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Thursday, April 6th, 2017

Evelyn Blackwood: “Global sexualities, or are there really lesbians and gays everywhere?” – March 29, 2010

Dr. Evelyn Blackwood, author of the forthcoming book “Falling into the Lesbi World: Desire and Difference in Indonesia,” has conducted research on lesbian and transgender identities, histories and practices globally for over twenty-five years. Her talk explores the diversity of female same-sex relations across cultures, from women in Suriname to tombois in Indonesia. Blackwood proffers the view that sexuality is a social product dependent on cultural norms and beliefs.  Despite the fact that we live in a globally connected world in which Western ideas seem to dominate, Blackwood demonstrates that the concept of sexual orientation does not hold up cross-culturally. Her discussion of the […]

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Thursday, April 6th, 2017

David Linden: “Perception, Emotion and the Creation of Narrative in the Brain” – October 27, 2009

In this colloquium, neurobiologist David Linden will present the following argument: “The feeling that we have about our senses, that they are trustworthy and independent reporters, while overwhelming and pervasive, is simply not true. Our senses are not built to give us an “accurate” picture of the external world at all. Rather, through millions of years of evolutionary tinkering, they have been designed to detect and even exaggerate certain features and aspects of the sensory world and to ignore others. Our brains then blend this whole sensory stew together with emotion to create a seamless ongoing story of experience that makes […]

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Thursday, March 30th, 2017

Ron Buckmire – “A Black, Gay National Science Foundation Program Officer? Or, How I Got Here From There” – October 4, 2012

A program officer in the National Science Foundation’s Division of Undergraduate Education will provide the details of his career trajectory. This involves being born in a small Caribbean island nation, going to school in a predominantly white and male engineering institution in upstate New York, being a faculty member at a small liberal arts college in California and working for the federal government. His entire career path was traversed while navigating the world as an openly gay, Black man who is also very interested and actively involved in multiple efforts that combine equity and excellence in various arenas, such as […]

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Thursday, March 30th, 2017

Charles Batson – “The Passages of a Queer Québec ” – November 18, 2010

Through a focus on Larry Tremblay’s short story “Piercing,” Professor Charles Batson proposes a reading of the Québécois landscape as one marked by transgression, by crossings, by Queerness. In this Francophone province surrounded by hundreds of millions of Anglophones, constant transpositions seem to unsettle notions of fixed personal and cultural identities and point to Québec as a particularly Queer space. With an analysis of the 2009 award-winning film J’ai tué ma mère (I Killed My Mother) by the 19-year-old Xavier Dolan, we see liminality as central to an understanding of a Queer Québec.

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Thursday, March 30th, 2017

Gretchen Schultz – “The Femmes damnées Go Global” – October 28, 2010

This talk will explore the relationship between 19th-century Sapphic literature from France and 20th-century US lesbian pulp fiction. Connections between these corpuses, one canonical and the other low-brow, reveal that representations of sexual minorities travelled transnationally and had an undeniable impact on disparate communities well before globalization and the information age. Reading pulp fiction through the lens of earlier male-authored Sapphic texts confirms their significance for distant and unintended readers: women in search of mirrors for emerging identities.

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