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Sermon I Wish I’d Heard Play & Workshop

ZOOM Meeting ID: 945 5862 5941

Tuesday April 20th, 2021 at 6:00 pm EST Zoom Virtual Event  Featuring: Lakhiyia Hicks Growing up Blxck, Queer, Non-binary, and Bible Belted in the Midwest, the Sermon I wish I'd Heard bears witness to Hicks' journey towards self-love through spoken word, song, and movement--three friends that fed the indomitable spirit childhood required. Such is a

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Will Robots Feel Pain? The Politics of Race, the Governance of Technology, and the Future of Humanity – Sylvester Johnson

Reitz Union G330

The UF Intersections Symposium celebrates the achievements of the UF Intersections project and the first two completing classes of Intersections Scholars (2020 + 2021). This two-hour event begins with a keynote presentation by Prof. Sylvester Johnson (Virginia Tech) entitled “Will Robots Feel Pain? The Politics of Race, the Governance of Technology, and the Future of

Critical STEM @ Marston: Dr. Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, “The Problem with Diversity and Inclusion”   

The Marston Science Library is pleased to host Dr. Chanda Prescod-Weinstein for a virtual speaking engagement. In this talk, Dr. Prescod-Weinstein will provide an interdisciplinary perspective on the evolution of “diversity and inclusion” as a legal and institutional concept, and discuss the demographic challenges astronomy and physics face as we move into the roaring 2020s. After her talk,

“Policing The Womb: Invisible Women & The Criminalization of Motherhood”

Michele Bratcher Goodwin (Chancellor’s Professor of Law; Director, Center for Biotechnology and Global Health Policy, University of California, Irvine) Virtual Event – Register Here to Receive Zoom URL In this talk, Professor Goodwin addresses the escalation of criminal punishments directed at pregnant women in the United States. Her talk reflects more than ten years of

“Latin America Writes Back 2.0: Political & Environmental Crisis in Science Fiction”

Smathers Libraries 100

“Latin America Writes Back 2.0: Political and Environmental Crisis in Science Fiction” commemorates and extends UF’s landmark 2005 symposium, “Latin America Writes Back.” That symposium identified UF as an early pioneer in the growing field of Latin American SF studies and featured talks by author/scholar Edmundo Paz Soldán and scholar J. Andrew Brown. This new

“Topple: Reimagining Monuments”

Paul M. Farber  (Director, Monument Lab, Philadelphia) Virtual Event – Register Here to Receive Zoom URL Monument Lab Director and Co-founder Paul Farber shares insights on the reckoning and reimagining of our nation’s monuments. Over the last decade, artists, activists, and cultural organizers have pushed the status quo in public art, especially to reckon with

“Snakes on the Dance Floor: Bollywood Divas and Gay Indian Nightlife”

The Center for Gender Sexualities, and Women’s Studies Research will be hosting a book talk by Dr. Kareem Khubchandani on November 8th from 2:00-3:30pm via Zoom. “Snakes on the Dance Floor: Bollywood Divas and Gay Indian Nightlife” Kareem Khubchandani (any pronouns) is the Mellon Bridge assistant professor in theater, dance, and performance studies, and women’s,

“Co-creating Knowledge: Collaboration and Change”

 Joy Connolly  (President, American Council of Learned Societies, The Graduate Center of The City University of New York, Distinguished Professor of Classics) Virtual Event – Register Here to Receive Zoom URL The model of the solitary scholar writing articles and books in the library has given way to a diverse array of approaches to humanistic