BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//Art\, Art History and Design | Notre Dame Events//iCal 2.0//EN CALSCALE:GREGORIAN X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Art\, Art History and Design | Notre Dame Events METHOD:PUBLISH BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20240304T171409Z UID:event-299050 DTSTART:20240304T173000Z DTEND:20240304T183000Z CLASS:PUBLIC DESCRIPTION:About the Speaker\nHannah Feldman is associate professor of art history and core faculty in Middle Eastern and North African studies as w ell as comparative literary studies. Her research\, teaching\, and advisin g center on late modern and contemporary art and visual culture. Her first book\, From a Nation Torn: Decolonizing Art and Representation in France (Duke University Press\, 2014)\, has been reviewed in over ten national an d international publications\, including Art Journal\, Art Bulletin\, and The American Historical Review. The book revises accounts of mid-century F rench aesthetics to argue for the centrality of decolonization to the cont emporaneous theorization of urban space\, photography\, the public\, spect acle\, and the very project of writing history. \nAbout the Series\nThe Nanovic Institute\, with its strategic emphasis on “peripheries” and d e-centering the center\, is committed to fostering research and teaching t hat presents European studies in a new light. The Nanovic Institute is ple ased to announce that the Decolonizing Scholarship lecture series will con tinue in the spring 2024 semester. This series will feature scholars from various academic disciplines at the top of their fields engaging issues in disciplines including French and Francophone studies and art history. Thi s semester's speakers join a growing library of insightful presentations f rom scholars in other fields. All of these past lectures have been recorde d and may be viewed in full.\n\nAttend the Event\nThis event is free and o pen to the public. Lunch will be available on a first-come\, first-served basis starting 30 minutes before the lecture (at 12 p.m.).\nThis lecture is co-sponsored by the Department of Art\, Art History\, and Design.\nOrig inally published at nanovic.nd.edu. LOCATION:1030 Jenkins Nanovic Halls SUMMARY:"Decolonizing Death (A Letter from a Pillar of Salt)": Decolonizing Scholarship with Hannah Feldman URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.nd.edu/events/2024/03/04/decolonizing-scholars hip-lecture-series-hannah-feldman/ X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:
Hannah Feldman is associate professor of art history and core faculty in Middle Eastern a nd North African studies as well as comparative literary studies. Her rese arch\, teaching\, and advising center on late modern and contemporary art and visual culture. Her first book\, From a Nation Torn: Decolonizing Art and Representa tion in France (Duke University Press\, 2014)\, has been reviewed in over ten national and international publications\, including Art J ournal\, Art Bulletin\, and The American Historical Revi ew. The book revises accounts of mid-century French aesthetics to arg ue for the centrality of decolonization to the contemporaneous theorizatio n of urban space\, photography\, the public\, spectacle\, and the very pro ject of writing history.
\nThe Nanovic Institute\, with its strategic emphasis on “peripheries” and de-cente ring the center\, is committed to fostering research and teaching that pre sents European studies in a new light. The Nanovic Institute is pleased to announce that the Decolonizing Scholarship lecture series will continue i n the spring 2024 semester. This series will feature scholars from various academic disciplines at the top of their fields engaging issues in discip lines including French and Francophone studies and art history. This semes ter's speakers join a growing library of insightful presentations from sch olars in other fields. All of these past lectures have been recorded and m ay be viewed in full.
\n\nT
his event is free and open to the public.
Lunch will be available on
a first-come\, first-served basis starting 30 minutes before the lecture (
at 12 p.m.).
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Department of Art\, Art History\, and Design.
\nOriginally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
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