairs, Ellie Kaplan, ekaplan@ucdavis.edu.

 

47th Annual Susman Graduate Conference 2025

https://history.sas.rutgers.edu/academics/graduate/susman-graduate-conference

We hope this email finds you well. The graduate students in the Department of History at Rutgers University invite proposals for the 47th Annual Warren Susman Graduate Conference, to be held on Friday, March 28, 2025. We seek papers and panels from graduate students in history and other disciplines that speak to this year’s theme Repression, Revolution, and Ruckus: Public Histories of Structural Violence and Resistance. Please see the attached Call for Papers for additional information. The submission deadline is February 1, 2025. Selected participants will be notified of their acceptance by mid-February.

Contact Email  susmanconf@history.rutgers.edu

 

Resistant, Resilient, and Resolute: Social Justice and Comics

https://comicsstudies.org/css-2025-call-for-papers/

Thursday, 10 July 2025 - Saturday, 12 July 2025, Michigan State University

We invite comics scholars from around the world to submit proposals for the 8th annual Comics Studies Society that engage in topics pertaining to the transformative potential of comics. We celebrate the resistance, resilience, and resolution demonstrated in the comic medium. As we approach the 60th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act, it’s a time to reflect on the progress made and the work that still lies ahead. We recognize that the revolution will be drawn and celebrate the artists, scholars, and communities that embrace the comic medium to do so. We celebrate an expanding literature in comic studies that highlights how those groups, often framed at the margin, have moved to the center of the cultural conversation.

Deadline: February 10th, 2025

Contact Email  comicsstudiesorg@gmail.com

 

(Re)Framing American Studies: Research, Art, & Praxis

https://newenglandasa.org/annual-conference/2025-neasa-conference/

The New England American Studies Association invites proposals for our 2025 Annual Conference titled “(Re)Framing American Studies: Research, Art, & Praxis in New England” held during August 5 and 6, 2025 at the Lunder Institute of American Art at Colby College in Waterville, Maine. With an “energy for the present”, we seek creative and scholarly abstracts that “metabolize” scholarship, history, and creative praxis that consider “tensions within diversity.” We seek papers that (re)frame these tensions within art, history, culture and society, and the US academy that “metabolize” the struggles of the past and present, considering the role of community in activating social, artistic, and political change.

For academic papers, please submit abstracts of approx. 250 words, brief participant bios, and five keywords to this form by Feb. 15, 2025.

Contact Email  Hannah.Haynes@mcla.edu

 

Traces and Places: Climatic Spaces/Changing Environments

https://iasesp.org/conferences/

Traces link place to space, present to past, and contemporary environments to future ecologies. By definition, traces are small, but they are not negligible. They house larger contexts, hold what is absent, and remain through rapid change. Trace, in its active verb form, delineates and sketches; those in architecture and design professions are well-acquainted with the many layers of trace paper—and today the many iterations of digital models—that a project engages. This interdisciplinary conference seeks to explore a wide range of questions related to this theme of traces and places. We invite papers from any discipline dealing with this theme.

The deadline for submitting an abstract is January 31, 2025. Please send questions and abstract submittals to Charlie Hailey (CLHAILEY@ufl.edu) and Elizabeth Cronin (EMCRONIN@ufl.edu).

 

Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies Graduate Conference

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20056894/university-new-mexico-17th-annual-comparative-literature-and-cultural

March 7, 2025 - March 8, 2025

We invite graduate students to offer new perspectives on the interchange between visibility, technology, and power in an increasingly digital world. We aim to explore the grids of vision and influence produced through media and technological platforms, and how such networks of technicity enforce, reinforce, or challenge hegemonic and ideological formations. By interrogating social responses to and integrations of technology, as well as its role in perpetuating or disrupting cultural hegemony, we seek to foster a deeper understanding of the mechanisms of power and collective trauma within global systems. We welcome papers from the fields of literary, cultural, cinema, visual, and emergent digital studies. Contributions that come from the disciplines of Philosophy, Classical Studies, History, Anthropology, and Political Science are equally welcome.

