Sociologist Claudio E. Benzecry explores the blurred boundaries between humans and objects, revealing how people project themselves onto their surroundings and, in turn, become shaped by them. Through studies on opera lovers, shoe models, and museum guards, he uncovers the ways in which passion and perception transform inanimate things into active participants in human experience.
Meena Ki Kahani (Stories of Meena), a beloved animated series created by UNICEF in 1993, has become a cultural phenomenon in South Asia, addressing critical issues like gender inequality, child labor, and trafficking. Speaking at a UCSB Interdisciplinary Humanities event, Indian scholar Jawa Jha highlighted the series’ profound societal impact. Jha believes the series shows how media can inspire social change.
As the fall quarter comes to a close, UCSB’s Interdisciplinary Humanities Center had a busy and successful quarter filled with lectures and events. Additionally, they have provided new announcements and opportunities for both faculty and graduate students at UCSB.
Julia Lupton was hosted by UCSB’s Interdisciplinary Humanities Center for her talk When Life is a Shipwreck: Key Passages in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night and discussed Shakespearean themes of transition, exile, and crisis, along with the role of dual identity in regards to queerness and the gender spectrum.
Jewish Israeli Rotem Levin and Palestinian Osama Iliwat discussed their transformative life experiences and the different realities they face in the same land, in a discussion hosted by UCSB’s Interdisciplinary Humanities Center. As violence escalates in the Middle East, leaving many devastated, the two activists are holding conversations around the world, to encouraging individuals to listen to one another and challenge presumptions. By doing so, they aim to foster a future of peace and freedom for all.
UC Santa Barbara's Interdisciplinary Humanities Center hosted Swati Chattopadhyay, a History of Art and Architecture professor at UCSB, to discuss her book Small Spaces: Recasting the Architecture of Empire. She spoke on servant quarters and other small spaces throughout the British Empire in India and how these marginalized spaces held together the Empire's infrastructure.
UCSB Religious Studies professor Janet Afary discussed her book Mollā Nasreddin: The Making of a Modern Trickster, 1906-1911 with department colleague Dwight Reynolds as part of the series “Humanities Decanted,” an Interdisciplinary Humanities Center program in which UCSB scholars present their newest works in a relaxed environment. Mollā Nasreddin: The Making of a Modern Trickster, 1906-1911, explores the first era of the 20th century Middle Eastern journal Mollā Nasreddin and its use of visual art, folklore, and satire to transmit social democratic ideas in Transcaucasia and Iran.
Community-engaged artist, writer, and UCSB professor of Chicana/o Studies, Silvia Rodriguez Vega, recently spoke to students about her work on how immigration policies impact children. She spoke about her book, “Drawing Deportation: Art and Resistance Among Immigrant Children,” at an event hosted by the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center.
Christoph Emmrich, an associate professor of Buddhist Studies at the University of Toronto, recently spoke to a UCSB audience about the fictional retellings of Dhammawati Guruma’s life as a Buddhist teacher. Emmrich’s talk was hosted by Rory Lindsay, a visiting scholar at the 84000 Buddhist Texts Translation Initiative, a global collaboration housed in UCSB’s Religious Studies department that began in 2021.
Presented by UCSB’s College of Letters and Science and and co-hosted by the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center and UCSB Arts & Lectures, the 2024 Arthur N. Rupe Great Debate: Is Housing a Human Right? was held at Campbell Hall. Host of LAist’s Air Talk Larry Mantle moderated a discussion with four housing experts, Eric Tars, Rasheedah Phillips, David Garcia, and Andy Bales who shared insights on the current homelessness crisis.
UC Santa Barbara’s Interdisciplinary Humanities Center (IHC) recently welcomed author and journalist M.G. Lord to speak to students as part of IHC’s Imagining California Series. Lord shared her perspective on the creation and impact of Barbie dolls, specifically through a feminist lens. In her speech, she spoke on controversies over gender stereotypes encouraged by Barbie dolls, while also acknowledging the impact of Barbie’s early feminist portrayals.
Cherríe Moraga, playwright, essayist and activist, gave a talk titled “Imagine This: The (Re)generation of Place,” for the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center’s Imagining California series. Moraga tackled the inherent struggle to define one’s cultural identity in the aftermath of hundreds of years of degradation and mistreatment.
UC Santa Barbara’s Interdisciplinary Humanities Center (IHC) is closing out an active year of lectures, panels, fellowships, research and graduate programs. This year, IHC welcomed seven new graduate fellows into its Public Humanities program, and in June, seven other graduate fellows completed their programs. In addition, five graduate fellows won the annual IHC Dissertation Fellowship competition. This fall, IHC will start its 2023-2024 public event series, “Imagining California,” by inviting academics, activists, artists and writers to engage with California’s historical past and inspire a hopeful future.
London-based artist Wajid Yaseen said that cassette tapes give a rare glimpse into the lives and immigration experiences of Pothwari-speaking people, whose language has no written form. The lecture was hosted by UCSB’s Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Music, Ethnomusicology Forum, Library Special Collections, and Interdisciplinary Humanities Center.
Jaime Alves, Black Studies professor at UCSB, said that scholars should frame Blackness as a resistance to Latin American colonial narratives that have falsely asserted Blacks were fully integrated into society. This talk was part of the 21st Hispanic and Lusophone Conference, hosted annually by UCSB’s Spanish and Portuguese department.
A UC Berkeley computer science professor, Hany Farid, spoke to a UC Santa Barbara audience last week about the dangers of deep fake technology and artificial intelligence, as part of IHC’s Too Much Information (TMI) series.
Cherríe Moraga, UCSB professor of English and co-director of Las Maestras Center for Xicana Thought, Art, and Social Practice, was recently awarded the annual Luis Leal Award for Distinction in Chicano and Latino Literature. Moraga spoke at an IHC event, delving into her role as a writer and her passion for Chicano studies. She shared part of her memoir, Native Country of the Heart, explaining the meaning behind the story.
Jody Enders, medievalist and UCSB Distinguished Professor in the department of French and Italian Studies, recently translated two books of French farce. Enders spoke at a recent IHC Humanities Decanted event with Leo Cabrantes-Grant, a professor of Spanish and Portuguese. They discussed contemporary themes in medieval farces that resonate with a 21st-century audiences and how Enders approaches translating.
Rob Boddice, author and historian, spoke as the inaugural speaker for the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center’s new Research Focus Group of the History of Emotions. Bodice highlighted the importance of different scholarly fields working together to continue making progress for research on emotions.
Ross Melnick, a UCSB Film and Media Studies professor, spoke at the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center’s second Humanities Decanted series event, to discuss his new book Hollywood Embassies: How Movie Theaters Projected American Power Around the World . Melnick also sat down with UCSB student Maxwell Wilkens to talk about his book and the role American cinema played in forging the US image abroad, in the second episode of HFA Speaks: The Podcast.