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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221013T150000
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UID:7270-1665673200-1665680400@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Maine Heritage Lecture: “Gluskabe in the 21st Century: Newell Lyon’s Stories Still Carry the Penobscot Language”
DESCRIPTION:Thursday\, October 13 | 3:00 p.m.\nBodwell Lounge of the Collins Center for the Arts\nReception to follow in the Hudson Museum \nMaine Heritage Lecture: “Gluskabe in the 21st Century: Newell Lyon’s Stories Still Carry the Penobscot Language” \nWith Penobscot language carrier Carol Dana\, UMaine Professor of English and former McGillicuddy Humanities Center Margo Lukens will tell the story of their theatrical collaboration that resulted in publishing the first bilingual volume of Penobscot stories\, “Still They Remember Me.” The book’s purpose is to invite Penobscot language learning through traditional stories about the culture hero\, Gluskabe. The stories teach readers/listeners about how Gluskabe transformed the land and balanced its forces to create sustainable life for humans; we learn what it means to live well in this place\, which is the foundation of Penobscot morality. Lukens hopes to inspire listeners to work in ways that improve the conditions for justice in Maine’s relationships with Wabanaki people and communities.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/maine-heritage-lecture-gluskabe-in-the-21st-century-newell-lyons-stories-still-carry-the-penobscot-language/
LOCATION:Bodwell Lounge\, Collins Center for the Arts\, 2 Flagstaff Rd.\, Orono\, ME\, 04469\, United States
CATEGORIES:CLAS event,English Department,Folklife and Oral History,Wabanaki
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220927T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220927T193000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20220902T165506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220902T165506Z
UID:7233-1664301600-1664307000@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Meet the Author: Phuc Tran
DESCRIPTION:On Tuesday\, September 27 at 6:00 pm in the atrium of the Bangor Public Library\, the Clement and Linda McGillicuddy Humanities Center will co-present an event with Phuc Tran\, author of the memior Sigh\, Gone (Flatiron Books\, 2020). The discussion will be led by longtime UMaine lecturer of English Margery Irvine. As part of his visit\, Tran will also drop in on a creative writing class on the University of Maine campus to discuss creative non-fiction and the writing process. \nThis evening is supported by the Maine Humanities Council’s Read ME program\, the Clement and Linda McGillicuddy Humanities Center at the University of Maine\, and Birds&Bones Tattoo Studio and Art Gallery. \nPhuc Tran has been a high school Latin teacher for more than twenty years while also simultaneously establishing himself as a highly sought-after tattooer in the Northeast. Tran graduated Bard College in 1995 with a BA in Classics and received the Callanan Classics Prize. He taught Latin\, Greek\, and Sanskrit in New York at the Collegiate School and was an instructor at Brooklyn College’s Summer Latin Institute. Most recently\, he taught Latin\, Greek\, and German at the Waynflete School in Portland\, Maine. \nTran has been an occasional guest on Maine Public Radio\, discussing grammar; the Classics; and Strunk and White’s legacy. He currently tattoos at and owns Tsunami Tattoo in Portland\, Maine\, where he lives with his family. Phuc is the author of the memoir\, Sigh\, Gone. \nFor anyone who has ever felt like they don’t belong\, Sigh\, Gone shares an irreverent\, funny\, and moving tale of displacement and assimilation woven together with poignant themes from beloved works of classic literature.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/meet-the-author-phuc-tran/
CATEGORIES:English Department,Public Humanities
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://umaine.edu/mhc/wp-content/uploads/sites/276/2022/09/Phuc-Tran-Poster-8.5-×-11-in-e1662137478339.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220915T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220915T210000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20220902T172109Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220902T172109Z
UID:7249-1663268400-1663275600@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:David Barnouw: Who Betrayed Anne Frank and Who Owns her Legacy?
DESCRIPTION:A presentation on Anne Frank\, betrayal\, and the legacy of both by David Barnouw. \nBarnouw is an independent scholar and emeritus researcher at the Dutch Institute for War\, Holocaust and Genocide Studies. His areas of interest are the Second World War in Europe\, memory\, representation\, monuments and museums. He has written over fifteen books and dozens of articles on World War II subjects. He has given lectures at Berkeley\, Columbia\, Cornell\, Harvard\, Princeton\, Rutgers\, UCLA\, WestPoint etc. He has been visiting professor at the University of Vermont in Burlington (2008 and 2012). Barnouw is a renowned expert on Anne Frank and follows her emergence as a global phenomenon and what this means for her historical person and her legacy as a symbol of the Holocaust. He is updating his book Who betrayed Anne Frank? (2003). His latest book The Phenomenon of Anne Frank (originally in Dutch) was published in 2018 by Indiana University Press with a translation in German(2015) and Italian (2021). \nCo-sponsored by the University of Maine History Department\, the McGillicuddy Humanities Center\, the Honors College and the Jewish Community Endowment Association. \nLive streamed at https://youtu.be/qrO3yrHLae0.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/david-barnouw-anne-frank/
LOCATION:Buchanan Alumni House
CATEGORIES:History,Honors College,Judaic Studies,Lecture,Religious Studies
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20211202T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20211202T160000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20211115T172720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211115T183445Z
UID:7056-1638457200-1638460800@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Reaching Readers
DESCRIPTION:Understanding how best to make a topic\, subject or theme relevant to non-specialized audiences is a skill that takes years to master. This roundtable event brings three nationally recognized University of Maine scholars together to discuss the process of planning\, researching\, and composing their new books\, and how they were able to gain the interest of the publishers who eventually supported and published their projects. The event will take place on December 2\, 2021\, at 3 p.m. ET in Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium in Barrows Hall\, and virtually via Zoom.  \nProfessor of Political Science Amy Fried’s new (co-authored) book\, titled At War with Government: How Conservatives Weaponized Distrust from Goldwater to Trump\, was published by Columbia University Press\, Professor of English Margo Lukens’s new (co-authored) book\, titled “Still They Remember Me” Penobscot Transformer Tales\, Volume 1\, was published by University of Massachusetts Press\, and Professor Emeritus of Sociology Kyriacos Markides’s new book\, titled The Accidental Immigrant: A Quest for Spirit in a Skeptical Age\, was published by Hamilton Books. All three books appeared this year (2021)\, and all three authors employed tools drawn from the humanities – historical inquiry\, thoughtful reflection\, and understandings of perspective and connection – to develop their ideas and complete their projects. \nThe event is part of the McGillicuddy Humanities Center’s 2021-2022 Annual Symposium: “Humanities: Impact in Real Life.”  \n  \nPARTICIPANT BIOGRAPHIES: \nAmy Fried is John Mitchell Nickerson Professor of Political Science at the University of Maine. She is the author of Muffled Echoes: Oliver North and the Politics of Public Opinion (Columbia\, 1997) and Pathways to Polling: Crisis\, Cooperation\, and the Making of Public Opinion Professions (2012). \nMargo Lukens is a scholar of Native American literature who has long collaborated with the Penobscot nation.  She is a Professor of English at the University of Maine\, and the former Director of the McGillicuddy Humanities Center. \nKyriacos Markides\, Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Maine\, has written several books on Christian mysticism for academic publishers including Yale University Press\, and trade publishers like Doubleday. \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/reaching-readers/
LOCATION:Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium\, Barrows Hall\, University of Maine\, Orono\, ME\, 04468\, United States
CATEGORIES:Symposium
GEO:44.9012197;-68.6666508
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20211109T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20211109T170000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20211007T171234Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211007T171234Z
UID:7042-1636473600-1636477200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Speaking to Citizens\, Connecting with Audiences