Submission deadline: 31 January 2025, 11:59PM

Contact Email  csconference.unm@unm.edu

 

Leveraging Legacies of Peacebuilding in a Precarious Time

https://www.peacejusticestudies.org/conference/2025-conference-call-for-papers/

OCTOBER 9-12, 2025 | Swarthmore, Pennsylvania

This year’s conference focuses on the theme of temporality and peacebuilding – we are interested in scholarship that traces the trajectories of peace-oriented social movements in the past and present. We are also envisioning the future of peacebuilding efforts, both locally and globally and seeking to illuminate the importance of intergenerational organizing, faith-based understandings of peace, and interdisciplinary approaches to studying conflict transformation.

Proposal Submission Deadline: May 1, 2025

For more information, contact info@peacejusticestudies.org

 

Frontiers before borders: Perceptions of boundaries, territory and space in the past and present

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20056392/frontiers-borders-perceptions-boundaries-territory-and-space-past-and

Friday, 11 July – Saturday, 12 July 2025, Trinity College, Dublin (virtual participation possible)

How have people constructed imaginary frontiers, boundaries or borders demarcating different geographical areas in the absence of formal political or administrative borders? Can cultural, social, and ethnic frontiers emerge on a geographical level within in the same political or administrative territory? Have there been, or are there examples of boundaries being constructed from below rather than by states? Have there been examples of cultural, social, political, ethnic and/or religious groups constructing territorial boundaries between themselves and others? Proposals for individual twenty-minute papers or for panels of no more than four twenty-minute papers are invited from disciplines including, but not limited to, geography, history, anthropology, sociology, political science, law and literature.

Abstracts of no more than 300 words, a biography of no more than 100 words, and a short bibliography are to be submitted to pduffy1@tcd.ie no later than 31 March 2025

URL: https://bsky.app/profile/frontiers2025.bsky.social

 

Disability Research as Disruptive Research

https://www.icadisability.com/2025/preconference-cfp

Boulder, Colorado, United States (and online) - June 10th, 2025

ICA 2025 invites us to critically review, disrupt, and consolidate the past, present, and futures of communication studies. Disability, media, and communication research is, of course, a vibrant field cutting across the swathe of communication and media studies. At the preconference, we view disability—a form of generative knowledge and embodiment—as an avenue for critical, disruptive, and consolidative work as it guides us ‘to think through, act, resist, relate, communicate, engage with one another against the hybridized forms of oppression and discrimination that so often do not speak singularly of disability’.

If interested, please submit a 300-word abstract of your research and a short statement of interest/biography on what you hope to get out of the preconference (maximum 200-words) by 15 Feb 2025.

Queries can be directed at icadisability@gmail.com.

 

PUBLICATIONS

The Future of Nonbinary

https://think.taylorandfrancis.com/special_issues/the-future-of-nonbinary/

This special issue addresses the emergent field of nonbinary studies, which currently finds itself at a critical juncture. Next to the more established and rigorous fields of gender studies and transgender studies, nonbinary studies remains under-theorised and open-ended. Despite the increasing visibility of nonbinary identities in media and culture, the term “nonbinary” risks becoming just another identity category, obscuring its potential for critical engagement. By bringing together a range of contributions across gender studies, media studies, and the arts, this special issue aspires to enrich and expand, not consolidate, the fast-evolving field of nonbinary studies and provoke fruitful discussions that envision a dynamic future for nonbinary as identity, informant, and inspiration.

For consideration, please email abstracts (250-300 words) and author bios (100 words) by 31 January 2025 to CQ Quinan (c.quinan@unimelb.edu.au) and Claude Kempen (c.kempen@unimelb.edu.au). 

