Oct 16 – Chinese Academic Education 🗓

Oct 16 – Chinese Academic Education 🗓

Wang Ying (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing)

Oct 16, 2018, 10 a.m.-12 noon, 00 030 SR04 (BKM)

 

Dr. Ying WANG is a Research Fellow, Associate Professor and Master’s Supervisor at the Institute of Literature at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Her main field of research is Life Writing Studies as well as Literary and Cultural Studies. She is also a Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Deputy Secretary General of the Chinese Society for Aesthetics and was a visiting scholar and visiting fellow at the University of Cambridge. She has published research papers in The Medieval History Journal and the Global Journal of Human Social Science. She is co-author of the English monograph Fashioning the Elusive Self: Autobiography in China and the West (Cambridge: Bringfield’s Head Press, 2015).

You can find the poster for the event here.

The event is sponsored by:

Oct 13 – Apartheid’s Lessons: Transnational Networks and US Evangelical Politics in the Cold War 🗓

Oct 13 – Apartheid’s Lessons: Transnational Networks and US Evangelical Politics in the Cold War 🗓

Melani McAlister (George Washington University, Washington, D.C., USA)

Oct 13, 2018, 9:15 a.m., Linke Aula/Alte Mensa

 

Melani McAlister is Professor of American Studies and International Affairs at George Washington University, Washington, D.C., USA.

This event is part of the international conference Global Faith and Worldly Power: Evangelical Encounters with American Empire. The lecture will be livestreamed here: Webcast of Keynote

Oct 11 – Prosperity, Sex, and Politics: Evangelicals Changing Mission to the World 🗓

Oct 11 – Prosperity, Sex, and Politics: Evangelicals Changing Mission to the World 🗓

Anthea Butler (U of Pennsylvania, USA)

Oct 11, 2018, 6 p.m. (s.t.), Linke Aula/Alte Mensa

 

The missionary impulse of Evangelicals has been saving souls, but that has changed in the last 40 years. Political, economic and social issues are part of the changing impetus of Evangelical engagement around the world, because of Pentecostal and Charismatic movements. This keynote will address the changes to belief, ideology and practice of Evangelical mission work, to show how Pentecostal and Charismatic movements have changed the impetus of Evangelical fervor and interests throughout the world.

Anthea Butler is Associate Professor of Religion and Africana Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, USA.

This event is part of the international conference Global Faith and Worldly Power: Evangelical Encounters with American Empire. The lecture will be livestreamed here: Webcast of Keynote

Oct 4 – Trans-Atlantic Bodies: American Nationalism and the Politics of Corporeality 🗓

Oct 4 – Trans-Atlantic Bodies: American Nationalism and the Politics of Corporeality 🗓

Maurizio Valsania (University of Turin)

Oct 4, 2018, 5-6 p.m., P 110 (Philosophicum)

 

In the 1760s, British colonies in North America agreed on boycotting the importation of goods. On occasion, upper-class Americans could reenact the so-called “age of homespun” much later on—George Washington’s 1789 mythic brown inaugural suit made in Hartford, Connecticut, is a wonderful example. But this may give the impression that Americans, including American republican leaders, did not care about style; that they had been created rugged; that they were cut off from the main trans-Atlantic cultural trends that, in the period, were being redefining fashion, civility, politeness, sensibility, and masculinity. My paper discusses two hypotheses. The first is that the Founding Figures (George Washington and Thomas Jefferson in particular) took part, knowingly, in a trans-Atlantic ongoing debate about style; second, that these men idealized their own bodies and deployed them as tools to channel a message of modernity. New political visions as well as new ideals concerning the modern white upper-class male were thus made visible.

This talk constitutes the keynote address of the “Transatlantic Conversations: New and Emerging Approaches to Early American Studies” conference (Oct 4-6, 2018).

Click here to access the conference page and the complete conference program.

 

 

June 26 – Some ‘Age-Friendly’ Advice?: Ableism, Austerity, and New Stories of ‘Active Aging’ 🗓

June 26 – Some ‘Age-Friendly’ Advice?: Ableism, Austerity, and New Stories of ‘Active Aging’ 🗓

Sally Chivers (Trent University)

June 26, 2018, 4-6 p.m., 00 025 SR 03 (BKM)

 

This talk comes from a larger research project that asks how gender and culture matter in creating age-friendly environments. Understanding that austerity thought warps age advice, making it anything but friendly, I will explore the WHO Age-Friendly framework as a form of 21st century advice literature. The research situates the focus on “active aging” within neoliberal processes and discourses of responsibilization. I will illustrate how humanities perspectives meaningfully challenge that model and o er promising paths to critical work on equity and diversity within the Age-Friendly movement.

Sally Chivers is Full Professor of English and Gender & Women’s Studies at Trent University, Canada, where she teaches about illness, disability, and aging in literature, film and popular culture. She is the author of The Silvering Screen: Old Age and Disability in Cinema (2011) and From Old Woman to Older Women: Contemporary Culture and Women’s Narratives (2003)and the co-editor of Care Home Stories: Aging, Disability and Long-Term Residential Care (2017) and The Problem Body: Projecting Disability and Film (2010). Her ongoing research focuses on the gerontological humanities, care systems, and media studies of age, gender and disability based on the belief that there are new and better stories to tell about aging, disability and care.

You can download the poster for this talk here.