Higher Education

Improvisation and the Orphic Revival in Quattrocento Florence

Presenter: 
James Coleman
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Tue, 09/30/2014 - 17:30

James Coleman holds a Ph.D. in Italian from Yale University, and a B.A. in
Classics, also from Yale. He has published research on Italian literature from
the Trecento to the Settecento. His published work includes essays on
Giovanni Boccaccio's De Canaria, Angelo Poliziano and Quattrocento
Florentine humanism, Ariosto's Orlando Furioso, and the thought of
Giambattista Vico. He has forthcoming work on the humanist forger Laudivio
Zacchia, the first vernacular commentary on Lucretius's De rerum natura,
and the Renaissance reception of Boccaccio's Genealogia. He is currently

Location: 
602 Cathedral of Learning

The Diplomat, the Dealer, and the Digger

Subtitle: 
Writing the History of the Antiquities trade in 19th Century Greece
Presenter: 
Yannis Galanakis
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 10/02/2014 - 16:30

From tomb robbers to diplomats the lucrative trade in antiquities during the 1800s involved much more than individual treasure hunters and travelers seeking souvenirs. During this period, the field of archaeology was forming as a structured discipline, grand-scale excavations were conceived and undertaken, national and imperial museums were founded, the art market became sophisticated and professional, and private collectors vied to be the owners of precious and impressive artifacts.

Location: 
125 Frick Fine Arts

Securitizing Energy in Turkey and the EU: Cheap Talk or New Policies?”

Presenter: 
Dr. Basak Alpan, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science and Public Administration/Centre for European Studies, Middle East Technical University, Turkey
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Mon, 09/29/2014 - 12:00 to 13:00

Dr. Alpan, a visiting scholar in the Center’s International Research Scholar Exchange Scheme, will discuss how energy emerges as a practical security concept and is represented in policy discourses in Europe and Turkey. Ever since the end of Cold War and since 9/11 in particular, the concept of ‘security’ has experienced a profound conceptual change. This talk will examine the securitization of ‘energy’ within the EU and Turkey and its impact on from a comparative perspective.

Location: 
4217 Posvar Hall
Contact Email: 
euce@pitt.edu

Berlin Now: The City in the Years since 1989

Presenter: 
Mr. Peter Schneider, Author and Journalist
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 09/25/2014 - 13:00 to 14:00

In honor of the 25th anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall, the EUCE/ESC and the Department of German are pleased to present a group of events to commemorate the fall of the Berlin Wall. Author of the book “Berlin Now: The City After the Wall”, Peter Schneider, who moved to Berlin in 1962 and witnessed the tearing down of the Berlin Wall, visits the University of Pittsburgh to share his experiences as keen observer of Berlin. His novel Der Mauerspringer (The Wall Jumper) was first published in 1983, and has become a classic. In it he describes life in the shadow of the Wall.

Location: 
3431 Posvar Hall
Contact Email: 
euce@pitt.edu

Crossing genders: Fourier as queer theorist and writer

Presenter: 
Patrick Samzun
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Wed, 09/17/2014 - 12:30 to 14:00

Charles Fourier (1772-1837) was neither gay nor bi. But he was indeed ‘prosaphian’. That means he enjoyed crossing both grammatical and sexual borders in order to build a New Amorous World (1816). We will sketch out some of the ways in which Fourier queers his socialist sexual utopia, such as creating new words and mixing assorted genres and genders, in order to create an at once joyous and ‘ambiguous’ utopia.

Location: 
CL 1218

Let's Talk Africa- Megan Carson

Presenter: 
Megan Carson
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 09/18/2014 - 13:00 to 14:30

Megan Carson spent the 2013-14 academic year in Nairobi studying the state of higher-education in Kenya. Her research attempts to tackle issues of accessibility to public higher education in the context of Kenya’s dual track tuition policy. What are the issues surrounding Kenya’s “public by day, private by night” universities? Join us for “Let’s Talk Africa” to discuss this and more

Location: 
4217 Wesley W Posvar Hall
Cost: 
Free
Contact Person: 
Eric Swetts
Contact Phone: 
412 648 1802
Contact Email: 
ems137@pitt.edu

Film screening: Magicky hlas rebelky (The Magical Voice of a Rebel)

Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Security Notice: Event Changed: 
This event's time has changed
Date: 
Sat, 11/15/2014 - 18:30 to 20:00

This is the first film in the series, "The Play's the Thing: Vaclav Havel, Art and Politics," presented at Pitt by the Czechoslovak Nationality Room courtesy of the Czech Embassy. "Magicky hlas rebelky" is a 2014 documentary about the Czech singer Marta Kubisova, who has become a symbol in the Czech Republic of the period in history known as the Velvet Revolution (1989), when a mass protest movement led to the fall of communism in Czechoslovakia. The film includes segments of members of the dissident organization Charter 77, including former Czech President Vaclav Havel.

Location: 
Frick Fine Arts Auditorium
Cost: 
Free
Contact Person: 
Gina Peirce
Contact Phone: 
412-648-2290
Contact Email: 
gbpeirce@pitt.edu

No Radical Art Actions Will Help Here…

Subtitle: 
A conference on Political Violence and Militant Aesthetics after Socialism, 18+
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 09/18/2014 (All day) to Sun, 09/21/2014 (All day)

A conference organized by Jonathan Brooks Platt (University of Pittsburgh) in collaboration with Marijeta Bozovic (Yale University) and Artemy Magun (St. Petersburg State University, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Sciences)

With: Maksim Alyukov, Ilya Budraitskis, Chto Delat, Igor Chubarov, Keti Chukhrov, Jodi Dean, Gandhi Group, Ilya Kalinin, Elena Kostyleva, Artemy Magun, Kirill Medvedev, Nikolai Oleinikov, Roman Osminkin, Ilya Orlov, Natalia Pershina-Yakimanskaya (Gluklya), Jonathan Platt, Gerald Raunig, Galina Rymbu, Aleksandr Skidan, and Oxana Timofeeva.

Location: 
St. Petersburg, Russia - The State Hermitage Museum

Conversations on Europe: The Scottish Referendum: Results & Implications

Presenter: 
Ailsa Henderson (University of Edinburgh), Guy Peters (University of Pittsburgh), and André Lecours (University of Ottawa)
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Tue, 09/23/2014 - 12:00 to 13:30

“Should Scotland be an independent country?” In a referendum scheduled for September 18th, voters in that country will have an opportunity to vote ‘yes’ or ‘no’ on that very question. On Tuesday, Sepetember 23rd, the EUCE at Pitt will devote the first session of its award-winning Conversations on Europe virtual roundtable series to a discussion of the results of the referendum. What is the future of the Scottish National Party? How will this effect UK politics? What are the implications of the results for other nationalist movements in Europe and North America?

Location: 
4217 Posvar Hall

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