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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T190000
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DTSTAMP:20260413T142408
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UID:10000654-1681412400-1681419600@www.clarku.edu
SUMMARY:Wallace W. Atwood Lecture: Kendra McSweeney\, The Ohio State University
DESCRIPTION:Kendra McSweeney\, professor of geography and distinguished scholar at The Ohio State University\, will deliver the annual Wallace W. Atwood Lecture. \nProhibition Geographies\nIn the U.S.\, prohibition is often considered a thing of the past\, evoking speakeasies and Al Capone. Yet the prohibition of other plant- and animal-based commodities has not only endured but expanded. This talk explores the geographies that arise from the global prohibitionary regime targeting one such commodity: cocaine. Drawing on a decade of team science spanning the many spaces of law-making and law-enforcement around cocaine—with particular focus on Central America—I lay out the many ways that drug prohibition initiates a cascade of predictable effects that accelerate climate change and have profound social and ecological consequences not only for the places through which cocaine is trafficked but for all the spaces up and down-stream in the cocaine supply chain\, from the Amazon to Massachusetts. \nHer primary interest is in human-environment interactions\, focusing on issues in cultural and political ecology\, conservation and development\, resilience\, demography\, and land use/cover change. Her current projects include tracing the socioecological impacts of drug trafficking through Central America and studying the nature and implications of demographic change among Latin America’s Indigenous populations. \n\n\nLivestream Link
URL:https://www.clarku.edu/events/event/annual-wallace-w-atwood-series-kendra-mcsweeney-the-ohio-state-university/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.clarku.edu/events/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2025/01/2022-Jonas-Clark-Hall-12-May-0003.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230420T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230421T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T142408
CREATED:20221216T213001Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T201213Z
UID:10000814-1682006400-1682096400@www.clarku.edu
SUMMARY:Vienna\, 1890 - 1938: Capital of Tradition\, Innovation\, Promise\, and Peril
DESCRIPTION:In the first decades of the twentieth-century Vienna was a locus for cultural and intellectual innovation\, as well as for radical politics of left and right. This symposium brings together a group of leading interdisciplinary scholars to explore the interactions of art\, music\, and cultural politics in the decades preceding the rise of National Socialism and the Anschluss of Austria in March 1938. We will likewise consider the reverberation and sometimes curious trajectories of those developments after 1938.  \n20 April 2023 | 4:30 – 6:00pm| Higgins Lounge\nDana Commons\n\nA performance of Pavel Haas’s String Quartet no. 2\, followed by a reception with hors d’oeuvres and wine\n\n \n\n21 April 2023 |9:00 – 4:00| Higgins Lounge \nDana Commons\n\nSymposium\n\n9:00-9:10: WELCOME  \n\n9:10-9:50  “Women’s Movements in Viennese Operetta” \n\nMichaela Baranello\, University of Arkansas\n\n9:55-10:35 “Stadt ohne Jüdinnen? Gender and Jewish Absence in Hugo Bettauer’s The City without Jews” \n\nLisa Silverman\, University of Wisconsin\, Milwaukee\n\n10:35-11:00 Coffee Break \n\n11:00-11:40 “The Naked and the Dead: Human Remains in Interwar Viennese Culture” \n\nAlys George\, Stanford University\n\n11:45-12:25 “The Last and the First Musical Premiere in Vienna\,1938” \n\nBen Korstvedt\, Clark University\n\n12:30-2:00 Lunch \n\n2:00-2:40 “Appropriation and Ambiguity in the Visual Art of Vienna under the Nazi Regime” \n\nLaura Morowitz\, Wagner College\n\n 2:45-3:25 “Reconsidering Viennese Nostalgia in Exile and in Postwar Austria” \n\nFrances Tanzer\, Clark University \n\n3:30-4:00 Coffee Break  \n\n4:00-4:40  “Arnold Schoenberg and Vienna: A Story of Antisemitism and Unrequited Love” \n\nJoy Calico\, Vanderbilt University\n\n 4:45-5:25 Leopoldstadt: the culture of survival; the survival of culture \n\nSteven Beller\, Independent Scholar\n\n5:30-5:40 Closing Notes and thoughts   \n\n6:00 Dinner \n\n \n\nFriday\, April 21\, 7:30 PM  A Spectrum of Viennese Song\, 1890-1938\n\nDuo Au Courant Stephanie Weiss (mezzo) & Christina Wright-Ivanova (piano) Razzo Hall\, Traina Center for the Arts\n\nSponsored by Clark University’s Academic Innovation Fund\, the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies\, the History Department\, and the Music Program of the Department of Visual and Performing Arts.\n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n 
URL:https://www.clarku.edu/events/event/symposium-vienna-1890-1938-capital-of-tradition-innovation-promise-and-peril/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T193000
DTSTAMP:20260413T142408
CREATED:20230406T184437Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T201027Z
UID:10000811-1682105400-1682105400@www.clarku.edu
SUMMARY:Concert: A Spectrum of Viennese Song\, 1900-1938
DESCRIPTION:Performed by Stephanie Weiss (mezzo-soprano) and Christina Wright-Ivanova (piano)\, as part of the Vienna\, 1890-1938: Capital of Tradition\, Innovation\, Promise\, and Peril symposium.\n\nOther events in the series:\n\nOpening Concert and Reception: Thursday\, April 20th at 4:30pm \nFeaturing the Clark University String Quartet performing Pavel Haas’s Second String Quartet\, op. 7 (‘From the Monkey Mountains’) (1925)\nHiggins Lounge\, Dana Commons\n\nSymposium: Friday\, April 21st 9am-5pm\nThis symposium will bring a group of leading interdisciplinary scholars to Clark to explore the interactions of art\, music\, and cultural politics in Vienna during the pivotal decades of the early twentieth century.\nHiggins Lounge\, Dana Commons\n\nSponsored by the Clark University Academic Innovation Fund\, the Music Program of V&PA\, the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies\, and the History Department
URL:https://www.clarku.edu/events/event/concert-a-spectrum-of-viennese-song-1900-1938/
CATEGORIES:Arts/Music/Film
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