Events

New Directions in British Urban History

This conference will bring together leading scholars working in the field of modern British urban and planning history. Bridging this sub-field in the UK and in the US, this conference has three main objectives. The first is to provide a forum for discussing the current flurry of written work on British urban life (seven of the participants have recent or forthcoming monographs on twentieth-century British urban history). Our long term goal is to produce a special issue in "Planning Perspectives" on this historiographical turn; the conference will be the key launching pad for this scholarly work. The second is to […]

Book Parts

The Heyman Center and the Rare Book and Manuscript Library New York, NY, United States

The field of book history has never been more vibrant, nor has the importance of interrogating the material dimensions of text, its creation and circulation and consumption, been more clear, as digital media upend traditional modes of publishing, reading, and even academic librarianship. “What is a book?” is a question whose stakes have never been higher, and book historians and bibliographers have risen to the challenge, producing work that examines not just how books exist as physical objects, but how those physical existences have been conditioned by historical circumstances, and how they in turn condition cultures and practices and reading […]

Indigenous Peoples and Borders: decolonization, contestation, trans-border practices

Indigenous Peoples’ sovereignty, cultural integrity, connection to the land and their overall well-being continue to be threatened, defined and constrained by borders. This symposium aims at offering a rare opportunity for indigenous (focused) scholars and practitioners to engage in dialogue in and through border studies. This burgeoning research field can enrich our global knowledge community and vice versa, stimulate border studies scholars to address topics of particular importance for the lived experiences of Indigenous Peoples. In a separate background note, we provide an overview of this increasingly diverse international research field that started with a nearly exclusive focus on physical […]

Schoff Memorial Lectures

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

THE UNIVERSITY SEMINARS & COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS announce the twenty-seventh series of the LEONARD HASTINGS SCHOFF MEMORIAL LECTURES Madeleine Zelin Dean Lung Professor of Chinese Studies; Professor of History and East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University CHINA SEMI-INCORPORATED: THE BATTLE FOR A CHINESE LEGAL MODERNITY IN THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2019, 8 PM I: The “Company” Will Save Us: Utopian Visions of the Corporation in Late Qing China MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2019, 8 PM II: Local Knowledge, Legal Transplants and the Struggle over Limited Liability MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2019, 8 PM III: What is Law when […]

An Urban World: The Changing Landscape of Suburbs and Cities

3:00 pm to 6:30 pm on November 14th and 9:00 am to 6:00 pm on November 15th.  RSVP to: smk2209@columbia.edu PROGRAM Thursday November 14, 3:00 pm – 6:30 pm 2:30–3:00 pm  REGISTRATION 3:00 pm    WELCOME Ira Katznelson, Interim Provost & Ruggles Professor of Political Science & History, Columbia University Lisa Keller, Chair, Seminar on the City, The University Seminars, Columbia University 3:15 pm    KEYNOTE ADDRESS Introduction: Ann Thornton, Vice Provost and University Librarian, Columbia University Kenneth T. Jackson, Barzun Professor of History, Columbia University “The Changing Landscape of Cities and Suburbs in the 21st Century” 4:15 pm    PANEL 1, […]

Seminars Wine Reception

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Come meet chairs and members from other seminars and bring along friends who are interested in learning more about The University Seminars program. The University Seminars office staff and Advisory Board will attend.

Iraqi Studies: Past, Present, and Future

This two-day conference brings together a diverse group of established and emerging scholars working on the history of modern Iraq from the Ottoman period to the present to interrogate Iraqi studies; taking stock of its past, reflecting on the present, and looking towards its future. Studies of modern Iraq have grown qualitatively and quantitatively in recent years. There is now a critical mass of innovative scholars in the US, Europe, and the Middle East who work on Iraq and are exploring new lines of inquiry in a number of different directions. It is common to see Iraq-themed panels and round […]

All 2020 Spring Events Canceled due to COVID-19

The COVID-19 is now categorized as a pandemic by the CDC. Columbia's classes will be held virtually for the remainder of the semester and all non-essential gatherings are restricted. In line with these measures, The University Seminars has decided to cancel all in-person seminars and conferences for the remainder of the semester. Our Annual Dinner, which was originally scheduled for late April, has been postponed until the fall. For those who wish to hold meetings over Zoom, Skype or Google Hangouts, please note the following guidelines: 1. The chair or organizer must read out The University Seminars publication policy to […]

