• Martin Luther King, Jr. Day

    Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York
    Holiday

    Morningside Campus is closed. Faculty House is closed for seminars and events.

  • Desire, Unreason, and Truth in Affect

    Heyman Center for the Humanities 74 Morningside Drive, New York, NY, United States
    Conferences/Symposia

    Sponsored by The University Seminar on Affect Studies This workshop seeks to explore the tension between the universal normative claim to truth and the singular claim to truth in affect, focusing on one of the strongest human emotions and experiences: erotic desire. In the absence of an absolute in a post-secular society, the role of affect has stepped in to substantivize many normative claims—either culminating in a ‘politics of feeling’ or in prioritizing individual emotions and affective economies over normative categories such as justice or freedom. This has major implications for two of the most contested concepts in religious, philosophical, […]

    Spring Break

    Columbia University

    Faculty House is closed for seminars and events.

  • Unsettled in Dakar: Architectural Modernity in 20th century Senegal

    East Gallery, Buell Hall, Columbia University 515 West 116th Street, New York
    Conferences/Symposia

    Sponsored by The University Seminar on Beyond France This symposium on architecture and urban planning in Twentieth-Century Senegal spotlights new research on how the built environment in and around Dakar registered the continuities and ruptures between French rule and independence, indigenous heritage and colonial legacies. What role did the built environment play in constructing citizenship? What opportunities did Senegal’s independence usher in for French and African designers? What effect did Léopold Sédar Senghor’s emphasis on the arts as a path to Négritude have on architectural production and training? Each panel will address one architectural scale: urban, housing, and monumental. Speakers include: […]

  • New Directions in the History of Knowledge and Material Culture

    Fayerweather Hall, Columbia University
    Conferences/Symposia

    Sponsored by The University Seminar on The History and Philosophy of Science Many recent works in the history of science and knowledge address various aspects of materiality, including material culture, agentive matter, and the trajectories of materials, objects, and knowledge across geographic and epistemic borders. This workshop, which accompanies a new graduate history course taught by Professor Pamela Smith, seeks to introduce and discuss some of these new approaches. Visiting scholars Anna Grasskamp (University of Oslo), Dana Leibsohn (Smith College), and Alisha Rankin (Tufts University) will present their research in conversation with the work of local graduate students and scholars […]

  • Italians in/and the Maghreb: Between Integration and Isolation

    Italian Academy for Advanced Studies 1161 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY, United States
    Conferences/Symposia

    Co-sponsored by The University Seminar on Studies in Modern Italy Italians in/and the Maghreb will expand discussions of colonialism, migration, race, decolonial movements, and postcolonial issues in Italian and Italian diaspora studies. While the study of Italian colonialism has blossomed in recent years with the country’s official colonies in Eritrea, Somalia, Libya, Ethiopia, and the Dodecanese Islands now the topic of many scholarly studies, the history of Italians in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia has tended to remain marginal, and mostly examined as an example of Italy’s aggressive emigration policies and attempts to pursue informal colonies. This seminar explores the exchanges […]

  • Annual Dinner and Tannenbaum Lecture

    Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York
    Annual Events

    This event is open to members of The University Seminars community only. Registration is required. This year’s Tannenbaum Lecturer is Lynn Garafola and the Tannenbaum-Warner Award recipient is David Johnston. MORE INFORMATION TO FOLLOW

    Commencement

    Columbia University

    Faculty House is closed for seminars and events.

  • Memorial Day

    Columbia University
    Holiday

    Morningside Campus is closed. Faculty House is closed for seminars and events.