Bodian Seminar: Nora Newcombe
Bodian Seminar: Nora Newcombe
@ Nora S. Newcombe, Ph.D.Laura H. Carnell Professor of PsychologyTemple University TBD Faculty Host: Jim Knierim Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ Nora S. Newcombe, Ph.D.Laura H. Carnell Professor of PsychologyTemple University TBD Faculty Host: Jim Knierim Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ Julia Cummiskey of University of Tennessee will present “Histories of Global Health Research, Policy, and Practice in Africa”. Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
Graduate students are invited to discuss Professor Julian Go’s recent works, Global Historical Sociology and Policing Empires, particularly addressing questions of theory, method, and research design.
Robin Kolodny (Political Science, Temple University) will provide a graduate-centered talk on the job market and large public universities. @ Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ Allison Marsh, from the University of South Carolina, and Jean Kumagai, from IEEE Spectrum, will present, “‘History of Science and Tech for Everyone: Insights from IEEE Spectrum”. Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
We're BACK for our first installment in 2024 of... Humanities on the Mall! On February 4th at 5pm in DC, we will be joined by an amazing panel to discuss "Students, College Campuses, and Difficult Conversations." We'll also chat about a new book, The Student: A Short History (2023). Our speakers will be: Chris Celenza, Dean […]
@ Devon Golaszewski of University of Alabama will present “‘Traditional Birth Attendants’ and the Meaning of the Medicalization in Post-Colonial Mali”. Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
We are happy to announce that this year's WGS Visiting Distinguished Professor is Professor Grace Lavery of UC Berkeley. Her most recent book Pleasure and Efficacy: Of Pen Names, Cover Versions, and Other Trans Techniques (Princeton, 2023) examines the experience and representation of modern gender transition, drawing on examples from George Eliot, Sigmund Freud, and many others. She will give three […]
at Ange Mlinko is the author of six books of poetry, most recently Venice, and a forthcoming book of lyric criticism, Difficult Ornaments: Florida and the Poets. She has won the Randall Jarrell Award in Criticism, the Frederick Bock Prize, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. She is a frequent contributor to the New York Review of Books and the London […]
Adam Sheingate will present a work-in-progress entitled “Officials in Action: Geographies of the Nineteenth Century American State” @ Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ Claire Edington of University of California (San Diego) will present “Drug Users, Psychiatric Patients, and the Braided Meanings of Recovery in 20th Century Vietnam”. Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ Yanilda Gonzalez, Assistant Professor of Public Policy Harvard University Talk Location: TBA This event is part of the Center for Africana Studies 2023 – 2024 Speaker Series. Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
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.
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 […]
@ 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 […]
“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
Bentley Allan (JHU) will talk about The Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab @ Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ Kate Epstein, from Rutgers University, will present, “Superpower Secrets: Computers, Intellectual Property, and Anglo-American Technology Theft.” Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
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
@ 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 […]
@ 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, […]
@ 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, […]
at In spring 2024, JHU Hard Histories, directed by Dr. Martha S. Jones, is hosting a series of conversations exploring the histories of Blackness, slavery, and racism in the Maryland area. Our first webinar of the semester, “Hard Histories Methods: Rethinking Our Archives”, will occur on Wednesday, February 21 from noon-1 pm eastern. This virtual event is free […]
@ Bloomberg 278 The Program in Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx Studies is pleased to welcome Mary Caton Lingold, Professor of English and director of the PhD Program in Media, Art, and TextMedia, Art, and Text at Virginia Commonwealth University, for a conversation about her recent book, African Musicians in the Atlantic World: Legacies of […]
Vanessa Baird (Political Science, Colorado University) will provide a talk on innovative pedagogy entitled “TILES (Teaching to identify logical errors systematically): an innovative and equitable approach to teaching” @ Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ Mergenthaler Hall 366 The Program in Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx Studies and the Department of Political Science are pleased to welcome Angie Bautista-Chavez, Assistant Professor of Politics and Global Studies at Arizona State University, for the lecture: Externalization and the Consolidation of Migration Control Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
at Monday Seminar, Michael Jin, University of Illinois Chicago (part of the History Department seminar series) Google Calendar iCalendar
@ Tobias Teichert, Ph.D.Associate Professor of Psychiatry and BioengineeringUniversity of Pittsburgh A mesoscopic electrophysiology platform for the monkey to measure brain function and connectivity in the ketamine model of schizophrenia Key aspects of brain function can only be understood by recording from the entire brain in parallel, rather than parts of it in sequence. While […]
at Political and Moral Thought Seminar, Lucy Allais, JHU, 4:45pm, in Gilman Hall, Room 308 Google Calendar iCalendar
@ Graduate student Jiwon Kim will present 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 not received the papers, please e-mail one of the organizers: Yushuang Zheng (History), Wesley Sampias (History), Minah Kang (Political Science), or Mercy An (Comparative Thought and Literature). Contact: East Asian […]
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Organized by Jo Giardini in collaboration with Siân Evans and Joseph Plaster Co-sponsored by the Alexander Grass Humanities Institute The Winston Tabb Special Collections Research Center’s Spring 2024 speaker series highlights cultural production by trans, non-binary, and gender-nonconforming artists, writers, historians, poets, and musicians. Drawing on Special Collections materials […]
@ Shriver Hall 001 The Program in Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx Studies is pleased to welcome Carlos Aguirre, Professor of History at the University of Oregon, for the lecture: The Inner History of the Latin American Boom: Literature, Politics, and Friendship In the 1960s, a group of Latin American writers, mostly male novelists, gained […]
at Modern American Seminar, Jayson Porter, University of Maryland, 4:00pm, in Gilman 308 Google Calendar iCalendar
@ Gilman Hall 186 The Spring 2024 Latin America in a Globalizing World works-in-progress seminar welcomes Professor Consuelo Amat, SNF Agora Institute, Political Science, JHU, to present: “Power in Autonomy: The Political Strategy of Constructive Resistance,” and Alex Sanchez, Ph.D. Student, History, JHU, to present: “Los tiempos de cuarentena: Disease and Vaccination in Post-emancipation Puerto […]
at Christine Lehleiter, Associate Professor of German at the University of Toronto, focuses on 18th– and 19th-century German literary and scientific cultures, and her books include Romanticism, Origins, and the History of Heredity. Bucknell University Press, 2014 and Fact and Fiction: Literary and Scientific Cultures in Germany and Britain (ed.). University of Toronto Press, 2016. Other publications […]
Alex Anievas (Political Science, UConn) will provide a talk entitled “The Difference Multiplicity Makes: The American Civil War as Passive Revolution” @ Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ Alexandre White of JHU presents “Expertise in enslavement: medical knowledge, necrofinance and the insurance of Atlantic slavery in Britain from 1750-1807″ (pre-circulated paper) Joint event with East Baltimore Campus Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
@ “ReOrient: The Climate Crisis in the New Asian Age” Remsen Hall 1 Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live
A Discussion on historical perspectives and contemporary politics with Monica Ali (SUNY), Tim Sahay (Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab, JHU), and Adam Tooze (Columbia) @ Doors open 4pm, doors close 8pm Hopkins Bloomberg Center, Conference Center Room 1020 Free registration (required): https://cglink.me/2dh/r1950173 Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live