DESCRIPTION:How might politicians\, pundits\, journalists\, scholars\, and other social and cultural leaders best connect with the audiences they need to address?  As part of its 2021-2022 Annual Symposium\, the McGillicuddy Humanities Center is pleased to sponsor a panel exploring this question and the issues it raises.  Bringing together a professional political communicator\, a Maine-based journalist\, and a professor of political philosophy\, the panel will describe how skills learned from the humanities – such as how to conduct interviews and answer questions\, how to speak and write clearly\, and how to engage audiences in democratic processes – play a vital role in their work. \nModerator: Robert A. Ballingall\,  Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Maine. Professor Ballingall’s research interests lie in classical political philosophy and its fraught relationship to modern – especially liberal democratic – political thought.  Before coming to UMaine\, Professor Ballingall was Postdoctoral Fellow in the Program on Constitutional Government at Harvard and Allan Bloom Memorial Postdoctoral Fellow for Research in Classical Political Thought at the University of Toronto\, where he also took his PhD.  Professor Ballingall’s new book\, The Reverent City: Plato’s Laws and the Politics of Ethical Authority\, is under contract to the University of Pennsylvania Press. \n\nPanelist: Victoria Bonney\, Director of Communications for Congresswoman Chellie Pingree (D-Maine).  In 2017\, Victoria Bonney was named Director of Communications for Maine Congresswoman Chellie Pingree.  Before that\, Bonney spent more than a decade of service as a senior spokeswoman and communications strategist for government agencies\, advocacy organizations\, and political campaigns. She served as Communications Manager for Planned Parenthood’s New Hampshire Action Fund\, and previously oversaw the United States Department of Health and Human Services’ outreach and public education strategy throughout New England during implementation of the Affordable Care Act. \nPanelist: Colin Woodard is a New York Times bestselling historian\, a Polk-Award winning journalist\, and the author of six books.  He is a contributing editor at Politico and the State and National Affairs Writer at the Portland Press Herald and Maine Sunday Telegram\, where he received a 2012 George Polk Award and was a finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting. A longtime foreign correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor\, The San Francisco Chronicle\, and The Chronicle of Higher Education\, he has reported from more than fifty foreign countries and seven continents. Born in Waterville\, he’s a graduate of Mt. Abram High School\, Tufts University\, and the University of Chicago\, and a past Pew Fellow in International Journalism at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.His books are interdisciplinary in nature\, informed by his liberal arts education\, and include: Ocean’s End (on the environmental crisis in the world’s oceans)\, The Republic of Pirates (on Blackbeard’s notorious pirate gang); The Lobster Coast (a cultural history of coastal Maine); and three books on the nature of the United States and the deep background to the existential crises it faces: American Nations\, American Character\, and\, most recently\, Union: The Struggle to Forge the Story of United States Nationhood. \n\n\nThis panel is part of the McGillicuddy Humanities Center’s 2021-2022 Annual Symposium: “Humanities: Impact in Real Life”
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/speaking-to-citizens/
LOCATION:Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium\, Barrows Hall\, University of Maine\, Orono\, ME\, 04468\, United States
CATEGORIES:Symposium
GEO:44.9012197;-68.6666508
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20211023T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20211023T150000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210923T170432Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210923T170432Z
UID:7012-1634995800-1635001200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Fall Poetry Pop Up
DESCRIPTION:The McGillicuddy Humanities Center is sponsoring a Fall Poetry Pop Up on Saturday\, October 23\, 2021\, at 1:30 p.m. \nThe open-mic poetry reading will be held outdoors at the Orono Village Green amphitheater\, located behind the Orono Public Library at 39 Pine Street. The event\, which is free and open to the public\, welcomes poets of all ages to share their work. Hot apple cider and other fall refreshments will be served. \nPoets are asked to keep their readings to five minutes in length maximum to make sure that everyone interested in reading has time to do so. If additional time is available at the end\, poets will be allowed to read additional material. \nWhile poets can sign up to read on the spot\, advance confirmation is always appreciated at mhc@maine.edu.  We ask that poets consider a public library audience when selecting which poems to read.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/fall-poetry-pop-up-2/
LOCATION:Orono Village Green\, Behind Orono Public Library\, Orono\, ME\, United States
CATEGORIES:Poetry,Public Humanities
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210421T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210421T203000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210316T152426Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210422T215521Z
UID:6823-1619031600-1619037000@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:The Stories We Tell: McGillicuddy Humanities Center Fellows Showcase
DESCRIPTION:The McGillicuddy Humanities Center is sponsoring a two-night research showcase event\, “The Stories We Tell\,” featuring the research and creative work of our four graduating undergraduate student fellows. While each student has been working independently\, their collective research this past year all happened to center around stories that people tell from generation to generation. The showcase will take place on Wednesday\, April 21\, and Thursday\, April 22\, from 7-8:30 p.m. on both nights. Join the events via Zoom here. Passcode  899432 if prompted. Email questions to mhc@maine.edu. \n  \nPRESENTATION SCHEDULE\nWednesday\, April 21\, 7-8:30 PM\, FELLOWS KATHERINE REARDON AND NOLA PREVOST \nKatherine Reardon\, “What It Was and What I Know: Attempts at Family History” \nSenior English major Katherine Reardon will be reading her creative work discussing family histories and storytelling through the lens of her own Irish family. Reardon was inspired to do this work while studying abroad in her family’s native Ireland. Combining the oral histories and family lore she grew up with sometimes contradictory archival records\, Reardon examines where the truth fits in with these stories\, and whether or not it is important if a family story is true. She will also discuss her personal reflective process\, and locating herself within these stories. \nNola Prevost\, “All The Girls In The Woods: Feminist Fairy Tales for the Modern World” \nNola Prevost will present selections from her original collection of feminist fairy tales\, All The Girls In The Woods. Prevost\, a senior English major and a Women’s\, Gender\, and Sexuality Studies minor\, will explore the ability of the fairy tale genre to create and disseminate knowledge and values\, and how this can be useful for social justice activism. She will also discuss the impact of inclusive and diverse representation in stories on women\, people of color\, and the LGBTQ+ community. \nThursday\, April 22\, 7-8:30 PM\, FELLOWS HAILEY CEDOR AND NOLAN ALTVATER \nHailey Cedor\, “Local Involvement\, Memory and Denial: the Complexities of the Holocaust in Lithuania” \nSenior History major Hailey Cedor will present part of her Honors thesis research about local involvement and memory of Lithuanians in relation to the Holocaust. The complex relationship of current Lithuanians with past atrocities shows the difficulties of acknowledging and reconciling difficult history\, and the dangers of that ignorance. In Lithuania\, the country’s complicated past has left ample room for self-victimization and denial that favors the public memory of non-Jewish Lithuanians\, leaving the small Jewish community that survived the Holocaust to be continually marginalized. Cedor has worked with Holocaust material since the fall of 2018\, and this past experience sparked an interest in Lithuania’s relationship to the Holocaust. \nNolan Altvater\, “Wabanaki Tools of Diplomacy: Storying Protocols as Political Will” \nUsing Indigenous research methodologies\, senior fellow Nolan Altvater’s project aims to center the needs and voices of Wabanaki communities to inform education policy in the State of Maine. Altvater\, a Passamaquoddy citizen and future Tribal educator\, addresses the current barriers of implementation of the Wabanaki Studies Law (LD 291) and presents how Wabanaki diplomacy can lead the way to address these issues and serve as political will toward decolonization and antiracist conviction in Maine education. In addition\, it explores the concepts and protocols of wampum and its later form of Indigenous writing and how Wabanaki people have used traditional intellect to use these tools for empowerment to resist colonialism. Altvater is also a board member of Wabanaki Reach. \nClick here for more information on the McGillicuddy Humanities Center fellowship program\, or email mhc@maine.edu with questions.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/stories-we-tell/2021-04-21/
CATEGORIES:MHC Fellows,MHC Undergraduate Fellowship
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://umaine.edu/mhc/wp-content/uploads/sites/276/2021/03/FB-Cover-The-Stories-We-Tell-e1616103274417.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210405T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210405T200000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210329T220029Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210405T223925Z