 

The Post/Colonial Eye: Visual Discourses of Empire'

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20055700/updated-call-chapter-abstracts-postcolonial-eye-visual-discourses

The first section aims to explore the intersections of visual culture(s) and colonialism, and visual technologies and colonialism, analysing the significance of the visual for the British Empire. We invite contributions that address issues of representation and the self, visual communication between coloniser and colonised, visual technologies, visual subjectivities, forms of gazing, ethics of looking etc. The second section will focus on how these visual discourses have been and are complicated, challenged, appropriated or potentially reversed in decolonial and postcolonial visual discourse. We are currently looking for proposals for the second part of our edited collection that explores postcolonial visualities and visual discourses. Since we already have quite a few contributions focusing on the Indian subcontinent, we'd welcome a different geographical focus.

Please send an abstract of 250-300 words as well as a short biographical note of 100 words by 31 January 2025 to visualdiscoursesofempire@gmail.com.

 

Call for Guest Editors

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20055659/call-guest-editors-rejoinder

The Institute for Research on Women (IRW) at Rutgers University is seeking guest editors for the Spring 2026 issue of its online journal, Rejoinder (https://irw.rutgers.edu/rejoinder). Rejoinder features work at the intersection of scholarship and activism that reflects feminist/queer and social justice perspectives and is currently published once a year. Guest editors will be responsible for the overall shape of the issue, and Rejoinder staff will advise on the process. To be considered, please contact the editor-in-chief, Sarah Tobias, at stobias@rutgers.edu with a 2-page proposal that includes a draft theme for your issue (and your rationale for selecting it) and a draft call for submissions. Please also include a CV or short bio that describes prior editorial experience. Deadline: April 21, 2025.

 

Crimson Historical Review – undergraduate journal

The Crimson Historical Review at the University of Alabama is a nationally-acclaimed, highly selective, undergraduate historical research journal that is now accepting submissions for its fourteenth issue. Publishing with the CHR offers bright researchers a great opportunity to experience the rigors of the publication process in a supportive environment. If you have students who are doing original historical research that should be considered for publication, please consider sending them to the CHR at http://crimsonhistorical.ua.edu.

The deadline for submissions for the Spring 2025 issue is February 14, 2025.

Contact Email  mhlockwood@ua.edu

 

Feminist Art Practices and Research

https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/rfar20/about-this-journal

The journal Feminist Art Practices and Research. COSMOS is born out of a shared desire for other ways of seeing-feeling-thinking-making and attends to the potentials of entanglements with/in regenerative feminist art in its polivocal and capacious possible configurations. It imagines cosmologies interfacing multitudes of positions, alliances, and positionalities,interrupting the logics of hetero-patriarchy, (neo)colonialism and coloniality, and racialised capitalism. The journal is a work of speculation, re-casting and re-situating spaces, chronologies and subjectivities through the lens of  transformative and activist feminist politics. It aims to generate transnational and intersectional dialogues and chronicle present cultural urgencies while attending to and caring for historical amnesias, unexpressed voices, and entangled dispossessions.

Each contribution is due by 30 March 2025

Contact Email  bsliwinska@fcsh.unl.pt

 

Migrant Sensoria

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20056005/migrant-sensoria-special-issue-senses-and-society

Migrant Sensoria aims to make space for research that explores the generative and underexamined intersections between sensory studies and critical migration studies. We seek scholarship that thinks about migration beyond regimes of visibility and is attuned to sensory modes of perception and meaning making. By this, we mean works that conjure touch, smell, sound, proprioception, thermoception, and other forms of embodied knowledge to interpret transnational migration flows and subjectivities. This special issue brings together humanities and social science approaches to Migrant Sensoria as an interdisciplinary disruption of how migrants and migration are conventionally imagined.

Abstracts of 150-250 words and brief bios should be sent to Ruben Zecena (rzecena@ucdavis.edu) and Hsuan L. Hsu (hsuanLhsu@gmail.com) by March 1, 2025.

