Today's Arts and Science events
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Ongoing events
Participating in the third annual Student Research Photo Contest is a fantastic opportunity to showcase your innovative research within the Faculty of Arts and Science. Capture a compelling image that encapsulates the essence of your work and illustrate its impact or process.
Receive help with sentence structure, grammar, spelling, and citations. Drop by for support from a writing assistant, Billy Gelinas, and bring your assignment or rough draft. Come see us for a 25-minute session, first arrived-first served.
Upcoming events
Led by prof. Mireille Paquet, this reading group is open to all interested students and faculty. Participants are only required to read and discuss the text assigned for each meeting. This is a welcoming, stress-free environment for Concordians interested in immigration studies, regardless of their level of knowledge or discipline. We look forward to meeting you!
In this lecture, Arun Kundnani probes the War on Terror's anti-Muslim racism, and locates its origins in a broader process of neoliberal restructuring.
Come see Concordia's student-led space featuring the artistic projects of our interdisciplinary students in the humanities PhD and the individualized MA and PhD programs.
Within this paper I examine bird specimens collected by Lt. Van Wyck in southern New Ireland, Papua New Guinea and the wider Pacific during the US North Pacific Expedition (1853-56).
The Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Time, Technology, and Capitalism (CIRTTC) and the Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society and Culture (CISSC) working group "Algorithmic Technology and Society" is inviting you to celebrate the launch of The Automatic Fetish - The Law of Value in Marx's Capital with Dr. Beverley Best.
Join us for the second annual Dr. Esmeralda Thornhill Black Feminist Speaker Series, presented by the Simone de Beauvoir Institute and Harambec. The evening promises rich discussions on Black feminist perspectives and visual storytelling.
What does cutting-edge research in philosophy look like? What are pressing and enduring questions it uncovers, and ways of addressing them? This event offers a taste. From enduring questions about the nature of morality and human experience, to urgent questions about how to overcome oppression, research conducted in Concordia’s Department of Philosophy reflects this diversity.
Antoine Bilodeau and Mireille Paquet are pleased to invite you to IRI's Seminar, highlighting the research of its three visiting doctoral fellows for 2024. This is an opportunity to discover research topics related to IRI's mission while contributing to the development of these three doctoral students' projects through your comments, feedback and encouragement.
Now that your midterms are over, how did you do? Depending on how you preformed, you may have questions about next steps! If so, this one-hour online zoom session is for you!
Edmund Snow Carpenter has been marginal to the history of anthropology and yet central to multisensory museology. A colleague of Marshall McLuhan in the 1950s, Carpenter co-edited with McLuhan the journal Explorations and was thus the co- founder of media studies as we know it today.
The Kristeva Circle supports research on, or influenced by, philosopher, psychoanalyst and novelist Julia Kristeva. The Circle holds regular gatherings to establish and advance Kristeva scholarship nationally and internationally. During these gatherings, scholars from a variety of fields and disciplines exchange ideas and collaborate on projects related to the work of Julia Kristeva.
Led by prof. Mireille Paquet, this reading group is open to all interested students and faculty. Participants are only required to read and discuss the text assigned for each meeting. This is a welcoming, stress-free environment for Concordians interested in immigration studies, regardless of their level of knowledge or discipline. We look forward to meeting you!
This workshop offers to reflect on archives as sites of contested knowledge, and to envision avenues and methodologies to open them to more inclusive decolonial and feminist perspectives.
This interactive workshop will introduce participants to a variety of visual methods suitable for inter-and cross-disciplinary study.
This conference is an in-person event and will be presented in English and French with a bilingual question period.
From the early 1960s to the early 1970s, Canadian exhibition designer and painter Harley Parker developed a sensory museology by applying Marshall McLuhan's ideas about the sensorium and media to exhibition design.
Participants are invited to join Yabome Gilpin-Jackson to explore the what, so what, now what, of building anti-oppression and pro-belonging human systems.
The MA in Human Systems Intervention program prepares you to plan change processes, host conversations in complex contexts, and implement whole system interventions. Join Graduate Program Director Cédric Jamet, as well as current and past students to learn more about the program and get your application questions answered.
Digital storytelling (DST) is of growing interest within health care settings to better understand patient experience and translate knowledge between health care professionals and patients. DST is a relational tool that can be used for education, advocacy, creative expression, and therapeutic intervention.
Deadlines, deadlines, deadlines! We all have them! But, what happens if we cannot meet them! What other options do students have to successfully complete the term when things happen? This one-hour online zoom session will help you figure things out!
This event brings together Lea Kabiljo and Kelann Currie-Williams, oral historians and photographers, who rely on the multi-faceted technique of "photo-interviewing" in their respective work. We will invite attendees to reflect on the relationship that exists between images and storytelling in the context of the oral history interview.
Concordia University Jurist-in-Residence, Morton S. Minc, invites you to the conference with Michael Sabia, President, CEO of Hydro-Québec.
Join us in the COHDS Computer Lab for an engaging 2 to 2.5-hour workshop designed to enhance your skills in digital storytelling and interactive exhibit creation. Participants will be asked to develop a mini exhibit concept incorporating edited digital content gathered from a brief exercise in conversational interviewing.
Jessica Gelber is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. Her primary area of research is Classical Greek and Roman Philosophy, with particular interests in foundational issues in ancient medicine and science.
Led by prof. Mireille Paquet, this reading group is open to all interested students and faculty. Participants are only required to read and discuss the text assigned for each meeting. This is a welcoming, stress-free environment for Concordians interested in immigration studies, regardless of their level of knowledge or discipline. We look forward to meeting you!
A conversation between some of the members of the 1990s Tiohtia:ke/Montreal-based, South Asian-focused LGBTQ+ group the Saathis. As many of the Saathis are artists, performers and activists, they are also invited to reflect on their creative journeys as racialized queer people in Montreal.
Join us for an evening of dance as students from the Department of Contemporary Dance bring embodied (auto-)biographical narratives to the Acts of Listening Lab.
Dr. Luis Sotelo Castro and PhD candidate Sara Lucas from the Acts of Listening Lab and The Listening Choir will discuss how musical interventions, particularly community choral music, can catalyze dialogue in communities that have experienced collective trauma.
The workshop will invite you to engage deeply with a videotaped interview of a Rwandan genocide survivor recorded as part of the Montreal Life Stories project.
Daniel Steel is Associate Professor at the W. Maurice Young Centre for Applied Ethics and the School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia.
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