UID:6853-1617649200-1617652800@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Virtual Hidden History Tour of Campus - RESCHEDULED
DESCRIPTION:The McGillicuddy Humanities Center’s new “Hidden UMaine” tour aims to highlight key people\, moments and places in campus history that often go overlooked\, including the experiences of the first students of color\, early efforts to create inclusive student groups like Wilde Stein\, or moments of unrest. \nRESCHEDULED DUE TO POWER OUTAGE: \nJoin us on Tuesday\, April 6 at 7 p.m. for a virtual tour of hidden campus history. Free and open to the public. Click here to join the virtual tour.  \nThe MHC’s humanities specialist Karen Sieber is overseeing the project\, which stems from work students started in Professor of History Liam Riordan’s fall of 2020 Public History class.  Using digital public history and mapping methods\, Sieber has been working with history students Luke Miller and Elizabeth Dalton\, in collaboration with archivists at Fogler Library\, to research and curate a tour featuring a dozen lesser-known stories within campus history. \nMiller will highlight stories behind the first Black student on campus\, as well as World War II soldiers from the Class of ‘44. Dalton\, who is also a McGillicuddy Humanities Center Fellow\, will discuss her research into student employment and financial aid during the Great Depression\, and numerous stories of remarkable women in campus history. Sieber\, too\, has added her own research on the Courtney Brothers incident\, as well as a tour stop featuring the efforts of Dr. Ted Mitchell to establish the Native American Studies program and the Wabanaki Center on campus. \nThe team is building the tour in Clio\, a website and app that will allow users to take the tour in person or virtually\, with options to add additional resources\, historic photographs and an audio tour. Dalton has also created an Instagram page to highlight some of the individual stories\, which can be found at @hidden_umaine. The tour has the potential to expand in the future through additional classroom collaborations across a number of fields. \nFollowing the event a link to the tour on the Clio app will be found at: https://umaine.edu/mhc/hiddenhistory/. \nContact karen.sieber@maine.edu with questions.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/hidden-history/
CATEGORIES:digital humanities,History,MHC Fellows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://umaine.edu/mhc/wp-content/uploads/sites/276/2021/03/matheas-e1617052440109.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210312T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210312T150000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210228T212112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210303T155442Z
UID:6787-1615557600-1615561200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:The Resistance  to Reason - McGillicuddy Humanities Center Ivy Flessen
DESCRIPTION:“The Resistance to Reason: An Enduring Problem” \nMarch 12\, 2 pm. \nWe are surrounded by those who refuse to accept what science tells us. Yet in many ways\, the question remains to be answered: how are we to think of these people? How do we to get them to listen? Can we? McGillicuddy Humanities Center Fellow Ivy Flessen will be presenting her research related to these questions. Her talk will center around Plato’s Myth of Er to answer these questions\, and illuminate the irrationality\, hatred\, and anger that seems to overwhelm our political society. Free and open to the public. Pre-registration is required by clicking here.   \nEmail mhc@maine.edu with any questions. \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/resistance-to-reason/
CATEGORIES:MHC Undergraduate Fellowship
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210310T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210310T203000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210127T211829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210127T213211Z
UID:6681-1615404600-1615408200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:The Art of Climate Change
DESCRIPTION:Figuring out new and creative ways to communicate the reality of climate change remains one of the great challenges facing policy-makers\, scientists\, and advocates.  This event brings together two artists with expertise in creating powerful images and visuals about climate science with a veteran science writer and editor to discuss how art can communicate directly and emotionally\, and can engage the public\, in ways that move beyond the scientific findings and data. \nJoin the McGillicuddy Humanities Center on Wednesday\, March 10\, 2021\, at 7:30 p.m. to explore this topic further.  Email mhc@maine.edu to join\, or register at: https://tinyurl.com/artofclimate. \nModerator Laura Helmuth\, Ph.D. is Editor-in-Chief of Scientific American. She is a science journalist with more than 20 years of experience covering all fields of health\, science\, technology\, and the environment. Prior to joining Scientific American\, she was the Science and Health Editor for The Washington Post and has held positions at National Geographic\, Slate\, Smithsonian\, and Science. Helmuth was the President of the National Association of Science Writers from 2016 to 2018 and board member from 2012 to 2016. \nPanelist Jill Pelto is a climate scientist and artist based in Westbrook\, Maine. Her work focuses on communicating human-environment connections. By incorporating scientific research and data into watercolor paintings\, she weaves visual narratives that reveal the benefits and costs of human impacts on this planet. She’s conducted field research around the world\, including the mountain glaciers of Washington and the Transantarctic Mountains. She recently created a custom data-art painting for the cover of TIME Magazine in July 2020. Her biography and a gallery of her work can be found at http://www.jillpelto.com/. \nPanelist Deirdre Murphy decodes the interconnected patterns that exist in art and science through the lens of biological patterns and data visualization. Her research has led to artist residencies at Integral Molecular Biotech and Winterthur Museum. Her paintings\, prints and public art have exhibited at the Philadelphia International Airport\, Palm Springs Museum of Art\, Zillman Art Museum\, Biggs Museum of American Art\, New Bedford Art Museum\, and Tacoma Art Museum. Her biography and a gallery of her work can be found at http://www.deirdremurphyart.com/. \n  \n  \n \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/acc/
CATEGORIES:Art,Art Event,CLAS event,Public Humanities,Symposium
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210225T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210225T203000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210128T193711Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210218T211541Z
UID:6693-1614279600-1614285000@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:The Atlantic Black Box: Reckoning with  New England's Complicity  in the Slave Trade
DESCRIPTION:Atlantic Black Box is a public history project that empowers communities throughout New England to take up the critical work of researching and reckoning with our region’s complicity in the slave trade and the broader slave economy. This grassroots historical recovery movement is powered by citizen historians and guided by a broad coalition of scholars\, community leaders\, archivists\, museum professionals\, antiracism activists\, and artists. \n\nOn February 25\, 2021 at 7:00 p.m.\, the project’s creator’s will discuss the origins of the project\, finding collaborators\, and why this important work is as necessary now as ever. Sponsored by the McGillicuddy Humanities Center as part of their ongoing mission to support the digital and public humanities. Free and open to the public with registration. Register here to get the Zoom link. \n\nMore about Atlantic Black Box’s creators: \n\n\nDr. Meadow Dibble: Meadow Dibble is a Visiting Scholar at Brown University’s Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice. She received her PhD from Brown University’s Department of French Studies and taught at Colby College from 2005–08. Today\, she is editor of The International Educator newspaper. In 2018\, following a brutal awakening to the reality of her hometown’s deep investment in the business of slavery\, she launched Atlantic Black Box\, a public history initiative devoted to researching and reckoning with New England’s role in the slave trade.\n\nDr. Kate McMahon attended the University of Southern Maine for both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees\, and completed her Ph.D. in History at Howard University in May 2017. Her dissertation\, The Transnational Dimensions of Africans and African Americans in Northern New England\, 1776–1865\, explores the complexities of the shipbuilding economies of northern New England\, their connections to the slave trade\, and how Africans and African Americans resisted slavery and racism. Her current research agenda focuses on the connections between northern New England and the illegal slave trade to Brazil and Cuba\, ca. 1830-1850.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/atlantic-black-box/
CATEGORIES:digital humanities,History,Public Humanities
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210224T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210224T180000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210130T233255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210319T151618Z