 

Susan Stryker and Trans Studies

https://think.taylorandfrancis.com/special_issues/afs_susan-stryker-trans-studies/

This issue invites contributions that reflect on Stryker’s legacy and the vital role she played in choreographing the field of transgender studies. Grounded in historical studies of trans communities, social movements, and cultural production, her writing has always been on the forefront of contemporary debates in trans thought and politics. Not only has she worked alongside many important trans studies scholars in the formation of the interdisciplinary field, but inaugurated a political and epistemological shift in the way we think about bi-gender culture. Stryker’s work invites us to question presumptions about gender foundational to feminism, queer theory, medicine, modernity, governmentality, colonialisms, etc. New questions are being asked about subjectivity, embodiment, desire, technology, power, affect and fantasy.

Please send a proposal to Sheila Cavanagh (Sociology, Gender and Sexuality Studies, York University) Sheila@yorku.ca and Toby Anne Finlay (Sociology, Gender and Sexuality Studies, York University) tfinlay@yorku.ca by February 16, 2025.

 

Food and War: Recipes of Survival, Resistance, and Power

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20056757/recipes-project-spring-edition-food-and-war-recipes-survival

Wartime cooking transforms under conditions of scarcity, such as the creative adaptations to rationing in World War II Europe or the ingenious survival strategies of Latin American communities during civil conflicts and independence wars. In other contexts, food figured in resisting oppression, from recipes secretly shared  in concentration camps to the use of cooking as an act of cultural preservation in exile. A focus on gender and race further highlights how women and marginalized groups used food to navigate the traumas of war while asserting agency. Additionally, food’s symbolic weight figures in commemorating or contesting wartime narratives, revealing how recipes sustain memory and identity amidst loss. For the upcoming Spring issue, guest edited by Vanesa Miseres, the Recipes Project team is soliciting proposals for 500-850 word posts related to food and war featuring original research as well as pieces on commemoration, pedagogy, and museum and archival collections.

Please send a brief pitch (2 or 3-sentences) as well as an abbreviated CV to editors Vanesa Miseres (Vanesa.A.Miseres.1@nd.edu) and Jess Clark (jclark3@brocku.ca) any time before 21 February 2025.

 

Digital Humanities: Theories, Practices and Methodologies

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20056787/call-papers-edited-volume-digital-humanities-theories-practices-and

The field of Digital Humanities (DH) continues to evolve as an interdisciplinary nexus of inquiry, embracing innovative theories, methodologies, and practices which transcend traditional disciplinary boundaries and fostering collaborations across the humanities, computational sciences, and the creative industries. The increasing digitization of cultural artifacts, the proliferation of data-driven methodologies, and the rise of virtual and networked cyberspaces demand innovative theoretical frameworks, robust methodological approaches, and critical reflections. Digital Humanities: Theories, Practices and Methodologies seeks to bring together critical insights and diverse methodologies to examine the ways in which digital environments shape and are shaped by cultural, social, and technological developments.

Deadline for Abstracts: 1. March 2025

Inquiries ought to be sent to Dr. Maria Grajdian, Grajdian@hiroshima-u.ac.jp

 

Call for Reviewers - Journal of Popular Culture

The Journal of Popular Culture is looking for those who are interested in reviewing books. These reviews will be due on March 10, 2025.  If you have a completed Master's degree or higher, one of these books is in your field of study, and you are interested in writing a review for us, please contact me at kiuchiyu@msu.edu, noting your preferred title and your mailing address. Please also send a short explanation to state what makes you a good reviewer of the book (or you may send me your CV). The reviews need to be between 500 and 1,000 words and documented in MLA style. Physical books may only be sent to an address in the U.S. International reviewers will receive an e-copy of the book.