Trans/Formations of Arabic Literary Theory: Prospects and Limits

Hosted by Columbia University’s Arabic Studies Seminar Institute for Comparative Literature and Society Sheikh Zayed Book Award Brill Academic Publishers In Memory of Jaroslav Stetkevych Organizers: Rebecca Johnson, Nizar F. Hermes, Chiara Fontana, Bilal Orfali and Sarah Monks This event will be hosted at Columbia University’s Faculty House and also available virtually for all. Columbia University Affiliates wishing to attend in person should register by clicking the below link. This link is only for Columbia University faculty, students, and staff. For all others, see the links to register in the program. IN-PERSON REGISTRATION PROGRAM AND VIRTUAL REGISTRATION

Schoff Memorial Lecture Series, Lecture I

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Photo by Jessica Collins During the decade of the First World War (1910-1920), African American philosopher, W.E.B. Du Bois, argued that white supremacy functioned both domestically and internationally to thwart the democratic political aspirations of the earth’s “darker peoples,” thus intensifying their vulnerability to anti-black mob violence, race-based economic exploitation, and the devastation wrought by the war itself.  During the same decade, Du Bois elaborated an aesthetics—a philosophy of beauty—that conceptualized beauty as a political force capable of supporting the struggle against white supremacy: of sustaining the moral resolve required to fight white supremacy and of undermining the grip of […]

Schoff Memorial Lecture Series, Lecture II

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Photo by Jessica Collins During the decade of the First World War (1910-1920), African American philosopher, W.E.B. Du Bois, argued that white supremacy functioned both domestically and internationally to thwart the democratic political aspirations of the earth’s “darker peoples,” thus intensifying their vulnerability to anti-black mob violence, race-based economic exploitation, and the devastation wrought by the war itself.  During the same decade, Du Bois elaborated an aesthetics—a philosophy of beauty—that conceptualized beauty as a political force capable of supporting the struggle against white supremacy: of sustaining the moral resolve required to fight white supremacy and of undermining the grip of […]

Schoff Memorial Lecture Series, Lecture III

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Photo by Jessica Collins During the decade of the First World War (1910-1920), African American philosopher, W.E.B. Du Bois, argued that white supremacy functioned both domestically and internationally to thwart the democratic political aspirations of the earth’s “darker peoples,” thus intensifying their vulnerability to anti-black mob violence, race-based economic exploitation, and the devastation wrought by the war itself.  During the same decade, Du Bois elaborated an aesthetics—a philosophy of beauty—that conceptualized beauty as a political force capable of supporting the struggle against white supremacy: of sustaining the moral resolve required to fight white supremacy and of undermining the grip of […]

2022 Annual Dinner

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

November 16, 2022 2022 Tannenbaum Lecture Hecuba’s Howl: Poetry as Feminist Lament This talk includes a reading from my newly published poetry collection, Year of the Dog, a Latina chronicle of the Vietnam War era, and a discussion of the tradition and function of feminist elegy during times of disaster and atrocity. The talk interweaves my perspective as the daughter of a Mexican immigrant Vietnam veteran with other stories of historical and mythic women responding to Vietnam and other forms of warfare—as warriors, widows, antiwar activists, and witnesses of violence. Drawing from the mythic figure of Hecuba, who committed herself […]

Analogues and Kinship: A Talking Circle

Colloquium for Early Medieval Studies Indigenous Futures / Medieval Pasts "Analogues and Kinship: A Talking Circle" Co-hosted by Tarren Andrews (Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, Yale University), Gage Diabo (Kanien’kehá:ka, Concordia University), Emma Hitchcock (Columbia University), and Stephen Yeager (Concordia University) Sponsored by CEMS, Office of the Vice Provost for Faculty Advancement, Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Department of English and Comparative Literature, University Seminar on Medieval Studies, Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity REGISTER IN PERSON HERE | REGISTER FOR ZOOM HERE This CEMS talking circle and workshop facilitates a broad discussion about the politics, power structures, and […]

