Eoin F. McGuirk (Tufts University)
Jonas Clark Hall, Room 118Speaker: Eoin F. McGuirk (Tufts University) Title: TBA Date: Thursday, November 21, 2024 Time: 12:00-1:15 pm Location: Jonas Clark Hall, Room 118
Speaker: Eoin F. McGuirk (Tufts University) Title: TBA Date: Thursday, November 21, 2024 Time: 12:00-1:15 pm Location: Jonas Clark Hall, Room 118
Join co-sponsors Center for Gender, Race and Area Studies, and Peace and Conflict Studies as we host Loubna Qutami in a timely and thought-provoking discussion on Palestinian Feminism.
Many Arctics: What Does it Look Like and Why Is it Important for the Future of Governance in the Far North? The Arctic is transforming in dramatic and complex ways through a myriad of pressures related to changes in climate, social trends and demographic patterns, economic opportunities, geopolitics, and technology. Although many discussions surrounding the […]
The Biology Spring 2025 Seminar Series presents Lily Khadempour, a microbial evolutionary ecologist and assistant professor at Rutgers University.
The Biology Spring 2025 Seminar Series presents Kara McKinley, assistant professor of stem cell and regenerative biology at Harvard University.
Join Psychology Professor Andrew Stewart as he discusses the multilevel and structural equation modeling used to examine the ideological foundations of discrimination and inequality between social groups. Pizza served as part of this Data Science Seminar Series.
The Biology Department Spring 2025 Seminar Series presents Renee Petipas, a lecturer at the University of Vermont and a global change biologist.
The Biology Department Spring 2025 Seminar Series presents Zeba Wunderlich, associate professor of biology and director of the Program in Molecular Biology, Cell Biology & Biochemistry at Boston University.
Join professional opera performers Rachel Hippert and Jose Heredia as they take you on a journey of horror music from the gothic to contemporary.
Nathan Braccio, Assistant Professor of History at Clark University, explores how both Algonquian-speaking communities and English colonists made maps as tools in a struggle for cultural and physical control of the Northeast.
In this talk, Clark University professor Elizabeth Blake (English) focuses on T. S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” and H. D.’s “Priapus” to discuss the way modernist poets disrupt lyric traditions by setting intertextuality and phenomenological referentiality in tension in order to explore queer experience.
The Women in Horror Month Student Panel showcases research and discussion on a variety of different horror topics ranging from gender and queer studies to film techniques.
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