UID:6706-1614186000-1614189600@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:The Double Standard:  Protest Coverage and Racial Bias
DESCRIPTION:Mass media has a long arm\, and a national influence over public opinion of social issues. When protests broke out across the country recently in support of the Black Lives Matter movement\, newspapers were quick to try to show the ‘true’ nature of these demonstrations. However\, in trying to show news consumers what they wanted to see\, reporters got caught up trying to create angles and portrayals of protestors that escalated racial tensions. \nMcGillicuddy Humanities Center Fellow Leela Stockley will present her research on racial bias in the media in relation to recent Black Lives Matter protests on February 24 at 5 p.m. as part of Black History Month. Stockley\, who is a journalist of color and the current editor-in-chief of the Maine Campus\, will highlight not just the problematic language and images used in the press to depict protestors\, but also how those biased reports affect marginalized communities. She will also provide advice for how journalists can report on social justice movements in the future in a more equitable manner\, and how the public can identify racial bias in the media they consume. She will also discuss plans for an upcoming podcast on the subject of the same name. Register here for the link to join.  \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/double-standard/
CATEGORIES:Communication and Journalism,MHC Fellows
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210218T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210218T153000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210128T222452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211203T042540Z
UID:6699-1613656800-1613662200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Women and Climate Change Speaker Series
DESCRIPTION:Women often are on the front lines of climate change impacts\, yet are uniquely poised to reshape our institutions towards resilience and gender equity. Women are increasingly in leadership roles\, innovating sustainable approaches to scarcity\, and building community around local solutions.  \nJoin us on select Thursdays at 2 p.m. throughout the semester to hear perspectives from women working to reshape their discipline and community with innovative media\, decolonization strategies\, renewable energy programs\, and activism. Organized by Dr. Katie Glover from the Climate Change Institute\, and the Department of Women’s\, Gender and Sexuality Studies\, through a McGillicuddy Humanities Center faculty grant. Part of the MHC’s 2020-2021 symposium on “The Story of Climate Change.” Free and open to the public with registration.  \nRegister once and you’ll be sent a confirmation and link to join all five events in the series. Click here.\n  \nFEBRUARY 18: Ecofeminism in the Urban Landscape \nDylan O’Hara\, PhD student\, Dept. of History\, University of Maine \nO’Hara’s research focuses on urban development in the mid twentieth century United States and leftist activist movements. Her lecture on “Ecofeminism and the Urban Landscape” will focus on the social and political power dynamics of urban renewal in the 1960s. \n  \nMARCH 4: Indigenous Ways of Knowing \nDr. Bonnie Newsom\, Dept. of Anthropology\, University of Maine \nNewsom is an Indigenous archaeologist interested in the pre-contact lifeways of Maine’s Native peoples. Through her research\, she seeks to humanize people in the past by exploring concepts of identity\, style\, social boundaries\, and human agency. This talk will focus on Indigenous ways of knowing as it relates to climate change. \n  \nMARCH 18: Indigenous science is activism \nSara Tenamoeata Kahanamoku\, PhD student\, Integrative Biology\, UC Berkeley \nKahanamoku is a Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) and Maʻohi (Tahitian) scientist from Haleʻiwa\, Oʻahu\, Hawaiʻi. Like many others in their family\, Sara was raised in the ocean\, and it is this relationship that drives their scholarship and activism. Kahanamoku is currently a PhD candidate at UC Berkeley (Huichin Ohlone)\, with a research focus on the impacts of the climate crisis on California’s ocean ecosystems during the 19th and 20th centuries. Kahanamoku’s applied work focuses on the pono (equitable\, relational) co-production of climate-related research and policy.  \n  \nMARCH 25: Podcasts as Method \nDr. Kelsey Emard\, Dept. of Geography\, Oregon State University \nEmard is a human-environment geographer and member of the Instructional Faculty in Geography at Oregon State University. Her current research examines shifting agricultural land uses and livelihoods driven by amenity development in rural areas\, plant health/disease\, and climate change. She is interested in creative feminist methods involving podcasting to analyze and understand often overlooked visceral data.  \n  \nAPRIL 8: Local Solutions to Climate Crises \nYouth activists Ruby Mahoney and Ayano Ishimura\, A Climate to Thrive on Mount Desert Island \nThese two young local climate activists on Mount Desert Island will discuss their experiences working to expand solar capacity to Maine K-12 schools\, and working with the non-profit A Climate to Thrive.\nMahoney is a junior at Mount Desert Island High School and a prominent member of their ECO Team. Eager to make the world around her a better place\, she’s worked with various local and national political and environmental justice organizations\, including Sunrise Movement and A Climate To Thrive. She volunteered for the re-election campaign of junior senator and co-writer of the Green New Deal\, Ed Markey-MA) in 2020 and plans to continue working as an organizer and activist.  \nAyano Ishimura is a passionate and active environmental advocate and visual artist. She is currently a Senior at Mount Desert Island High School in Bar Harbor Maine and is the Co-President of her school’s ECO Team. She has worked on a variety of projects such as declaring a Climate Emergency in her town and expanding solar energy statewide\, to strive towards climate justice in Maine. She takes inspiration from nature and fellow youth members to find creative and collaborative solutions to the climate crisis. \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/wcc/
CATEGORIES:Symposium,WGS
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210122T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210122T113000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20210115T205353Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210115T205612Z
UID:6676-1611313200-1611315000@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:DH Pop In: Using Canva to Market Your Event or Research
DESCRIPTION:The McGillicuddy Humanities Center’s next DH Pop In event will be Friday\, January 22\, at 11AM. The MHC’s Humanities Specialist Karen Sieber will show participants how to use a free\, easy-to-use program called Canva to design event flyers\, social media posts\, brochures\, powerpoints\, resumes and more. Email mhc@maine.edu for the link to join.  No digital skills or design aesthetic needed. \nWhile not a digital humanities tool per se\, as humanities events\, outreach\, and employment move to a virtual format\, learning design skills using programs like Canva will allow participants to better promote their events and research and engage with the public. \nThis event is part of an ongoing “DH PopIn” series which introduces students and faculty to easy-to-use tools and methods in the digital realm that help explore and share the humanities in new and exciting ways. The series will also feature virtual chats with noted digital humanities practitioners from across the country to discuss the process building a variety of different projects\, from GIS mapping to textual analysis. \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/dh-pop-in-canva/
CATEGORIES:digital humanities
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201208T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201208T190000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20201129T180804Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201129T181011Z
UID:6619-1607448600-1607454000@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:The Art of Breathing: Original Feminist Poetry by Bria Lamonica
DESCRIPTION:McGillicuddy Humanities Center Fellow Bria Lamonica will be presenting an original collection of poems\, “The Art of Breathing\,” on December 8 at 5:30 p.m. ET. Free and open to the public. Join the Zoom reading here.\n\nLamonica is a fourth-year English major with a concentration in creative writing and a minor in psychology. As part of her MHC fellowship\, she created this experimental collection of poetry\, which deals with issues of oppression and the female body. The reading will mark the completion of her fellowship\, as well as a celebration and appreciation for feminism and the ongoing work women are doing for equality. She selected four influential women from her academic and personal life to act as readers: Kathleen Ellis\, lecturer in English; UMaine students Sarah Penney and Autumn Rogers; and Linette Hice\, her mother.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/breathing/
CATEGORIES:English Department,Poetry,Public Humanities,WGS
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201201T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201201T203000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20201125T190123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201125T190747Z
