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C-20/21 Group, feat. Prof. Donald Pease

On behalf of Peter Kalliney, Alan Nadel, and Michael Trask 

The final meeting of the C-20/21 Group, on Monday, April 24 from 2:00 to 4:00 pm in Gatton Student Center room 331. Our guest will be Professor Donald Pease, the Ted and Helen Geisel Third Century Professor in the Humanities at Dartmouth College. He is the founder and Director of the Futures of American Studies Institute at Dartmouth, founding editor of the New Americanist series at Duke University Press, and winner of the American Studies Association’s Carl Bode-Norman Holmes Pearson Prize for life-long service to American Studies. He will be discussing his work-in-progress on Colonial settler philosophy and the genealogy of Trumpism. 

Professor Pease’s visit will also be open to the public, and copies of his chapter will be available to all interested parties. Please feel free to invite anyone that you think would be interested to this event, and email Emily Naser-Hall at ena225@uky.edu for a copy of the reading.

 

Date:
Location:
Gatton Student Center room 331

Poetry & Art

A Reading of Ekphrastic Works

by ENG 407 & 507 Students

FEATURING

Halle Barr ~ Kylon Bibb ~ Aidan Boyd ~ Ella Brown-Terry

Kristin Earnest ~ Grace Hedrick ~ Eleni Karelis ~ Sage Lucas

Nyah Marasigan ~ Anna McElhannon ~ Cierra Moore

Alaina Pignato ~ Brook Plotner ~ Louise Rucker ~Regan Strehl

Date:
Location:
UK Art Museum

48 Hour Film Race

On March 24, the University of Kentucky LibrariesMedia Depot and Smart Campus Initiative will kick off the first ever campus-wide “48 Hour Film Race,” an exciting opportunity for students to make a movie – write, shoot, and edit – in just 48 hours. Students from all academic disciplines are encouraged to participate.

Participating students are invited to make a short film with five film elements – genre, character, prop, location, and a line of dialogue – all drawn from a hat over one weekend. This year’s mandatory film element challenges students to film using only their smart devices; phones, iPads, and/or tablets.

The event has two components:

Check-in & Kick-off Meeting: March 24 | 6 pm | Young Library, Media Depot

Film Screening & Award Ceremony: March 31 | 6 pm | Young Library, Auditorium

Race Details

The fun begins during the kick-off meeting when participating teams or individuals randomly draw film elements from a hat. Elements range from film genre, a specific line of dialogue, a funny prop and character, and popular locations around campus to make the filming experience as convenient as possible. Participating students have many surprises in store as film requirements will further challenge their creativity while creating their films!

Soon after, watches will be synchronized, and students are off in a “mad dash” to complete their films over the weekend. 

On Monday night, films are turned in. The following Friday, students who participated in the “48 Hour Film Race” will have their films screened in front of an audience of fellow filmmakers, friends, and families. Superlative awards and prizes will be given, and the “Best Film” will be announced. This event is free and open to the public.

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The Student Media Depot at the Hub is a student digital media center that provides access to recording equipment and space, editing stations with specialized multimedia software, and technical support for students’ development of their academic media projects.

Date:
Location:
Young Library, Media Depot

28th Annual Black Women's Conference: "Excavating the Lives of Black Women" Day 02

The 28th Annual Black Women's Conference, "Excavating the Lives of Black Women," will take place virtually on March 24, 2023.

Please register for each event here:

10 a.m. | Panel with Whitney Baptiste Battle & Ayana Omilade-Flewellen | Register Here

2 p.m. | Keynote with Dr. Afua Cooper | Register Here

Saturday, March 25, 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. | Cemetery clean-up at African Cemetery No. 2. (419 E 7th Street, Lexington)

Community volunteer event will assist with headstone cleaning and minor landscape clearing in this historic cemetery. A brief tour of the cemetery, including a focus on the graves of notable women buried in the cemetery who contributed locally to the thoroughbred industry, social safety nets, education, and politics.

Parking is in the cemetery itself. Participants should drive in through either of the two gates and park far enough to one side to leave a driving lane. We will assemble at the center garden

Date:
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