1. Home /
  2. Organisation /
  3. Townsend Center for the Humanities

Category



General Information

Locality: Berkeley, California

Phone: +1 510-643-9670



Website: townsendcenter.berkeley.edu

Likes: 1341

Reviews

Add review

Facebook Blog





Townsend Center for the Humanities 13.07.2021

An Ongoing Revolution: Reflections on Gendered Struggles and Feminist Scholarship in the Humanities On October 3, 2020, UC Berkeley celebrated the 150th anniversary of admitting women as undergraduate students. The 150 Years of Women at Berkeley History Project has responded to Chancellor Carol Christ’s call to convert this anniversary into a lasting archive by documenting the struggles and achievements of students, faculty, and staff since 1872 from the earliest days of ...co-education, to the gender revolution of the sixties and seventies, and beyond. To join in the commemoration, the Townsend Center presents An Ongoing Revolution: Reflections on Gendered Struggles and Feminist Scholarship in the Humanities. Faculty members representing Comparative Literature, English, East Asian Languages & Cultures, History of Art, Music, and Spanish & Portuguese gather for a discussion of the role and experience of women at Berkeley, asking such questions as, how have departmental and disciplinary cultures changed over the years? How have issues of gender and feminism been brought to bear on scholarship and teaching? What has been the changing relationship between political battles in the streets and research in the academy? Whose stories have we lost track of as institutional life continues to transform? What fights are still to come? Participants: Catherine Gallagher (English), moderator Darcy Grimaldo Grigsby (History of Art) Francine Masiello (Comparative Literature and Spanish & Portuguese) Mary Ann Smart (Music) Sophie Volpp (Comparative Literature and East Asian Languages & Cultures)

Townsend Center for the Humanities 26.06.2021

Image | (Re)making Sense: The Humanities and Pandemic Culture Every previous major disaster in human history, from the Black Plague to the Great Depression, has elicited a reimagination of the world, a reinvention of collective life through culture. The COVID-19 pandemic is no exception. The arts and humanities two areas of inquiry that focus on value and meaning provide crucial resources for reconceptualizing our lives together during, and after, our current crisis. The ...series (Re)making Sense: The Humanities and Pandemic Culture examines the utility of the arts and humanities for helping us navigate the ethical challenges and practical reinventions that lie before us. Top scholars, writers, and artists at UC Berkeley discuss how their disciplines, and the skills and abilities fostered by their fields, can help in our efforts to reimagine and rebuild. The sixth event of this series explores how the practices and study of visual culture are shaped by, and have responded to, the current political and public health crises. We live in an age in which smartphone owners are also photographers and videographers, and images can be disseminated, reproduced, and doctored in the blink of an eye. Image-making has become a political tool, as we saw with the George Floyd video and the numerous postings on social media of acts of police brutality during the Black Lives Matter protests. The January 6th attack on the US Capitol brought home the shaping power of images in our understanding of both history and contemporary reality. How do we know when we're seeing an important or iconic image? What role does the academic study of visual culture, through such disciplines as film studies and art history, play in shaping the ways we now process and use images? How do avant-garde and contemporary visual practices respond to the current moment? Can we trace the emergence of a post-pandemic iconography? As film collection supervisor for Pacific Film Archive, Antonella Bonfanti oversees film and video archival, acquisition, and preservation projects. Prior to joining BAMPFA in 2020, she served as director of the famed Bay Area experimental film distributor Canyon Cinema Foundation. Abigail De Kosnik is director of the Berkeley Center for New Media and associate professor of theater, dance, and performance studies. Her book Rogue Archives: Digital Cultural Memory and Media Fandom examines the practice of archiving in the transition from print to digital media. She is co-editor of the essay collection #identity: Hashtagging Race, Gender, Sexuality, and Nation. Filmmaker and scholar Jeffrey Skoller is associate professor of film and media. His cinematic and scholarly work explores relationships between film and contemporary art, the avant-garde and experimental film, and hybrid genres such as the essay film and animated documentary. He is editor of an essay collection on filmmaker Daniel Eisenberg.

Townsend Center for the Humanities 09.06.2021

Happening tomorrow at 4 pm PST! Livestream link here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8JaSDoMW5U