UID:6607-1606849200-1606854600@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Tarred and Feathered: UMaine's Hidden Connection  to the Red Summer of 1919
DESCRIPTION:Karen Sieber\, Humanities Specialist at the McGillicuddy Humanities Center\, will speak at 7 p.m. ET on Tuesday\, December 1\, 2020\, about her research\, “Tarred and Feathered: UMaine’s Hidden Connection to the Red Summer of 1919.” Free and open to the public.  Co-sponsored by the McGillicuddy Humanities Center and the Office for Diversity and Inclusion. Join via Zoom at: https://maine.zoom.us/j/85185694577.\n\nSieber\, who comes from a background in public history and the digital humanities\, has made it her one-woman mission to increase awareness about the Red Summer of 1919\, the term given to a nationwide wave of violence against African Americans that year. Over the past five years she has built the world’s largest database and archive on the topic\, Visualizing the Red Summer\, which is now the most used classroom resource on the Red Summer in the nation. Her work has been featured or cited by the National Archives\, American Historical Association\, History Channel\, Zinn Education Project and others.\n\nSieber recently discovered a previously undocumented case of Red Summer violence at the University of Maine that year. Two African American brothers\, Samuel and Roger Courtney\, were tarred and feathered by their fellow students. The incident was kept out of the press and university records until now. She is using the incident as an opportunity to work with students in Liam Riordan’s Public History class to build an interactive map of this and other hidden histories on campus.\n\nSieber will discuss her work building what she calls a “rogue archive\,” her recent discovery of the Courtney Brothers incident and parallels it holds to current events\, and her work with students to think about campus as not just a neutral place where history is studied but as an active place where history has made\, forgotten\, and at times erased.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/red-summer/
CATEGORIES:Public Humanities
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201117T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201117T203000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20201102T183942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201102T184309Z
UID:6569-1605641400-1605645000@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Telling the Story of Climate Change
DESCRIPTION:This event\, part of the MHC’s 2020-2021 Symposium on “The Story of Climate Change” brings together people from different professional fields tasked with communicating the impact of climate change to the public. The panel (which will be remote\, via Zoom) features a veteran reporter\, scientists working with Maine’s Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife (DIFW)\, and is moderated by Dr. Katherine Glover from the University of Maine’s Climate Change Institute.  Panelists will discuss best practices for telling the story of climate change\, and for helping the public understand environmental transformation on both a local and global scale. \nPanelists: \nBill Trotter is a veteran Bangor Daily News reporter who writes about how the Atlantic Ocean and the state’s iconic coastline help to shape the lives of coastal Maine residents and visitors.  Based in Ellsworth\, he writes about fisheries\, marine-related topics\, and covers eastern coastal Maine communities. \nDr. Amanda Cross is a wildlife biologist with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife and a member of the Maine Climate Council.  She studies\, teaches\, and conducts public outreach about vernal pool ecology across Maine. \nLee Kantar is a Moose Biologist for the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife.  In 2019\, Kantar was awarded the Distinguished Moose Biologist Award at the 53rd North American Moose Conference held in Carrabassett Valley\, Maine. \nModerator \nDr. Katherine Glover is a Research Associate at the University of Maine’s Climate Change Institute. Specializing in how interactions between hydroclimate\, vegetation\, and wildfire produce landscape change\, and the sustainable  management of public lands\, Dr. Glover will be teaching WGS 301/501: Women and Climate Change\, in the spring\, 2021 semester. \nThe panel will run 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.\, and it will be recorded.\nJoin via Zoom at: https://maine.zoom.us/j/84162028940
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/telling-the-story-of-climate-change/
CATEGORIES:Symposium
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201112T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201112T133000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20201103T173043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201111T171455Z
UID:6584-1605184200-1605187800@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:The Humanities as Activism in Chicago
DESCRIPTION:On Thursday\, November 12\, the McGillicuddy Humanities Center will be sponsoring a panel on “The Humanities as Activism in Chicago.” This session of the Socialist and Marxist Studies Series will feature three remarkable panelists whose work at the intersection of the humanities and activism has garnered national attention: Tonika Johnson\, Kevin Coval\, and Nicole Marroquin. Free and open to the public. \nJoin on 11/12 at 12:30p.m. EST at: https://maine.zoom.us/j/94485327393?pwd=ME4rWk84dUxkRGlHbm5WR05kR2U0dz09 \n  \nAbout the panelists: \nTonika Johnson is a visual artist\, photographer\, and community activist from Chicago’s South side Englewood neighborhood. Her Folded Map project examines the long history of redlining and segregation in the city. Johnson works to address inaccurate negative perceptions about the South and West sides of Chicago\, and open a dialogue about institutional racism and segregation. She is co-founder of the Resident Association of Greater Englewood (R.A.G.E.) and lead co-founder of Englewood Arts Collective. In 2017\, Johnson was named a Chicagoan of the Year\, and in 2019\, she was named one of Field Foundation’s Leaders for a New Chicago. She was recently appointed as a member of the Cultural Advisory Council of the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events by the Chicago City Council.  \nKevin Coval is an Emmy-nominated\, award-winning poet & author of Everything Must Go: The Life & Death of an American Neighborhood\, A People’s History of Chicago & over ten other full-length collections\, anthologies & chapbooks. He is a founding editor of The BreakBeat Poets imprint on Haymarket Books. Coval is Creative Director of the MacArthur Award-winning cultural organization\, Young Chicago Authors\,  a founder of Louder Than a Bomb: The Chicago Youth Poetry Festival\, the world’s largest youth poetry festival\, now in more than 19 cities across North America. He’s shared the stage with The Migos & Nelson Mandela & his work has been feature on The Daily Show\, Poetry Magazine\, The Chicago Tribune & CNN.com & four seasons of HBO’s Def Poetry Jam. Coval was the recipient of the 2018 Studs Terkel Award. \nNicole Marroquin is an interdisciplinary artist who’s practice includes art making\, collaboration\, research and cultural production with youth and in communities. She has exhibited locally and internationally\, including the Museo Nacional de Culturas Populares in Mexico City and the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago. She is a member of the feminist collective Multiuso\, and a former Joan Mitchell Fellow at the Center for Racial Justice Innovation. Marroquin is the creator of Chicago Raza Research Consortium\, a grassroots effort to map\, gather\, and present Mexican\, Mexican American\, Chicano\, Latinx\, and Raza history in Chicago. She is Associate Professor in the Department of Art Education at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. \n  \nModerator: Karen Sieber is Humanities Specialist at the McGillicuddy Humanities Center. She is a former Chicagoan\, who is a public historian doing research on what she calls “tactical humanities\,” or using the humanities in strategic outside-of-the-box ways to draw attention to urgent issues. \nFor more information on the Socialist and Marxist Studies Series click here.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/humanities-as-activism/
CATEGORIES:Marxist-Socialist Studies Series,Public Humanities
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201026T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201026T203000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200920T192130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201009T181542Z
UID:6520-1603737000-1603744200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Harlan County\, USA: The Story of Climate Change Film Series
DESCRIPTION:The McGillicuddy Humanities Center Symposium Film Series returns with narrative and documentary films that engage with this year’s symposium theme\, “The Story of Climate Change.” The selected films present visions of our past and future and examine our relationships with the environment\, energy\, material culture\, and the power structures that shape the many stories of climate change. All films begin at 6:30 p.m. EST virtually. Three additional films will air in the Spring as part of this series. Email mhc@maine.edu with questions.  \nRegister here to get the link for the film series: https://tinyurl.com/yy37uxdz \nOctober 12: Wall-E \nIntroduction by Brie Berry\, PhD student (ANTH) \nOctober 26: Harlan County\, USA \nIntroduction by Karen Sieber\, McGillicuddy Humanities Center \nNovember 9: Mad Max: Fury Road \nIntroduction by Professor Lisa Neuman (ANTH)
