UNC Med-Ren Colloquium: Carmen Hsu (UNC)
Carmen Hsu will give a talk.
Carmen Hsu will give a talk.
Join the DLC and the Critical Gaming Initiative for a tabletop game session for undergraduates that centers issues of labor and critical world-building in play, led by Graham Culbertson, Steve Gotzler, David Hall, and Shane Peterson. We will be setting … Read more
Sponsored by the People, Ideas, and Things Journal, the conference serves as a forum for ENGL 105 students following a research-intensive curriculum to share the projects that they have been working on for the semester, gaining valuable feedback from their … Read more
Our Honors Poetry Thesis reading will be held on April 4th in the main lounge of Graham Memorial from 7:00 pm to 8:45 pm. Please come out and support Caroline Brogden, Gina Flow, Chelsea Hignite, Cecil May, Mike O'Brien, Quinton Okoro, Aryani Pallerla, … Read more
On Friday, April 7th at 1PM, digital human and professor of computer science Douglas Luman will lead a workshop based off on their project, Rationalism. "A computational mistranslation of mid-twentieth century Fascist architectural writing, Rationalism engages how fascist principles, long-since … Read more
Next week, Dr. Gaspard Pelurson of King's College London is visiting UNC Chapel Hill under the auspices of the UNC/KCL partnership and UNC's Critical Gaming Initiative to run three events concerning the intersections of queer theory and game studies: 1) … Read more
UNC-ECL alum Dr. Geovani Ramírez will give a talk titled "Reducing Settler Colonialist Footprints." By offering an analysis of Karen Zacarías’ play Native Gardens, using what Dina Gilio-Whitaker refers to as an Indigenized Environmental Justice (EJ) framework, this talk will … Read more
Endowed by Miss Armfield, a 1925 alumna of the University, The Blanche Armfield Poetry Reading is an annual event that brings a prominent American poet to the English Department for a late afternoon reading, open to the public. The reading … Read more
On Monday 4/17 and Tuesday 4/18, from 6-7pm, the ten Senior Honors students in fiction will read selections from their thesis manuscripts in Graham Memorial.
In this talk, Zara Anishanslin (University of Delaware) explores the life, labors, and designs of one of London's most fascinating eighteenth-century women, a woman who against all odds achieved success in the male-dominated field of silk production.