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September

Sep 17

Grad School 101: Application Basics for Law and Med School

Zoom Meeting: https://uwmadison.zoom.us/j/98990018498 Meeting ID: 989 9001 8498

5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

This is a virtual session presented by the Assistant Director of Scholarship Administration and Recruitment at the University of Wisconsin Law School This session will cover application basics, followed up with some time for Q&A. If you are considering Law School, Medical School, or just want to start gathering your information, this is a great opportunity. Don't miss it! This event is open to all students and alumni. For more information, Please contact Allice Jones at 757-455-3107 or ajones@vwu.edu. 

Sep 24

²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ Graduate & Professional School Fair

Batten Student Center

11:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.

The ²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ Graduate & Professional School Fair is a 1-day event giving students, alumni and graduate school program representatives an opportunity to connect and share information. ²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ (²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ) students and alumni from a variety of majors who are actively applying to graduate programs, exploring the idea of attending in the future, and those who are working now to become competitive candidates when they do apply, are welcome to attend this event.

Graduate Program Representatives should register in Handshake or contact Alice Jones (ajones@vwu.edu) for more information. https://vwu.joinhandshake.com/career_fairs/50086/student_preview?token=jLFp2QZZ-PLGUxhza1lFU6unK2xPz5DLLzzRcbNWRtKDRnIEZ-nSnw

 

Sep 24

Laffin’ Kamala: Racial Identity, Laughter, and Politics

Brock Commons

12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m.

What might initially seem like a derisive, stilted nickname, “Laffin’ Kamala” reflects how the laughter of Black Americans has long been associated with intense white anxiety, police intervention, and democratic resistance. Ralph Ellison’s 1985 essay “An Extravagance of Laughter” explores how the distinctive sounds, styles, and tonalities of Black laughter are products of a history of racial oppression and how white supremacy sustains itself by treating these differences in laughter as evidence of essential racial difference. Patrick Giamario discusses what Ellison’s work can tell us about this timely cultural and political phenomenon. Patrick Giamario, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. His first book, Laughter as Politics: Critical Theory in an Age of Hilarity, was published by Edinburgh University Press in 2022.

For more information, contact the Robert Nusbaum Center at 757.455.3129 or NusbaumCenter@vwu.edu.

 

Sep 24

Northeastern University Arlington - Information Session

Lighthouse Common Area

5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.

Thinking about graduate school? Looking for opportunities to expand your education and experience? Consider Northeastern University, Arlington. Northeastern aligns education and research with global and regional needs, and customizes research collaborations, co-creating project plans to advance shared goals. Join us on September 24th from 5:30 PM - 6:30 PM in the Lighthouse Common Area to learn more about the institution and its Masters and Certificate programs. This event is open to all V²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ faculty/staff/students and alumni. Students can register using Handshake: https://vwu.joinhandshake.com/events/1574929/share_preview.

October

Oct 3

The Battle Behind the Ballot Box: Identity Politics' Impact on American Elections and Democratic Stability

Brock Commons

12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m.

How do Americans see themselves? How has that changed over the years? How does that affect how they get and receive political information? And how does this affect the quality of our democracy? Join us for an important conversation about issues of identity in America and why those issues matter so much today. Leslie Caughell, Ph.D., is Associate Professor Political Science at ²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ. Having studied public opinion and political communication at the University of Illinois, she is the author of The Political Battle of the Sexes: Exploring the Gender Gaps in Policy Preferences (2016).

For more information, contact the Robert Nusbaum Center at 757.455.3129 or NusbaumCenter@vwu.edu.

 

Oct 17

Investing in Ignorance: Dismantling Public Education

Brock Commons

12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m.

How did American public education begin? How has it been used or denied? Why does any of this matter in a democracy? This presentation highlights how public education was started and how it has changed in the United States, why some motives and strategies undermine public education, and why teachers today face challenges unlike anything they have experienced before. Desegregation, anti-intellectualism, unique religious forces, the Red Scare, and gun culture all have created challenges in public schools. A 1983 alumna of ²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ, Clair Berube, Ph.D., earned her master’s and doctorate degrees in urban studies and education at Old Dominion University before returning to ²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ as a faculty member in 2020. She is co-author of The End of School Reform (2006), The Moral University (2010), and the recently published The Investments: An American Conspiracy (2020).

For more information, contact the Robert Nusbaum Center at 757.455.3129 or NusbaumCenter@vwu.edu.

Oct 22

Thomas Jefferson's Ciceronian Universe: The Importance of Being Decent in the American Tradition

Blocker Hall Auditorium

12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m.

In the course of their education, early Virginians like Thomas Jefferson encountered Greek and Latin texts, monuments, and constitutional ideas. So, it’s no surprise that those texts and ideas would end up shaping and influencing the cultural history of Virginia’s Tidewater region. Haller’s most recent book looks at how Jefferson’s readings in Greek and Roman texts led him to articulate ideals of religious freedom and a conviction that all human beings are created equal.  Learn how the rediscovery of a lost palimpsest may have inspired a plan for a planetarium—never completed—in the Rotunda at UVA, how a paint chip prised from a metope at UVA sheds light on Jefferson's engagement in the question of whether the Greeks painted their statues, and how a tiny inaccuracy in John Trumbull's famous painting of Independence Hall sheds  light on Jefferson's ideas about Greek democracy. Benjamin Haller, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of Classics at ²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ.

For more information, contact the Robert Nusbaum Center at 757.455.3129 or NusbaumCenter@vwu.edu.

 

Oct 24

COOKSON LECTURE - All My Presidents: An Essayist's Tour of American History

Brock Commons

7:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

In the nearly 250 years of America's existence, only 45 men have held its highest office, a strange assortment of politicians, citizens, generals, businessmen, schemers, dreamers, heroes, and failures. Convinced he might find something new to say about the Chief Executives, essayist Colin Rafferty wrote short creative works that took on each president. In his book Execute the Office, George Washington's teeth dance the Virginia Reel while Ronald Reagan meets John Wayne in a film script. Franklin Pierce gets diagnosed, Rutherford B. Hayes sends postcards from home, George W. Bush watches the hurricane index rise, and we consider what the notion that anyone can become president really means to us. Colin Rafferty received an MFA from the University of Alabama and teaches nonfiction writing at the University of Mary Washington. He writes about monuments and memorials (Hallow This Ground, Break Away Books, published in 2016), presidents (Execute the Office, Baobab Press, published in 2021), and Vietnam (book in-process).

For more information, contact the Robert Nusbaum Center at 757.455.3129 or NusbaumCenter@vwu.edu.

Oct 31

The Sparkle and Glitter of Which our Campaigns are Made: U.S. Presidential Campaign Buttons and the Representation of Religion

Brock Commons

12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m.

Buttons supporting William Jennings Bryan endorsed him—in Yiddish. Fans of Herbert Hoover, a Quaker, demanded “A Christian in the White House,” even though he was running against a Catholic. Bahais proudly declared their support for Barack Obama on their lapels, as did Buddhists, Catholics, Confucians, Druze, and many others. As former New York Mayor Ed Koch declared, “Buttons, stickers, and songs . . . are the sparkle and glitter of which our campaigns are made.”  This exploration of presidential campaign buttons examines the diversity of religious terms, images, and symbols and how they have been used to communicate both positive and negative messages to potential voters. Eric M. Mazur, Ph.D., is the Gloria and David Furman Professor of Judaic Studies at ²Ê°ÔÍõÁùФ and serves as the Fellow for Religion, Law, and Politics for the Robert Nusbaum Center.

For more information, contact the Robert Nusbaum Center at 757.455.3129 or NusbaumCenter@vwu.edu.