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/harlan-county-usa-the-story-of-climate-change-film-series/
CATEGORIES:Film Series,Symposium
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201019
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201020
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200917T180016Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201014T193206Z
UID:6512-1603065600-1603151999@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:McGillicuddy Humanities Center Funding Fall Deadline
DESCRIPTION:Applications and proposals for student and faculty funding from the McGillicuddy Humanities Center are due October 19\, 2020. More information about each opportunity is available below\, or on our website at umaine.edu/mhc/research/. Student Fellows are awarded $8\,000 over a two semester period. Faculty grants of up to $5\,000 are awarded to support classrooms initiatives\, events\, and research. \nPlease note: For academic year 2020-2021\, the McGillicuddy Humanities Center will not be awarding faculty grants for travel.  This is in accordance with the University of Maine System’s current travel guidance regarding covid-19. Proposals not involving travel will be unaffected by this temporary change. \nUndergraduate Fellowships\nThe McGillicuddy Humanities Center Undergraduate Fellows program offers junior and senior humanities students the support needed to concentrate on their coursework and develop research or creative projects\, work collaboratively with a select group of peers\, participate in interdisciplinary humanities programs\, and gain professional skills. Fellows will receive $4000 each per semester for two consecutive semesters (fall/spring or spring/fall cycles). At the culmination of their tenure\, Fellows must give one live presentation of their research. \nApplication Process \nWe have recently updated the fellowship application process. Guidelines for what information should be included in your proposal\, and how it should be formatted\, are available at umaine.edu/mhc/research/. The document also includes guidelines and instructions for your faculty advisor’s letter of support\, which is to be mailed separately from your application to mhc@maine.edu. Applications are invited annually in October and March\, and are evaluated by a team of faculty advisors based on the rubric available below. Fellowships are competitive but are based on the strength of one’s ideas and research plans\, not the strength of one’s GPA.  We fund up to eight MHC Undergraduate Fellows at a time. Applications for this cycle are due October 19\, 2020 via our online portal. \nFaculty Grants\nThe Clement and Linda McGillicuddy Humanities Center Faculty Grant award applications are being accepted for maximum awards of $5000 to support faculty at all levels\, for their research\, community engagement\, or innovative teaching proposals. Funds are used for expense reimbursement and cannot be used as compensation for faculty time. \nApplication Process \nGrant applications and budget forms can be found on our website\, and emailed to Director michael.socolow@maine.edu by October 19\, 2020 for the fall deadline.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/mhcfallfunding2020/
CATEGORIES:CLAS event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201012T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201012T203000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200920T191858Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201009T181403Z
UID:6517-1602527400-1602534600@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Wall-E: The Story of Climate Change Film Series
DESCRIPTION:The McGillicuddy Humanities Center Symposium Film Series returns with narrative and documentary films that engage with this year’s symposium theme\, “The Story of Climate Change.” The selected films present visions of our past and future and examine our relationships with the environment\, energy\, material culture\, and the power structures that shape the many stories of climate change. All films begin at 6:30 p.m. EST virtually. Three additional films will air in the Spring as part of this series. Email mhc@maine.edu with questions.  \nRegister here to get the link for the film series: https://tinyurl.com/yy37uxdz \nOctober 12: Wall-E \nIntroduction by Brie Berry\, PhD student (ANTH) \nOctober 26: Harlan County\, USA \nIntroduction by Karen Sieber\, McGillicuddy Humanities Center \nNovember 9: Mad Max: Fury Road \nIntroduction by Professor Lisa Neuman (ANTH)
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/wall-e-the-story-of-climate-change-film-series/
CATEGORIES:Film Series,Symposium
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200925T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200925T160000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200810T153726Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200902T123851Z
UID:6483-1601046000-1601049600@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Careers in Public History workshop
DESCRIPTION:Kate Axelson Foster from the Career Center will lead a virtual workshop on “Careers in Public History” on September 25\, 2020 at 3 p.m. Foster will provide students with tips for navigating the public history job market. Attendees will learn about how to search and apply for internships and careers in public history\, including work with museums\, archives\, historic preservation offices\, the National Park Service\, historical societies and more. \nJoin the meeting at: tinyurl.com/y3qyt4po using the password: kate. \nEmail riordan@maine.edu for more information. \nSponsored by the University of Maine History Department\, Career Center\, and McGillicuddy Humanities Center.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/careers-in-public-history-workshop/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:History,History Event,Public Humanities,workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200925T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200925T123000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200727T192632Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200902T124029Z
UID:5990-1601022600-1601037000@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Virtual NEH Grant Writing Workshop
DESCRIPTION:On Friday\, September 25\, 2020\, the University of Maine’s McGillicuddy Humanities Center will offer a virtual workshop on applying for NEH grants. It will be conducted by Mark Silver\, Senior Program Officer in the Division of Research Programs at the National Endowment for the Humanities. The workshop is open to the public. Anyone interested in learning about NEH funding opportunities and application strategies is invited to attend\, although space is limited and priority will be given to those in the Mid-Coast\, Downeast and Highlands regions of Maine. The workshop will run from 8:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. Although the event is free\, you must register in advance. Registration is now open using this link.  \nDuring the first half of the workshop\, Dr. Silver will provide an overview of a variety of NEH funding opportunities and offer guidance for writing competitive proposals. In the second half of the workshop\, he will run a mock application review panel\, where panelists will discuss and rank sample proposals using NEH guidelines to provide insight into how applications are evaluated and recommended for NEH funding. \nDr. Silver will also be available during the afternoons of Thursday\, September 24\, and Friday\, September 25\, to meet virtually with prospective applicants to discuss their projects and offer advice about their proposals. Those interested in scheduling a twenty-minute appointment will be asked to submit a one-page single-spaced overview of their project in advance. \nFor more information\, email mhc@maine.edu or follow us on social media.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/virtual-neh-grant-writing-workshop/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Anthropology,Art,Canadian Studies,Center for Poetry and Poetics,CLAS event,Communication and Journalism Event,digital humanities,English Department,Folklife and Oral History,History,Performing Arts,Philosophy Department Colloquium Series,Poetry,Wabanaki,WGS
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://umaine.edu/mhc/wp-content/uploads/sites/276/2020/07/NEH-Workshop-Edited-e1599050417347.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200918T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200918T163000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200901T133129Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200902T122836Z
UID:6494-1600441200-1600446600@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Humanities Faculty Fall Welcome Event
DESCRIPTION:Humanities Faculty Fall Welcome Event\nSeptember 18\, 2020\, 3pm – 4:30pm\nMartin Luther King Plaza\n\nThe McGillicuddy Humanities Center will be sponsoring a welcome event to introduce new and returning faculty members in the Humanities to the Center and each other.  This in-person\, outdoors event will offer faculty the opportunity to interact and talk about their research in alternative\, distanced formats\, including speed mingling (like speed dating)\, research charades\, and pictionary. As space is limited for safety\, attendees must register by emailing karen.sieber@maine.edu. Snacks will be served.\n\nWe look forward to seeing you & hearing about your scholarship (and your summer)!
