Who’s Chloe? A New Center for the Critical Study of Racism, Immigration, and Colonialism

Please join us for Who’s Chloe?, an event to celebrate the dawn of the next chapter of the Program in Racism, Immigration, and Citizenship. This event will introduce the new Chloe Center for the Critical Study of Racism, Immigration, and Colonialism, explaining its origins and exciting plans, including the new Critical Diaspora Studies major.

Love Data Week

Virtual

  Join the Johns Hopkins Libraries for Love Data Week, February 12-16, 2024!   Love Data Week is an international celebration of data, and Johns Hopkins Libraries are hosting Love Data Week events in partnership this year with The Institute for Data-Intensive Engineering and Sciences (IDIES), Stavros Niarchos Foundation SNF Agora Institute, and The Alexander Grass […]

Bodian Seminar: Jaewon Ko

@ Jaewon Ko, Ph.D.Professor, Department of Brain SciencesDaegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology (DGIST)Daegu, South Korea Modulation of neural circuit organization by synaptic suppressors Synapses are fundamental information units of the brain that function by establishing and regulating innumerable overlapping and interdigitating neural circuits between neurons. Synaptic cell-adhesion molecules (CAMs) are central synapse organizers […]

JHU Anthro Colloquium Series: Nat Adams, Johns Hopkins University

Mergenthaler 426 3400 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Maryland, United States

“Vacant to Verdant? Urban Greening and Community Progress in West Baltimore” @ Reception to followZoom: https://zoom.us/j/8809236688 Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live

Faculty Research: Bentley Allan (JHU)

Mergenthaler 366 Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore

Bentley Allan (JHU) will talk about The Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab @ Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live

Monday Seminar, Carolyn Dean, Yale University

Gilman Hall, Room 308

at Monday Seminar, Carolyn Dean, Yale University (part of the History Department seminar series) Co-sponsored by the Leonard and Helen R. Stulman Program in Jewish Studies Google Calendar iCalendar

East Asian Studies Seminar – Faculty Presentation

Gilman 308

@ Faculty members Dr. Yumi Kim (History), Dr. Clara Han (Anthropology), and Dr. Satoru Hashimoto (Comparative Thought and Literature) will present on How to Turn Diss into Book for the Spring 2024 EAS Graduate Seminar Series. Papers and the Zoom link will be distributed one week in advance. If you would like to attend and have […]

Bernadine Marie Hernández: Border Bodies

@ Macaulay Hall, 101 The Program in Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx Studies and the Marxisms Seminar are pleased to welcome Professor Bernadine Marie Hernandez (English, University of New Mexico) for a conversation about her recent book, Border Bodies. Racialized Sexuality, Sexual Capital, and Violence in the Nineteenth-Century Borderlands In this study of sex, gender, […]

East Asian Studies Speaker Series – Madeline Hsu (University of Maryland)

Gilman 308

@ Immobilization and Decolonization in Singapore, 1945-1953 Perhaps the greatest challenge in preparing Singapore for independence was defining and assigning citizenship to its highly heterogeneous populations, a challenge magnified by the entrepot’s majority of ethnic Chinese residents and its uncertain political relationship to Malaya. Affixing citizenship rights would determine balances of power in these future, […]

Gregor Moder, “Hegel’s Antigone between Historicity and Subjectivity”

Gilman 208

@ Gregor Moder, Department of Philosophy, University of Ljubjana “Hegel’s Antigone between Historicity and Subjectivity” Hegel treated the myth of Antigone not as material for a particular work of art, but as a direct expression of the Greek world, as the shape of the world spirit in the Greek antiquity. If it were possible to […]