2023 Schoff Memorial Lecture Series, I

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Hidden Hybridities I: The Eccentric and Creole Nature of the English Language Much of my academic work addresses the results in language of contact between groups. My main interests are in revealing hybridities hitherto unsuspected, and in refining our conception of hybridities more obvious. My goal, addressing a wide range of languages and also extending to music, is to wean us from preconceptions due to superficial appearances, distracting gulfs between the present and the past, and concerns more local to our moment than scientifically framed. In these three lectures I will present areas that I have found of particular interest […]

2023 Schoff Memorial Lecture Series, II

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Hidden Hybridities II: The Afrogenesis Hypothesis of Creole Language Origins Much of my academic work addresses the results in language of contact between groups. My main interests are in revealing hybridities hitherto unsuspected, and in refining our conception of hybridities more obvious. My goal, addressing a wide range of languages and also extending to music, is to wean us from preconceptions due to superficial appearances, distracting gulfs between the present and the past, and concerns more local to our moment than scientifically framed. In these three lectures I will present areas that I have found of particular interest in this […]

2023 Schoff Memorial Lecture Series, III

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Hidden Hybridities III: The Black American Roots of the Broadway Musical Sound Much of my academic work addresses the results in language of contact between groups. My main interests are in revealing hybridities hitherto unsuspected, and in refining our conception of hybridities more obvious. My goal, addressing a wide range of languages and also extending to music, is to wean us from preconceptions due to superficial appearances, distracting gulfs between the present and the past, and concerns more local to our moment than scientifically framed. In these three lectures I will present areas that I have found of particular interest […]

50th Anniversary of Appetitive Behavior

Celebrating a Half-Century of the Columbia University Seminar on Appetitive Behavior Co-sponsored by:  NutriSci, Inc. and The University Seminar on Appetitive Behavior. A brief history of the seminar: The Appetitive Seminar had its first meeting on March 9, 1972. It was created to combine a number of disciplines to study appetite. As the founder, Dr. Theodore VanItallie stated in a letter (16 November 1971) proposing the seminar: “The regulation of food intake and its epiphenomena represent fundamental problems in human biology and physiology. How food intake (appetite) is regulated is still poorly understood and should remain a subject of intense […]

Abolitionism and the Arts

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

10 am - 5 pm Interdisciplinary Symposium at the Heyman Center for the Humanities 5:30 pm Concert at the Maison Française The goal of our conference is to bring together an interdisciplinary group of scholars to think through some key questions and issues that arise when we study the connections between the arts and the history of abolitionism in the Atlantic world, e.g.: What approaches did writers, musicians, and artists take to the problems of slavery and the slave trade? In what ways did their creative activities subvert or reinscribe stereotypes about Africans and African-descended people? How did the materiality of the objects […]

Memory Studies: New Directions

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

  Please join us to discuss two recent collections in Memory Studies and to take stock of new directions in the field. Irene Kacandes, editor of On Being Adjacent to Historical Violence (De Gruyter, 2022), and Brett Kaplan, editor of Critical Memory Studies (Routledge, 2023), will each introduce their volumes and reflect on how the pandemic lock-down inflected the books' contributions. Contributors Claudia Breger, Leo Spitzer, Marita Sturken, Sonali Thakkar, and James Young will offer brief accounts of key memory studies concepts emerging from their essays. This event is open to the public. Fliers to order books at a discount are attached, along with the two […]

Crooked Plow: Translating Social Justice in Brazil

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Crooked Plow: Translating Social Justice in Brazil Join us for a discussion of Brazilian author Itamar Vieira Junior’s best-selling novel Crooked Plow, now available in English. Our speakers will explore translation, literary writing, social justice work, and the long shadow that slavery casts. Co-Sponsored by the University Seminar on Public Humanities: Expanding Scholarship and Pedagogy; Columbia University Department of History; The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities; Columbia Global Centers, Rio De Janeiro; Institute of Latin American Studies. This event is free and open to the public. About the Book Deep in Brazil's neglected Bahia hinterland, two […]

