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SUMMARY:ONLINE: Environment Bound with GIER – The World As We Knew It
DESCRIPTION:“At a time when our planet is experiencing terrifying and unprecedented levels of change\, what corresponding transformations have you witnessed in your own lives\, yards\, neighborhoods\, jobs\, relationships or mental health?” \nJoin the Guelph Institute for Environmental Research (GIER) as we welcome Amy Brady and Tajja Isen to discuss of their new anthology\, The World As We Knew It\, and answer questions about the daily and personal effects of climate change\, and how storytelling can be an essential part of combating climate change. Hear about this intimate portrait of a climate-changed world\, a collection of voices describing lives and memories of familiar activities and places that have been transformed in small and large ways. \nRegister online.
URL:https://news.uoguelph.ca/event/online-environment-bound-with-gier-the-world-as-we-knew-it/
LOCATION:ONLINE\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Homepage,Intranet Events
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SUMMARY:IF 2022 - Improvisational Arts Festival
DESCRIPTION:IF 2022 is an 24-hour online improvisational arts festival. Now in its third year\, this free\, multi-disciplinary festival showcases new\, improvised performances from 150+ artists from 20+ countries around the world. Featuring jazz legends (Wadada Leo Smith\, William Parker)\, renowned composers (Evelyn Glennie\, Susan Alcorn)\, acclaimed poets (Lorna Crozier and George Elliott Clarke) and some of the most exciting musicians\, filmmakers\, dancers\, poets\, comedians and unclassifiable creators working today\, IF 2022 is a celebration of the power of in-the-moment creation: the joy and magic of finding a way out of no way. \nThis year’s theme\, “Towards New Futures: Improvising in Transition\,” speaks to a current feeling of being in transition between pandemic life and post-pandemic life. It invites our performers and audience alike to re-imagine the world around them and spark positive change. \nIn addition to its online-only programming\, IF 2022 features a free\, in-person closing performance by Toronto-based Japanese drumming ensemble Nagata Shachu at Branion Plaza (University of Guelph campus\, just outside of the University Centre) on Aug. 27th at 6 p.m. This performance will also be streamed as part of IF 2022 at improvfest.ca/watch. \nTo view the full line-up and learn more about IF 2022\, visit our website: https://improvfest.ca/
URL:https://news.uoguelph.ca/event/if-2022-improvisational-arts-festival/
LOCATION:Branion Plaza and Online\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Homepage,Intranet Events
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UID:84115-1661695200-1661706000@news.uoguelph.ca
SUMMARY:Jacobites\, Jacobins and Outlanders: Scotland in Cultural Memory
DESCRIPTION:This community event will feature presentations by faculty\, graduate students and Archival and Special Collections staff\, and is part of a wider partnership between the University of Guelph and Simon Fraser University. \nSpecial guest speaker Professor Viccy Coltman will present an exploratory and informal talk titled\, ‘Wartime: Scottish officers in military service\, 1793-1815’. \nIn the last thirty years\, the study of martial culture in Britain during the period of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars has been foregrounded in various humanities disciplines as scholars sought to reclaim academic military history with its traditional focus on campaigns\, commanders and tactics for cultural studies\, with its equivalent emphases on poems\, novels and plays. Despite the efflorescence of publications from history and English Literature\, art history has lagged behind\, and within the existing literature\, there has been no focussed study of Scottish officers and Highland regiments during this period of intense and prolonged warfare that lasted almost a quarter of a century\, or a generation. As Captain John Kincaid wrote in his Adventures in the rifle brigade in the Peninsula\, France and the Netherlands\, from 1809 to 1815\, (London\, 1830)\, ‘We had been born in war\, reared in war\, and war was our trade’. \nViccy Coltman’s work-in-progress seeks to write a cultural history of wartime which privileges Scottish commanders-in-chief of the British army including Sir Ralph Abercromby and Sir John Moore and the contributions of the 42nd\, 79th and 92nd Highland Regiments at major battles of Alexandria (1801) and Waterloo (1815). She situates a range and raft of temporalities at stake in this period and its visual and material representation\, both contemporary and posthumous. \nIn this illustrated talk\, Viccy offers an overview of her current book project\, focussing on a series of key images and objects which she has identified\, including understudied and unpublished martial portraits by Edinburgh’s leading portrait painter\, Henry Raeburn. \nViccy Coltman is a Professor of history of art at the University of Edinburgh. Her most recent book was Art and Identity in Scotland: A cultural history from the 1745 Jacobite uprising to Walter Scott\, (Cambridge\, 2019; paperback 2021). Her wartime book in preparation has been supported by fellowships from the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art and at the Anne S. K. Brown military collection at Brown University. \nRegistration is available on the event website and early registration is encouraged. The event is free and open to the public. \nThe event is supported by the Centre for Scottish Studies at the University of Guelph\, the Research Centre for Scottish Studies at Simon Fraser University and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Connections Grant program.
URL:https://news.uoguelph.ca/event/jacobites-jacobins-and-outlanders-scotland-in-cultural-memory/
LOCATION:University Centre\, 150 Research Ln\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G2W1\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Homepage,Intranet Events
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