For the academic year 2010-2011, the Baker-Nord Center for the Humanities is focusing on the theme of “Globalism and Its Origins.” In recognition that this phenomenon is transforming American society today, Baker-Nord has organized a series of public events that allow participants to understand this…
Case Western Reserve University
Digital Humanities Connections: a conversation about the future of digital humanities was held on May 6th, 2011 at the Kelvin Smith Library on the Campus of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. A combination of keynotes and collaboration, the event featured this Keynote presentation by Tom Scheinfeldt, Managing Director of the Center for History and New Media (CHNM) at George Mason University, and Sharon Leon, the Director of Public Projects at the CHNM.
Seremba reads from his plays NAPOLEON ON THE NILE and COME GOOD RAIN. In COME GOOD RAIN, Seremba relives the night of Dec. 10, 1980, when he was abducted by Milton Obote's military soldiers and taken into Namanve forest, shot and left to die, and NAPOLEON ON THE NILE is about three Sudanese refugees, who on the seventh anniversary of their escape from the Sudan reenact their experiences of escaping the conflicts in their country. Seremba's talk is part of the yearlong exploration of the humanities and globalism.
Scholars at every professional stage, from graduate school to retirement, face an overwhelming array of pressures concerning publication of their scholarship. These pressures are only growing as academic and trade publishers struggle to adapt to new market forces and a rapidly changing landscape of new media technologies. Mary C. Francis, Executive Editor for the University of California Press discusses publishing with university presses and writing a successful book proposal.
John Grabowski, Department of History, discusses his work on the rise of foundation-funded private universities and museums in Turkey in the period after 1980.
Peter Van Dijk is a Fellow in the Ohio Chapter of the American Institute of Architects and recipient of it's highest honor, The Gold Medal of the Ohio. He is also a past winner of The Cleveland Arts Prize – Architecture and the Ohio Arts Prize. He will discuss design, preservation, tradition and globalism.
Great encyclopedic museums collect art from all cultures. Philippe de Montebello, Fiske Kimbell Professor in the History and Culture of Museums at New York University's Institute of Fine Arts, David Carrier, Champney Family Professor at Case Western Reserve University and the Cleveland Institute of Art, and Noelle Giuffrida, Assistant Professor of Art History at Case Western Reserve University will discuss this issue. Is a world art history possible and, if so, what would it look like? This lecture, in memory of Walter A. Strauss (1923-2008), who was the Elizabeth and William T. Treuhaft Professor of Humanities, is generously supported by funds provided by the Paul Wurzberger Endowment and co-sponsored by the Case Western Reserve University Department of Art and Art History.
Gootenberg, Professor of History, State University of New York, Stony Brook, examines the early cocaine smuggling class, which came together across a vast expanse of shifting geographies, and, as they invented and shared new tools of the trade, represented a new form of pan-American "networking,” as well as cocaine's new transnational geographies pertaining to the "cold-war" history of the Americas. Co-sponsored by the Case Western Reserve University Department of History.