- All My Life A Musician : The Art, Contexts and Aesthetics of East European Jewish Traditional Musical Performers - Michael Alpert Paul - Artist in Residence - Borns Jewish Studies Program - Friday March 4 - Distinguished Alumni Room - 12:00 Noon
- Challenging Particularity: Jews as a Lens on Latin American Ethnicity - Jeffrey Lesser - Professor of History - Emory University - Friday March 25 - University Club President's Room IMU - 12:00 Noon
- This Land is My Land, Your Land is My Land: Dueling Narratives Within Israel and Palestinian Jerusalem Amy Horowitz - Dept. of Comparative Literature - Mershon Center - Friday April 22 - University Club President's Room IMU - 12:00 Noon
Monday, February 28, 2011
The Robert A. and Sandra S. Borns Jewish Studies Program Faculty-Graduate Workshop Series, Spring 2011
Friday, February 25, 2011
Interrogation in the Era of Non-Traditional Combatants
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Thursday, February 24, 2011
The Challenge of Being the Majority: Intra-Jewish and Multicultural Issues in Israel
Flyer
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Branigin Lecture by Christopher Melchert
Christopher Melchert
Agreeing to Disagree (or not): The Shaping of Islam In the Early Middle Ages
Thursday, February 24, 2011 - 4:00 p.m. - Wright Education Building, 1120 (201 N. Rose Ave.) IU Bloomington
The Sunni community formed in the ninth and tenth centuries CE around a series of agreements to disagree. Multiple texts of the Qur?an were accepted, multiple collections of sound hadith, and most importantly multiple schools of law. In the area of piety, Sufism evolved so as to avoid offence to the legal-minded, although tensions here have persisted to the present. Agreement was even more elusive in the area of theology, although with diminishing effects in time except as to the Sunni-Shi`i divide. Probabilism was the most important mechanism for keeping the peace: one felt sure that one?s own way was the closest to what God wanted but recognized that there was a certain chance that other ways were actually closer.
Christopher Melchert is University Lecturer in Arabic and Islam at the Oriental Institute and a Fellow of Pembrook College at the University of Oxford, England. He is one of the leading experts on Islamic law, focusing on the formation of Islamic legal traditions and on the early Hanbali school. His 1997 book, The Formation of the Sunni Schools of Law, 9th-10th Centuries C.E. has already become a modern classic.
U.S. Policy and Strategy in Afghanistan - What Next?
"U.S. Policy and Strategy in Afghanistan - What Next?"
by Larry P. Goodson, Professor of Middle East Studies U.S. Army War College
Friday, February 25 at 5:30 pm
India Studies House
For additional information see attached flyer or contact:
Madhusudan and Kiran C. Dhar India Studies Program
825 E 8th Street, Bloomington IN 47408
812 855 5798
http://indiana.edu/~isp
follow us on twitter at IndiaStudiesIUB or on Facebook at India Studies Indiana University Bloomington
This lecture is made possible through the support of The Indiana University India Studies Program, The Center on American and Global Security, and The Center for the Study of the Middle East.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Special ArtsWeek 2011 Program
Working closely with an ArtsWeekEnd team of Art Museum staff, IU students, and K-12 classroom and art teachers, the museum's education department will offer four curriculum-based gallery sessionsand four hands-on "work stations" that will showcase the visual arts as a vehicle for teaching and learning.
Friday, February 18, 2011
East Asian Studies Center - Spring 2011 Special Events
March 4-5 - 8am-5pm Maurer School of Law
Hosted by the ANU-IU Pan Asia Institute and the Mauer School of Law's Center for Constitutional Democracy
"Rethinking the 'Post-Defeat' Discursive Space: Censorship during the Occupation Period"
March 10 - 4-5:30pm Hoagy Carmichael Room, Morrison Hall 006
Richi Sakakibara, School of International Liberal Studies, Waseda University
East Asian Film Series - The Housemaid
March 26 - 6:30pm IU Cinema
Admission will be free, but tickets will be required. Tickets may be obtained through the IU Auditorium box office, Mon.-Fri. 10am - 5pm or in the IU Cinema lobby 30 minutes prior to screening.
Roundtable -"The Economic Recession: Opportunities and Challenges in Economies in Transition"
April 8 - 9am-22pm, 2-4pm IMU Stateroom East
Hosted by the Russian & East European Institute
Film & Director's Talk - Pinoy Sunday
April 21 6:30pm IU Cinema
Admission will be free, but tickets will be required. Tickets may be obtained through the IU Auditorium box office, Mon.-Fri. 10am - 5pm or in the IU Cinema lobby 30 minutes prior to screening.
East Asian Film Ceries - Japanese film, title TBA
April 23 6:30pm IU Cinema
Admission will be free, but tickets will be required. Tickets may be obtained through the IU Auditorium box office, Mon.-Fri. 10am - 5pm or in the IU Cinema lobby 30 minutes prior to screening
EALC/EASC Student Awards Ceremony
April 29 - 3:30-5pm Wells House (1321 East 10th Street)
Jacobs Presentations
Faust by Charles Gounod
Spring Ballet: New York, New York! by Stewart Kershaw
Scheduling and other details can be found by clicking on the above links.
Thursday, February 17, 2011
David Cohen: Eastern China in the Early Bronze Age and the Search for the "Great City Shang"
Horizons of Knowledge Lecture: Alex Chávez
Thursday, March 3, 2011
7:00 - 9:00 pm
Lindley Hall 102
This lecture explores a variety of common sociolinguistic practices –ranging from humorous verbal put-ons to the virtuosic use of the Spanish décima in poetic flyting– as interactional means of self-making across the U.S.-Mexico border among undocumented Mexican immigrants from the Sierra Gorda region of central Mexico.
