East Asian Studies Seminar – EAS Senior Theses

Gilman 308

@ Undergraduate East Asian Studies major’s Calista Huang, Jill Ji, and Amrita Makunda will present their senior theses. The EAS Seminar is primarily an interdisciplinary workshop for graduate students and […]

Caplan-Rosen Lecture Spring 2024: Prof. Kuiyi Shen 

Mason Hall Auditorium @ 3400 N Charles St Baltimore, MD, United States

@ Calligraphic Language and Aesthetics in Contemporary Chinese Art Calligraphy entered contemporary Chinese art at the time modernist art reappeared in China in the 1980s, and gradually became an important […]

LAGW Seminar: Literatures from the Andes to New York

@ Gilman Hall 186 The Spring 2024 Latin America in a Globalizing World works-in-progress seminar welcomes Mariangela Ugarelli, PhD Candidate, Spanish and Portuguese Program, Modern Languages and Literatures, JHU: “Revenge […]

Environmental Humanities Research Initiative (Spring Panel)

Gilman 108

Arielle Saiber, Modern Languages & Literatures Waterways to the Divine: The Liquid Language of Altered-States of Consciousness Naveeda Khan, Anthropology Quantities of Households, Qualities of Householding: River Life in Bangladesh […]

SNF Agora & Political Science Seminar: Erin Pineda (Smith)

Mergenthaler 366 Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore

Erin Pineda (Political Science, Smith College) will present research-in-progress, title TBA @ Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live

Famine, War, and International Humanitarian Law

Please join us for an online panel discussion on Thursday, April 25th, noon to 1pm, about famine, war, and international humanitarian law, details below. Please also help publicize the event by […]

East Asian Studies Seminar – Xueqian Zhang

Gilman 308

@ Graduate student Xueqian Zhang will present on The First Year Paper for the Spring 2024 EAS Graduate Seminar Series. The EAS Seminar is primarily an interdisciplinary workshop for graduate students and […]

Critical Diaspora Studies and U.S. Empire in Maryland, D.C., and Virginia: A Symposium of Student Research

The DMV region is home to refugee and migrant communities from across the globe. It is also home to the centerpieces of the national security state, including CIA headquarters, the Pentagon, numerous military bases, as well as outposts of all the major firms that comprise the military-industrial complex, plus three of the military’s university-affiliated research centers. This symposium of original student research inquires into the connections between these two aspects of regional development, as well as how migrants and their families grapple with continuing forms of slow violence such as racialized displacement.

Arts & Sciences Undergraduate Research Symposium

@ Hodson Hall 210 and Hodson Hall Lobby The Office of Undergraduate Research, Scholarly, and Creative Activity (URSCA) is pleased to present the annual Arts & Sciences Undergraduate Research Symposium, […]