Fall 2023 Schoff Memorial Lecture Series | II

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

The Abundant In Between Time II: A Timeless Tale:  Paule Marshall’s Underappreciated Great Work, “The Chosen Place, The Timeless People” Monday, November 20, 2023, 8 pm Farah Jasmine Griffin The William B. Ransford Professor of English and Comparative Literature and African American and African Diaspora Studies, Columbia University Drawing upon Maya Angelou’s memoirs, The Heart of a Woman (1981) and All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes (1986), these lectures identify a few of her friends, singer, composer, Abbey Lincoln, novelist, Paule Marshall and art historian, ethnographer, Sylvia Ardyn Boone, major artists and intellectuals in their own right, who help us flesh out an […]

Fall 2023 Schoff Memorial Lecture Series | III

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

The Abundant In Between Time III: To Be a Part of the Future:  The Quiet Quest of Sylvia Ardyn Boone Monday, November 27, 2023, 8 pm Farah Jasmine Griffin The William B. Ransford Professor of English and Comparative Literature and African American and African Diaspora Studies, Columbia University Drawing upon Maya Angelou’s memoirs, The Heart of a Woman (1981) and All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes (1986), these lectures identify a few of her friends, singer, composer, Abbey Lincoln, novelist, Paule Marshall and art historian, ethnographer, Sylvia Ardyn Boone, major artists and intellectuals in their own right, who help us flesh out an […]

Making Connections for the Study of the Hebrew Bible

Union Theological Seminary

The conference is intended to encourage regional HB scholars and PhD students to make or strengthen personal connections with one another. At the same time, we hope to highlight interdisciplinary, intercultural, and intertextual connections that many of us are making in our scholarship on the Hebrew Bible The day will be prepared for by gathering responses from planned participants (both attendees and presenters) with 1-2 sentences giving a brief pointer to how they have found an interdisciplinary connection useful for their research or teaching. Those responses will be collected and circulated to attendees so they have an idea of who is at […]

Reception in Memory of Francesco Pellizzi

The Stronach Center (Schermerhorn 8th Floor)

The University Seminar for the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas will be hosting a reception to celebrate the life and achievements of Dr. Francesco Pellizzi, who joined the ancestors in August 2023. Francesco served generously as chair or co-chair of the seminar for 18 years (2005-23), which, under his guidance, made a huge contribution to the life of the department and the university. Thanks to Francesco’s international stature as an anthropologist, art critic, and the Founder and Editor of Res: Anthropology and Aesthetics, Francesco was able to attract an astonishing caliber of scholars to speak. This included distinguished anthropologists […]

GLP-1 Agonists: A New Frontier In The Treatment of Obesity

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

There is considerable excitement about a new generation of anti-obesity medications (AOMs). These medications supply the body with analogues of hormones that are naturally produced in the gut, including glucagon-like-peptide-1 (GLP-1), which signal the termination of eating and suppress hunger. Recent clinical trials demonstrate marked efficacy of GLP-1-based AOMs in promoting weight loss with some evidence that their primary mechanism of action is to limit food intake. Although work is needed to precisely characterize effects on eating behaviors, initial data suggest that GLP-1 analogues can enhance satiation and curb appetite. Ultimately, these new classes of AOMs have potential to counter […]

Test Conference

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

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Labor Day

Columbia University

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

“Cine-Memoria:” Past and Present in Latin American Cinemas

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York +1 more

Cine-Memoria: Past and Present in Latin American Cinemas is a conference and screenings that consider two times in the history of regional Latin American filmmaking. We return to the radical women’s movement and collective filmmaking of the 1960s and 1970s in screenings of rare short titles and reconsider this work in the light of political developments and the emergence of “global auteurs” with international recognition. The first day is dedicated to remembering the critical work of Cuban-American scholar Ana M. López and a third day features online presentations in Spanish and Portuguese. View the Detailed Schedule       PRESENTED […]

Community Hour at Faculty House

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

Community Hour at Faculty House is back. Before you head home after work, take some time to wind down and socialize with your colleagues and other Columbia community members. $15 for 3 drink tickets, beer and wine Complimentary light snacks No reservations required Cash and credit cards both accepted

Academic Holiday

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

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

Election Day

Faculty House 64 Morningside Drive, New York

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

Thanksgiving Break

Columbia University

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