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/humanities-faculty-fall-welcome-event/
LOCATION:MLK Plaza\, University of Maine\, Orono\, ME\, 04469\, United States
CATEGORIES:CLAS event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200818T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200818T140000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200811T202452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200811T202541Z
UID:6488-1597755600-1597759200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:DH Pop In: Simple Mapping
DESCRIPTION:Building off of the success of the Black Digital History event this spring\, the McGillicuddy Humanities Center will be continuing their DH Pop In series throughout the year to show the potential and accessibility of the digital humanities for research and classroom use. Spearheaded by the MHC’s Humanities Specialist Karen Sieber\, each event will showcase a different tool or digital project\, and teach users how to use similar methods in their own research or creative work\, including mapping\, textual analysis and digital exhibits. \nThe next DH Pop In will be Tuesday\, August 18\, at 1PM. Sieber will show virtual attendees how to build quick\, easy\, free interactive maps and guided tours using the tools StoryMapJS\, GoogleMaps and Clio. No experience is necessary. Possibly uses include building interactive maps to help students make sense of jam-packed survey classes\, harnessing the power of maps to organize research notes\, and breaking down big ideas spatially for a general audience. These tools also allow for collaborative remote work for classrooms meeting virtually. \nEmail mhc@maine.edu to get the link to register for the DH Pop In. \nSieber’s own digital humanities work has received national attention in recent years. The site Digital Loray (www.digitalloray.org) received the National Humanities Alliance’s “Humanities For All” award. The map\, timeline and digital archive on the race riots of 1919 that she built (www.visualizingtheredsummer.com) is used in classrooms around the country and has reached hundreds of thousands of users.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/dh-pop-in-simple-mapping/
CATEGORIES:digital humanities,Public Humanities,workshop
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200803T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200803T140000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200727T193956Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200727T193956Z
UID:5993-1596459600-1596463200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:DH Pop In: Building Digital Timelines
DESCRIPTION:Building off of the success of the Black Digital History event this spring\, the McGillicuddy Humanities Center will be continuing their DH Pop In series throughout the year to show the potential and accessibility of the digital humanities for research and classroom use. Spearheaded by the MHC’s Humanities Specialist Karen Sieber\, each event will showcase a different tool or digital project\, and teach users how to use similar methods in their own research or creative work\, including mapping\, textual analysis and digital exhibits. \nThe next DH Pop In will be Monday\, August 3\, at 1PM. Sieber will show virtual attendees how to build quick\, easy\, free interactive timelines using the tool TimelineJS. No experience is necessary. Possibly uses include building virtual timelines to help students make sense of jam-packed survey classes\, harnessing the power of timelines to organize graduate school comps notes\, and using timelines to break down big ideas for a general audience. This tool also allows for collaborative remote work for classrooms meeting virtually. \nEmail mhc@maine.edu to get the link to register for the DH Pop In. \nSieber’s own digital humanities work has received national attention in recent years. The site Digital Loray (www.digitalloray.org) received the National Humanities Alliance’s “Humanities For All” award. The map\, timeline and digital archive on the race riots of 1919 that she built (www.visualizingtheredsummer.com) is used in classrooms around the country and has reached hundreds of thousands of users.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/dh-pop-in-building-digital-timelines/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Anthropology,Art,CLAS event,Communication and Journalism,digital humanities,English Department,Folklife and Oral History,History,Philosophy Department Colloquium Series,WGS
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200325T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200325T180000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200227T180804Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200227T180913Z
UID:5906-1585153800-1585159200@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Canción/Canção\, a recital of art songs from Cuba\, Brazil and Argentina featuring mezzo-soprano Caitlin Felsman\,
DESCRIPTION:Canción/Canção\, a recital of art songs from Cuba\, Brazil and Argentina featuring mezzo-soprano Caitlin Felsman\, will be held on March 25 at 4:30 p.m. in Minsky Recital Hall. Presented by the McGillicuddy Humanities Center\, the event is free and open to the public. \nFor decades\, political turmoil has limited the cultural exchange of the United States and Cuba. In 2017\, Caitlin Felsman\, mezzo-soprano\, traveled to Cuba to study with local musicians and collect art songs. In 2018 she received the Espacio Abierto grant from the Villa Victoria Center for the Arts in Boston to present a recital tour featuring the songs. Join Caitlin and pianist Sally VanderPloeg for a program that explores and celebrates the Cuban classical sound from the 20th century through today featuring works from contemporary Cuban composer Jose Maria Vitier\, as well as rarely performed works from Brazil and Argentina. \nBIOS:\nCaitlin Felsman\, mezzo-soprano\, has been praised for her “velvety low register” and “bright\, ringing top” [Boston Music Intelligencer]. She is a dynamic\, passionate performer\, equally at home on the opera stage and in intimate recital venues. Caitlin made her professional opera debut in November 2011 with Austin Lyric Opera as Second Lady in Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte. In 2018\, Ms. Felsman received the Espacio Abierto grant from the Villa Victoria Center for the Arts in Boston and presented a recital tour featuring Cuban art song. In 2019 she performed bel canto favorites in a recital tour of Divas and Rivals: the Birth of the Diva with sopranos Kathryn McKellar and Barbara Quintiliani\, and premiered the role of Bella Carter in a workshop performance of the new opera Before the War is Over by Beth Wiemann. Her recent opera roles include the title role in Rossini’s La Cenerentola (NEMPAC)\, Stephano in Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette (Maryland Lyric Opera)\, Cousin Hebe in Gilbert and Sullivan’s H.M.S. Pinafore (Natchez Festival of Music)\, and Dorabella in Mozart’s Così fan tutte (NEMPAC\, Opera del West). Learn more at caitlinfelsman.com \nSally VanderPloeg is a collaborative pianist who enjoys opera\, vocal coaching and chamber music. She received her Masters in Collaborative piano from The Boston Conservatory in 2013. VanderPloeg has served as rehearsal pianist for a number of productions at The Boston Conservatory\, Sarasota Opera\, Boston Midsummer Opera and Odyssey Opera. These days\, she enjoys performing with friends\, subbing in area churches and playing the occasional “gig” with Opera on Tap in Boston. VanderPloeg now works as a nurse for Families First Community Health Center in Portsmouth\, NH. She runs their homeless healthcare program and also coordinates the Hepatitis C treatment program.