Immigration and trans-border relations are among the most pressing concerns in the political economy of both countries. Dr. Chávez’s lecture, which offers a perspective on the immigration experience and the transnational border from the vantage point of the immigrants’ own forms of expression, will be of interest to undergraduate and graduate students and faculty members in a wide range departments.
Liora Halperin Guest Lecture
Images and Public Culture: Understanding Images Across the Humanities
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
CEUS Colloquium
Flyer
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Upcoming Talks
Zouhair Ghazzal - Iliya Harik’s Work on Lebanon and Egypt in Light of His Critics - Feb 25th noon Woodburn 218 - http://www.zouhairghazzal.com/
Charles Kurzman - The Missing Martyrs: Why There Are So Few Muslim Terrorists - March 9th 4pm Woodburn 120 - : http://www.unc.edu/~kurzman/
Monday, February 14, 2011
Hoosiers for Peace in the Middle East Film Screanings
For more information, find us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=127296737300981
Or contact us via email: hoosiersforpeace@gmail.com
Each screening begins at 7:30pm in Myers Hall room 130 and will be followed by an open discussion.
Slingshot
Hip Hop
Documentary, 83 minutes
This film braids together the stories of young Palestinians living in Gaza, the West Bank and inside Israel as they discover Hip Hop and employ it as a tool to surmount divisions imposed by occupation and poverty. From internal checkpoints and Separation Walls to gender norms and generational differences, this is the story of young people crossing the borders that separate them.
Occupation 101
Documentary, 90 minutes
Here, a comprehensive analysis of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is presented in order to dispel many of its long-perceived myths and misconceptions. The film works through the first wave of Jewish immigration from Europe in the 1880’s, to the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
To See If I'm Smiling
Documentary, 59 minutes
In this film, former Israeli soliders revisit their tours of duty in the occupied territories with surprising honesty and strip bare stereotypes of gender differences in the military. These women share shocking moments of negligence, flippancy, and power-tripping.
Saturday, February 12, 2011
The International Interfaith Initiative Invites You to "Understanding Egypt Today: A Conversation"
Indiana Interchurch Center, Krannert Room
1100 West 42nd Street
Indianapolis, Indiana 46208
Wednesday February 16, 2011, 7-9 p.m.
Join the International Interfaith Initiative for an opportunity to hear and discuss the situation in Egypt with four experts:
- Omar Atia, Local businessman and president of Bridge Generation
- Dr. Pierre Atlas, Political science professor at Marian University and director of The Richard G. Lugar Franciscan Center for Global Studies
- Father Nabil Hanna, Pastor of St. George's Orthodox Church
- Amira Mashhour, Visiting lecturer for the Department of Foreign Languages and Cultures at IUPUI A
- Abla Abdelrouf Rasslan, United States State Department visiting Egyptian scholar
Friday, February 11, 2011
Won-Joon Yoon Memorial Scholarship
I am pleased to announce that applications are now being accepted for the Won-Joon Yoon Memorial Scholarship.
The Won-Joon Yoon Scholarship will provide financial support for IU students who have exemplified tolerance and understanding across racial and religious lines through service, personal commitment, academic achievement and future potential.
- Candidates may be citizens of any country.
- Candidates must be full-time students pursuing Indiana University degrees in Bloomington.
- Candidates may be self-nominated (apply themselves) or be nominated by Indiana University faculty or staff members.
- Candidates must submit a statement (not to exceed 750 words) describing what the scholarship will enable them to accomplish in their academic programs. The scholarship should be taken up during summer 2011 or the 2011-2012 academic year.
- Candidates must submit a resume or curriculum vitae as well as a transcript.
Faculty or staff who nominate candidates, should provide a letter of nomination and at least one additional letter of support. If possible, please also enclose a copy of the student’s resume or curriculum vitae as well as a transcript.
The scholarship has a value of approximately $2,500.
Re-scripting Islam: Muslims and the Media
DeVault Alumni Center – Indiana University Bloomington
Registration and information: www.indiana.edu/~global/Re-scriptingIslam/
Registration Deadline: March 20, 2011
A quick Internet search of the terms “Islam” and “Muslim” turns up news stories with headlines about “radical Islam” or Islam’s war against the First Amendment or honor killings. The stories attached to such headlines ask whether Islam is compatible with the West; whether Muslims can ever truly be American. Such framing of Muslims, and Islam, is not new. In fact, it goes back centuries both in the United States and abroad.
A conference organized by Indiana University’s Voices and Visions Project will dissect this framing as well as highlight what some Muslims are doing to counteract these seemingly hegemonic narratives about their faith and themselves.
Re-scripting Islam: A conversation between media professionals and scholars will take place March 23 and 24 on Indiana University’s Bloomington campus. This free conference is designed to bring together academics, journalists and communication students to discuss the media’s portrayal of Islam and Muslims. The international slate of panelists features bloggers, journalists, and experts on the framing of Muslim women as well as Muslim use of new media.
The conference’s keynote address will be given by Andrea Elliott of The New York Times. A Pulitzer Prize winner, and the creator the Islam beat at the Times, Elliott will speak about her experience covering “Muslims in a Post-9/11 America.”
Registration: www.indiana.edu/~global/Re-scriptingIslam/
Project Coordinator: Rosemary Pennington (rompenni@umail.iu.edu or 812-855-0353)
The Voices and Visions Project is made possible by support from the Social Science Research Council.
Muslim Voices – Voices and Visions of Islam and Muslims from a Global Perspective