Available Books

  • Reginald Wiebe and Doothy Woodman, The Cancer Plot: Terminal Immortality in Marvel's Moral Universe, Alberta
  • Mark Hibbett, Data and Doctor Doom: An Emperical Approach to Transmedia Characters, Palgrave
  • Daniel Worden, Petro-Chemical Fantasies: The Art and Energy of American Comics, Ohio State U
  • Ed Gruver, The Wee Ice Mon Cometh: Ben Hogan's 1053 Triple Slam and One of Golf's Greatest Summers, Nebraska
  • Marie-Pier Luneau, Love Stories Now and Then: A History of Les Romans d'Amour, Baraka Books
  • Aditya Misra, Theorizing the Superhero: Performativity and Politics, Palgrave (e-book only)
  • David Walton, The Ambiguities of European Comic Books, Lexington
  • Paul Thomas, The Informatoin Behavior of Wikipedia Fan Editors: A Digital Auto Ethnography, Lexington
  • Kevin Chabot, Poetics of the Paranormal, McGill-Queen
  • Sheng-Mei Ma, China Pop!: Pop Culture, Propaganda, Pacific Pop-Ups, Ohio State
  • Mary Grace Lao, et al., Diverging the Popular, Gender and Trauma aka the Jessica Jones Anthology, Calgary
  • Tim Hanley, Never a Sidekick: Exploring the Dynamic History of Batgirl, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Karry Fine, et al., Hell-Bent for Leather: Sex and Sexuality in the Weird Western, Nebraska

 

Sensory History

https://www.processhistory.org/calls-for-submissions/

Process: A Blog for American History invites proposals and submissions for an upcoming series on sensory history. We are open to a variety of themes relating to sensory history as both a methodology and a field and its intersections with various subfields of U.S. history, including histories of law, age, gender, disability studies, sport, and the environment. Articles might be centered on just one sense or could take a multisensory approach. We accept submissions from anyone engaged in the practice of U.S. history, including researchers, teachers, graduate students, archivists, curators, public historians, digital scholars, and others.

Proposals and drafts may be sent to blog@oah.org.

 

 

FUNDING/FELLOWSHIPS/PRIZES

Grant Opportunities at GINGKO

https://www.gingko.org.uk/

GINGKO provides grants to support academic research into the history, art history and religions of MENA. GINGKO also offers grants for people organising transformative interfaith and intercultural encounters between people from MENA and the West. We are open for applications until 6 April 2025. You can read more about the GINGKO Grants Programme and find information on how to apply by visiting: gingko.org.uk/how-to-apply 

Contact Email  grants@gingko.org.uk

 

Barnard Library Research Awards

https://library.barnard.edu/grants-and-awards

The Barnard Library Research Award supports research using collections at the Barnard Library, Barnard Zine Library, and Barnard Archives, resulting in any final format. Undergraduate and graduate students, non-Barnard faculty (including adjuncts and term faculty), journalists, and independent scholars, artists, and organizers are encouraged to apply. Additionally, we may prioritize projects that lack traditional institutional resources for research. Applications are open for the 2025-26 award cycle are due by February 2, 2025.

 

Women Doing Fieldwork | Photo Contest

https://filmfreeway.com/WAU2025CongressPhoto

For decades, a limited vision of who "should" be doing fieldwork has erased and made invisible women anthropologists and social scientists. This limited vision has resulted in a lack of recognition for the photographic record of women doing fieldwork, and their image has not become a common symbol in the public understanding of social science disciplines. The WAU 2025 Congress Photo Contest seeks to highlight the importance of women in fieldwork, to reverse decades of invisibility in photographic repositories, and to provide images that show the diversity of scientific work by women social scientists, especially anthropologists.

Deadline: May 31, 2025

If you have any questions about our use of your information or privacy practices, please contact us at org@waucongress.org

 

Postdoctoral Fellowship in Textile and Dress History

https://www.pasold.co.uk/neaverson-pasold-postdoctoral-fellowship

The Pasold Research Fund is offering a limited series of short-term Postdoctoral Fellowships. These fellowships will be offered biennially between 2025 and 2029 to support postdoctoral research and the start of new research projects in the fields of textile and dress history.