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/cancion-cancao/
LOCATION:Minsky Recital Hall\, Collins Center for the Arts\, University of Maine\, Orono\, ME\, 04469\, United States
CATEGORIES:Performing Arts,Symposium
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200323T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200323T200000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200204T200002Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200210T171424Z
UID:5845-1584986400-1584993600@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:Innocence Unprotected: The Cinema of Colonization and Decolonization
DESCRIPTION:The McGillicuddy Humanities Center is holding a year-long film series examining “The Cinema of Colonization and Decolonization” as part of our annual symposium. The films selected engage with the theme in a variety of ways\, from incorporating the legacies of colonization into the storyline to disrupting traditional Western systems and methods of production and distribution. Films are shown in Hill Auditorium in Barrows Hall (ESRB) on select Monday evenings at 6 p.m. All movies are free\, open to the public\, and include a meal and discussion. \nMarch 9: Coffy \nCoffy  (1973)\, directed by Jack Hill\, is a classic of blaxploitation cinema starring Pam Grier as a vigilante nurse fighting drug dealers\, criminals\, and the system\, in an effort to avenge her sister’s death. The film subverts the action/crime movie genre and places black characters at the center as the heroes. Noted visiting film scholar\, Professor Ernest Mathijs from the Film and Media Studies Department at the University of British Columbia\, will lead a discussion following the film. \nMarch 23: Innocence Unprotected \nInnocence Unprotected (1968)\, directed by Dusan Makavejev\, is a Yugoslav film pieced together with footage from an earlier 1941 film of the same name made by gymnast Dragoljub Aleksić that was never released due to Nazi censors. Makavejev added additional news footage from the war and Nazi propaganda to turn it into something entirely new\, part documentary\, part bizarre acrobatic montage. Michael Grillo\, Associate Professor of the History of Art at UMaine\, will lead a discussion following the film. \nApril 6: Timbuktu  \nTimbuktu (2014)\, directed by Abderrahmane Sissako\, is a French-Mauritanian film that examines the brief occupation of Timbuktu\, Mali by the militant Islamist group Ansar Dine. The film has won numerous awards\, including the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Foreign Language Film\, and the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Alan Berry\, PhD student in Communication\, will lead a discussion following the film. \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/innocence-unprotected-the-cinema-of-colonization-and-decolonization/
LOCATION:Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium\, Barrows Hall\, University of Maine\, Orono\, ME\, 04468\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art,Communication and Journalism,Film Series,History,Lecture,MHC Symposium 2019,Public Humanities,Symposium
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200310T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200310T173000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200227T191911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200309T135753Z
UID:5911-1583856000-1583861400@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:CANCELED: Hunter Without Hunting Ground: The Dispossessed Wanderer in 21st Century Film
DESCRIPTION:CANCELED due to unforeseen travel issues.\nFollow our calendar to stay informed about other upcoming events.\nThe Rising Tide Center in collaboration with the Department of Communication & Journalism and the McGillicuddy Humanities Center presents\, “Hunter Without Hunting Ground: The Dispossessed Wanderer in 21st Century Film ” \nVisiting professor Dr. Ernest Mathijs\, Professor of Film and Media Studies at the University of British Columbia\, will speak in Hill Auditorium in Barrows Hall on March 10 at 4p.m. The event is free and open to the public. \nFrom Charlie Chaplin’s loving tramp to violent hillbillies in Deliverance and zombies in the Walking Dead\, portrayals of the dispossessed wanderer\, or “white trash” in film as”backwards” are fundamental in informing American debate on race\, gender\, and belonging. In this lecture\, Professor Ernest Mathijs will trace the representation of rural\, white dispossessed wanderers in film through the years and show how our understanding of property ownership as an identity-affirming value influences current political discussions. \n“Hunter Without Hunting Grounds” is supported in part by a grant from the Cultural Affairs/Distinguished Lecture Series fund. \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/hunter-without-hunting-ground-the-dispossessed-wanderer-in-21st-century-film/
LOCATION:Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium\, Barrows Hall\, University of Maine\, Orono\, ME\, 04468\, United States
CATEGORIES:Communication and Journalism Event,Film Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200309T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200309T200000
DTSTAMP:20260607T040223
CREATED:20200204T182547Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200309T134626Z
UID:5836-1583776800-1583784000@umaine.edu
SUMMARY:(CANCELED) Coffy: The Cinema of Colonization and Decolonization
DESCRIPTION:The March 9 showing of the film Coffy  is CANCELED due to unforeseen travel delays with the speaker.\nTomorrow’s talk with Professor Mathijs is also canceled.\nFuture “Cinema of Colonization and Decolonization” events listed below will continue as scheduled.  \nThe McGillicuddy Humanities Center is holding a year-long film series examining “The Cinema of Colonization and Decolonization” as part of our annual symposium. The films selected engage with the theme in a variety of ways\, from incorporating the legacies of colonization into the storyline to disrupting traditional Western systems and methods of production and distribution. Films are shown in Hill Auditorium in Barrows Hall (ESRB) on select Monday evenings at 6 p.m. All movies are free\, open to the public\, and include a meal and discussion. \nMarch 9: Coffy (*CANCELED)  \nCoffy  (1973)\, directed by Jack Hill\, is a classic of blaxploitation cinema starring Pam Grier as a vigilante nurse fighting drug dealers\, criminals\, and the system\, in an effort to avenge her sister’s death. The film subverts the action/crime movie genre and places black characters at the center as the heroes. Noted visiting film scholar\, Professor Ernest Mathijs from the Film and Media Studies Department at the University of British Columbia\, will lead a discussion following the film. \nMarch 23: Innocence Unprotected \nInnocence Unprotected (1968)\, directed by Dusan Makavejev\, is a Yugoslav film pieced together with footage from an earlier 1941 film of the same name made by gymnast Dragoljub Aleksić that was never released due to Nazi censors. Makavejev added additional news footage from the war and Nazi propaganda to turn it into something entirely new\, part documentary\, part bizarre acrobatic montage. Michael Grillo\, Associate Professor of the History of Art at UMaine\, will lead a discussion following the film. \nApril 6: Timbuktu  \nTimbuktu (2014)\, directed by Abderrahmane Sissako\, is a French-Mauritanian film that examines the brief occupation of Timbuktu\, Mali by the militant Islamist group Ansar Dine. The film has won numerous awards\, including the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Foreign Language Film\, and the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Alan Berry\, PhD student in Communication\, will lead a discussion following the film. \n 
URL:https://umaine.edu/mhc/event/coffy/
LOCATION:Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium\, Barrows Hall\, University of Maine\, Orono\, ME\, 04468\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art,Communication and Journalism,English Department,Film Series,Lecture,MHC Symposium 2019,Public Humanities,Symposium
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END:VCALENDAR