UCSB’s Middle East Ensemble has performed at Lotte Lehmann Concert Hall, marking their return to live performances since the COVID-19 pandemic required social distancing. The ensemble has been performing as an ethnomusicology performance ensemble in UCSB’s Music department for 33 years. The concert showcased the diversity of Middle East cultures through a series of music and dance performances from across the region, including pieces by Egyptian legend Umm Kulthum.
One of Marvel’s newest film releases, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, tells the exciting tale of martial-artist-turned-superhero Shang-Chi, who must confront his past and estranged father in his fight against the mysterious Ten Rings criminal organization. At the core of the action-packed story lies an intimate look at the complex father-son relationship between Shang-Chi and his father Wenwu, co-writer and director Destin Daniel Cretton told a UCSB audience last week. Cretton was speaking as part of the Carsey-Wolf Center’s Script to Screen series.
Journalists Ann Louise Bardach and Lou Cannon house their career media archives at the UCSB library’s Special Research Collections. The two were recently guest speakers at a library event titled “Why Archives Matter,” where they told stories from their journalistic heyday and agreed they chose to store their collections at UCSB in order to make them easily accessible to the public.
Accessibility statements put out by universities serve as well-intentioned attempts to accommodate people with disabilities. But to disability studies scholar Tanya Titchkosky, these surface-level acts of "caring" are useless until public perceptions of disability change. In a recent talk organized by UCSB's Graduate Center for Literary Research, Titchkosky described how representations of disability in university life and society as a whole continue to alienate people with disabilities by reinforcing a "background of ordinary."
The UC Santa Barbara Department of Theater and Dance opened its new season with a production of 35 plays presented in 70 minutes, titled “Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind.” Fast moving, improvisational, and interactive, the debut production showcased a small, eight-member ensemble cast running full speed around the stage, with the audience participating.
Just three years after graduating from UC Santa Barbara, Molly Forster is an award-winning investigative producer who says doing an undergraduate Minor in Professional Writing helped her succeed when she entered in the media world after college.
The Center for Taiwan Studies has come back to campus in full force this year, with a roster of speaker events that stress the ties between Taiwan studies and other departments, and also enhance the artistic component of its lectures to bring Taiwan studies alive beyond textbooks. In one week alone, the department was abuzz with a total of three lectures, in both the center’s Workshop series and Sounds, Screens and Stages series.
Located near UC Santa Barbara’s signature monument Storke Tower, the university’s Art, Design & Architecture (AD&A) Museum has reopened its doors to the public after 19 months of pandemic, welcoming Gabriel Ritter as its new director.
Many American monuments, including the White House, were built using slave labor. In a recent Interdisciplinary Humanities Center (IHC) Regeneration Talk, Black author Clint Smith spoke about his experience researching exploring many such institutions, where he found that most often the role slaves played in their construction and maintenance is left unacknowledged.
The Indigenous Khoi and the San people have been present throughout South African history, yet media and historians have chronically misrepresented them and overlooked their importance. In a recent Research Focus Group talk hosted by the UCSB Interdisciplinary Humanities Center, Indigenous social justice activist Attaqua Ethel Williams Herandien spoke on the importance of including Indigenous voices in South African history in order to correct negative stereotypes and "speak the [Khoi and San] people out of extinction."
Helen Murdoch, who received her master’s degree from UC Santa Barbara’s History Department, has spent more than two decades forging ties between the university and the Santa Barbara community, where she has taught history to high school students.
In a recent event hosted by the Latin American and Iberian Studies program, Brazilian politician and environmentalist Marina Silva discussed the social and environmental struggles facing the Amazon rainforest and their consequences to indigenous populations, and the world’s climate. She explained her opinion on the root cause of the problem, as well as how humans should move forward toward sustainability.
Jake Lazich, a recent UC Santa Barbara Linguistics alumnus, is now serving in the US Army as an infantry officer, aspiring to make a difference in the world by using his knowledge of linguistics to help him serve his country.
Meditation has become an increasingly popular practice and can aid in depression and anxiety. But the negative side effects of meditation are not well known. In a talk hosted by the East Asia Center, Pennsylvania State University professor Pierce Salguero discussed a phenomenon known as "meditation sickness" and the role of religious studies scholars in educating the public on the “dark side” of meditation.
Victoria Korotchenko, the child of Russian immigrants, is combining her knowledge of Russian with a passion for teaching. As a peer tutor at the Campus Learning Assistance Services (CLAS), the third-year UC Santa Barbara student helps teach anything related to Russian to fellow students - from the alphabet to grammar to speaking, or writing.
In his new book, The Psychopathology of Political Ideologies, UC Santa Barbara writing lecturer and author Robert Samuels approaches American political ideologies through a psychological lens. He explores the guiding forces behind political ideologies and how they appear in current politics.
UC Santa Barbara honors Art student Andrew Wharton explores virtual objecthood in his most recent exhibit, “Virtual Shadows.” Through his work, Wharton merges nature and technology to produce captivating digital and physical pieces.
The city of New Orleans has recast a natural disaster symbol into an icon of its people’s resilience, an example of how visual rhetoric can function within a community, says researcher Sarah Hirsch, a continuing lecturer in the UC Santa Barbara Writing Program and the 2020-2021 Charles Bazerman Faculty Fellow.
Magic Lantern Films screened Save Yourselves! last weekend at Isla Vista Theater, the first Magic Lantern film night to air in person after 19 months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Following the screening, there was a Q&A with the film’s co-writers and co-directors Eleanor Wallace and Alex Huston Fischer.
For Irwin Appel, UCSB theater professor and artistic director of the NAKED SHAKES company, there was no better play to highlight the return of in-person instruction than Shakespeare's famous comedy, Twelfth Night. Approximately 450 people attended four outdoor performances that marked the return of in-person theater this fall after 18 long months of remote performances.