Application Deadline: 1 April 2025

questions? e-mail the Pasold Research Fund's Director, Dr Bethan Bide at histart-pasold@york.ac.uk or bethan.bide@york.ac.uk

 

Research & Creative Fellowships: Center for History and Culture of Southeast Texas and the Upper Gulf Coast

https://www.lamar.edu/arts-sciences/research-centers/center-for-history-and-culture/center-fellowships.html

The Center supports the production, curation, and transmission of knowledge about Southeast Texas and the greater Gulf regions with a commitment to interdisciplinary, collaborative, and community-focused projects. To achieve these goals, the Center supports the work of scholars, authors, artists, community leaders, and others who represent varied specializations and backgrounds. Fellowships are open to scholars, creatives, advance graduate students, and community leaders whose work contributes to the Center's mission. Fellows may receive awards up to $5,000.

Send PDF applications to Center director Jimmy L. Bryan Jr. (jlbryan@lamar.edu) by March 15, 2025.

 

State Library and Archives of Florida Research Stipend Program

https://dos.fl.gov/library-archives/archives/research/stipend/

The Division of Library and Information Services is pleased to announce a competitive stipend program for qualified researchers, sponsored by the Friends of the State Library and Archives of Florida. The program is intended to support exceptional projects utilizing the collections of the State Archives and State Library of Florida that can only be accessed on-site. Who is Eligible to Apply? Academic historians, graduate students and undergraduate students conducting research for a thesis, dissertation, article, book, documentary or other publicly-disseminated product.

Application deadline is March 31, 2025.

Contact Email  thomas.robinson@dos.fl.gov

 

Research Fellowship with the BPL’s Special Collections Department

https://www.bpl.org/blogs/post/apply-for-a-research-fellowship-with-the-bpls-special-collections-department/ 

The Boston Public Library is proud to announce two new research fellowships to support the use of special collections:

The Telling Boston's Stories Fellowships is a four-week fellowship, intended to support research projects whose focus is on the people and communities of Boston that are commonly left out of the historical narrative.

The Surfacing Overlooked Stories Fellowship is an eight-to-ten-week fellowship intended to highlight often overlooked voices and narratives in our collections. The theme for the 2025-2026 Surfacing Overlooked Stories fellowship will be looking into Black life and culture from Boston’s founding in 1630 through Boston’s incorporation as a city in 1822.

applications are due on Monday, March 3, 2025.

 

Research Fellowships | University of Michigan Library

https://www.lib.umich.edu/research-and-scholarship/awards-and-grants/special-collections-research-fellowships

The University of Michigan Library invites applications for fellowships for research in residence. Three fellowship opportunities are available to researchers whose work would benefit from onsite access to our special collections.

The current application cycle is open from 1 November 2024 through 31 January 2025

Contact Email  moconway@umich.edu

 

 

JOBS/INTERNSHIPS

Center for Humanistic Inquiry (CHI) Fellowship

https://apply.interfolio.com/161531

The Center for Humanistic Inquiry at Amherst College invites applications for four post-doctoral scholars whose work considers the theme of tools and the role they have played in defining the human and the humanities. The theme is to be understood broadly—open to studies of tools from the most rudimentary to the most technologically advanced, from the manual to the digital, the silex axe to the silicon chip. The theme encompasses such functional synonyms of tools as devices, gadgets, apparatuses, and prostheses, etc.—in short, the equipment that figures centrally to narratives regarding the making and unmaking of the human and of the world.

