Week of May 14, 2023 in UCIS

Friday, May 12 until Sunday, May 14

12:00 pm Conference
Association for Japanese Literary Studies Conference
Location:
Cathedral of Learning
Sponsored by:
Asian Studies Center along with Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures and Japan Iron & Steel Federation and Mitsubishi Endowments
See Details

The 30th annual meeting of the Association for Japanese Literary Studies will be held at University of Pittsburgh May 12–14, 2023 in the Cathedral of Learning Room 332 & Room 324. The event will be hosted by Charles Exley and Elizabeth Oyler, University of Pittsburgh, with the cooperation of Christopher Lowy and Yoshihiro Yasuhara, Carnegie Mellon University.

We live in a world both fragmented and connected through technologies enabling new platforms for creative expression. These range from online publishing to co-located theatrical productions to tiktok. Such platforms bring to the fore the possibility for performance to be simultaneously playful, individually creative, and socially engaged as they redefine the temporal and spatial parameters of “performance.” The transformation of how, what, and where we perform and experience performances has evolved dramatically in very recent years, but the roles that performance and other arts play as spaces for creative engagement with society, contemporary politics, and the past have been important worldwide throughout history. In Japan, the numerous traditional performing arts designated as Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO attest to the significance of performance as a defining cultural feature, as do contemporary experimental theatre companies and the thriving film industry. From early myth through court ceremony and medieval and early modern theatre to 20th- and 21st century street theatre and anime, performance has been an important tool to provoke, to transform, and to reimagine.

Learn more at: https://www.japanstudies.pitt.edu/ajls-pitt-conference

Tuesday, May 16

3:00 pm Panel Discussion
Roundtable Discussion on Anna Muller's An Ordinary Life? The Journeys of Tonia Lechtman, 1918-1996
Location:
Zoom
Sponsored by:
Center for Russian East European and Eurasian Studies along with Department of History and Polish Studies Association
See Details

Tonia Lechtman was a Jew, a loving mother and wife, a Polish patriot, a committed communist, and a Holocaust survivor. Throughout her life, these identities brought her to multiple countries – Poland, Palestine, Spain, France, Germany, Switzerland, and Israel – where she lived on the margins of society during some of the most pivotal and cataclysmic decades of the twentieth century.
This roundtable will discuss Anna Müller’s book, which is not a mere biography of a remarkable woman, but also offers a view of the troubled history of twentieth-century Europe.

The roundtable features Karolina May Chu, moderator (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee), Marci Shore (Yale University), Joanna Sliwa (Jewish Claims Conference), Anna Hájková (University of Warwick), Jadwiga Biskupska (Sam Houston State University), Małgorzata Fidelis (University of Illinois Chicago), John Bukowczyk (Wayne State University, editor of the Polish and Polish-American Studies Series from Ohio University Press), and Anna Müller.

Anna Müller holds an MA from the University of Gdańsk, Poland, and a Ph.D. from Indiana University. She is an Associate Professor and the Frank and Mary Padzieski Endowed Professor in Polish, Polish American, and Eastern European Studies at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. Previously, she was a curator for the Museum of the Second War in Gdańsk, preparing exhibitions on the Holocaust, the concentration camps, forced labor, and eugenics. She is the author of If the Walls Could Speak. Inside a Women’s Prison in Communist Poland (Oxford University Press, 2018) and An Ordinary Life? The Journeys of Tonia Lechtman, 1918-1996 (Ohio University Press, 2022).

The talk is co-sponsored by the Polish Studies Association, the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies, and the University of Pittsburgh’s History Department.

Through May 23, 2023, discounted books are available at www.ohioswallow.com, using the promo code TONIA.

Wednesday, May 17

5:00 pm Seminar
Seminários CULTNA (Cultura Negra no Atlântico)
Location:
Zoom
Sponsored by:
Center for Latin American Studies along with LABHOI/AFRIKAS UFJF
See Details

Discussão do livro "Casaco que se despe pelas costas". Evento em Português.

Thursday, May 18

5:00 pm Teacher Training
Banned Book Club
Location:
4217 Posvar Hall
Sponsored by:
Global Studies Center and National Consortium on Teaching About Asia