Review of applications will begin on February 1, 2025

 

Assistant Teaching Professor

https://www.sujobopps.com/postings/107954

The Department of Women’s and Gender Studies at Syracuse University invites applications for a renewable non-tenure track 3-year position of Assistant Teaching Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies (WGS), appointment to begin August 2025. We seek an interdisciplinary feminist scholar with a strong record of teaching and research in WGS. Candidates with interdisciplinary doctoral training and experience in teaching introductory WGS classes preferred. Candidates are expected to teach eight courses per year. Service to the department, college, or university is also expected.

deadline: March 1, 2025

For more information contact: Dana Olwan (dmolwan@syr.edu)

 

Teaching Assistant Professor - Race, Gender, and Sexuality Studies

https://www.higheredjobs.com/faculty/details.cfm?JobCode=179033844

We seek a colleague who will be a dedicated teacher with the ability to teach introductory General Education classes in Race, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. This position involves teaching five three-credit courses each semester, or, depending on department needs, four three-credit courses plus a departmental service work assignment. Preferred areas of specialization include 1) Indigenous, 2) Queer or LGBTQI+ or, 3) Latine studies. Teaching instructional academic staff will not be evaluated based on research productivity.

First Review Date: 02/22/2025

Position Contact Email: tlilley@uwlax.edu

 

 

EVENTS: WORKSHOPS, TALKS, CONFERENCES

Roundtable Discussion of Risk on the Table: Food Production, Health, and the Environment

https://www.paris-iea.fr/en/events/risk-on-the-table-food-production-health-and-the-environment-2

27 January 2025, 12-1:30PM EST

Online Round-table discussion marking the paperback launch of Risk on the Table: Food Production, Health, and the Environment, edited by Angela Creager. Over the last century, the industrialization of agriculture and processing technologies have made food abundant and relatively inexpensive for much of the world’s population. Simultaneously, pesticides, nitrates, and other technological innovations intended to improve the food supply’s productivity and safety have generated new, often poorly understood risks for consumers and the environment. This panel will use Risk on the Table, which was just published in paperback, as a starting point for a multidisciplinary discussion of the costs and consequences of the reliance on chemical technologies in contemporary food production.

Contact Email  frohlich@auburn.edu

 

First Day Magic? Effective Teaching Practices for Faculty to Start Strong

https://acue.org/start-strong-webinar/

Thursday, February 6th, 3:00 - 4:00 PM, EDT

In this focused session, faculty certified in ACUE’s Framework share their approach to the start of the semester and how it has evolved over time—including what’s worked and what hasn’t. Plus, take a deep dive with ACUE’s Chief Academic Officer, Penny MacCormack, PhD, into how ACUE’s new course Effective Teaching 101.

 

Decolonizing the Mind: A Journey through

Feb 9th, Feb 17th, 2025

Scholars and students are invited to engage in a series of thought-provoking dialogues that examine the process of decolonizing the mind. This series aims to critically explore and challenge the pervasive influences of colonialism on knowledge, culture, and society. Through interactive discussions, we will delve into the complexities of colonial and postcolonial studies and the significance of decolonial theories and engage directly with an influential author in the field., Dr. Mohammad Bagher Shabanpour.

 

Black Diversities Virtual Seminar 2025

You are invited to join our third Black Diversities virtual seminar on January 31, 2025 starting at 9:00 am (EST). This theme for this year's seminar is racial and ethnic mixing and in-betweenness. The seminar will consider how these and other concepts of mixing and in-betweenness complicate notions of rigid racial, linguistic, religious, and ethnic classifications. The event is free but attendees must use this link to register: https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIof-CrqD4qHNQhxFJohSIj8QIUejKC8AnM

Contact Email  amcletch@scsu.edu

 

God Bless the Pill: Contraception and Sexuality in American Religion

March 9, 2025, 6pm

In the middle of the 20th century, Protestants, Jews, and even some Catholics were in an alliance to expand birth control access to American women. Religious leaders joined medical authorities to make birth control respectable. Yet these efforts to expand access sometimes found these same leaders distancing themselves from the birth control movement’s feminist underpinnings. In this talk, Professor Mehta shows how the mainstreaming of birth control in the middle of the 20th century has more in common than one might expect with the family values rhetoric that would limit reproductive rights in the late 20th and early 21st century.

See all spring online lectures here: https://www.brandeis.edu/hbi/events/index.html


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