A Latina Labyrinth: Ariadne in Classic and Contemporary Literature

A Latina Labyrinth: Ariadne in Classic and Contemporary Literature

UC Davis professor Kathleen Cruz was hosted by UCSB Classice for a lecture on modern Latine writers who draw on classical mythology, particularly the story of Ariadne, to explore themes of ethnic identity, feminism, and social exclusion. In her lecture, Cruz highlighted works by Chicana poet Analicia Sotelo and Puerto Rican poet Etnairis Rivera, showing how these poets use Ariadne’s myth to reflect on experiences of “othering,” reclaiming identity, and the challenges of diasporic life.

 From Iran to America: Culture and Immigration

From Iran to America: Culture and Immigration

Filmmaker and director Persis Karim visited UC Santa Barbara for a screening of her film The Dawn is Too Far, hosted by the Center for Middle East Studies. The film details how art serves as a cultural creative outlet for many Iranian immigrants who moved to America.

Faith and Power: How Christian Nationalists Have Shaped the 2024 Election

Faith and Power: How Christian Nationalists Have Shaped the 2024 Election

UC Santa Barbara’s Walter H. Capps Center hosted a virtual panel last week about the influence of religion in politics and the 2024 election. Panelists were University of Pennsylvania religious studies professor Anthea Butler, North Florida University professor Julie Ingersoll, and UC Santa Barbara professor Joseph Blankholm. The audience heard that Christian nationalists aim to establish a theocratic government, viewing a figure like Donald Trump as a vehicle for gaining political and religious power. Panelists warned of potential violence as these movements see themselves in a battle of good against evil.

A Palestinian and an Israeli Call for New Narratives

A Palestinian and an Israeli Call for New Narratives

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.

Parody with a Purpose: The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence

Parody with a Purpose: The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence

UC Riverside religious studies professor Melissa M. Wilcox spoke to a UC Santa Barbara audience last week about her research on the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, an international group of drag queens and queer activists. Wilcox was invited by UCSB's Walter H. Capps Center as part of its 60th-anniversary celebrations. Her book, Queer Nuns: Religion, Activism, and Serious Parody, explores how the Sisters blend drag, activism, and religious imagery to challenge societal norms around gender and morality.

Old Words, New Energy: “Much Ado About Nothing”

Old Words, New Energy: “Much Ado About Nothing”

UC Santa Barbara students recently took to the stage in an outdoor performance of Much Ado About Nothing through the Naked Shakes theater program. They brought their own interpretations to Shakespeare’s work under the direction of UCSB Theater professor Irwin Appel. The actors explored the impact of spoken word, delighting several audiences over the course of an October weekend.

Why Artificial Intelligence Won't Replace Human Writing

Why Artificial Intelligence Won't Replace Human Writing

In a lecture last week, English professor Sowon Park spoke about how human writing is born from creativity and a need to make sense of the world, whereas AI-based writing can only be formed from a prompt and cannot pull from real emotion. Park explored the notion of AI replacing human writing through her own experience as a judge in the UCSB Mellichamp Initiative’s AI and Human Writing Competition.

Cinematic Sound and the Density of Silence

Cinematic Sound and the Density of Silence

Cinema sound editor Javier Umpierrez joined UCSB Film and Media Studies professor Greg Siegel for a post-screening discussion on the 2021 fantasy mystery film Memoria, which was the inaugural feature of “Panic!,” a fall series presented by UCSB’s Carsey-Wolf Center. Umpierrez spoke about his role in Memoria’s sound design and the film’s portrayal of bodies and locations recording history.

John ’75 and Jody Arnhold Establish the Arnhold Arts and Humanities Commons

John ’75 and Jody Arnhold Establish the Arnhold Arts and Humanities Commons

In a milestone for the campus, UC Santa Barbara has received visionary commitments totaling $22 million — including a record gift of $13.5 million in support of the arts and humanities — from alumnus and UC Santa Barbara Foundation Trustee John Arnhold ’75 and his wife Jody Arnhold, with their Arnhold Foundation.

Comedy with a Dark Side: One-Act Plays Directed by Students

Comedy with a Dark Side: One-Act Plays Directed by Students

Spring One-Acts, an annual UCSB student director-led event, featured three one-act plays individually directed by senior Theater students, who each took several months to create and direct their plays, providing a night of provocative entertainment for the audience.

Grammy-nominated Grads: UCSB Musicians Make it Big

Grammy-nominated Grads: UCSB Musicians Make it Big

The story of how UCSB college band Rebelution put themselves on the map, garnering a global audience of millions and a Grammy nomination. A feature story written by UCSB student Emily Ferguson.

The Evolution of Music in an Opera Landscape

The Evolution of Music in an Opera Landscape

UCSB’s Department of Music hosted an Opera Gala last month, showcasing the talents of UCSB and Ventura College students in three separate performances: one at UCSB, one at Ventura College and an abridged version at the Casa Dorinda retirement community. The primary focus of the Gala was six opera singers, all graduate students in UCSB’s music department. The event also featured a chorus, orchestra, and dancers .

Art History Major is a Grrrl Who Rocks!!!

Art History Major is a Grrrl Who Rocks!!!

Valeria Perez, host of Grrrls Who Rock!!! at UCSB’s radio station KCSB, sits down to discuss women and gender-expansive people in rock, finding your path in college, and radio show hosting.

Working With Artificial Intelligence in Digital Art

Working With Artificial Intelligence in Digital Art

George Legrady is director of UC Santa Barbara’sn Experimental Visualization Lab in the Media Arts Technology (MAT) graduate program. He discusses artificial intelligence's positive and negative impacts on art and art engineering in an interview with Humanities and Fine Arts.

Beyond the Single Story: Turing, Queer Community and Early Computers

Beyond the Single Story: Turing, Queer Community and Early Computers

Writing program faculty member Patricia Fancher has published a book titled “Queer Techné: Bodies, Rhetorics, and Desire in the History of Computing,” which explores the role of relationships, sexuality and gender in the computing community during its early years of invention, specifically surrounding Alan Turing. Her work was supported in 2023 by the Bazerman Fellowship, given to a Writing Program lecturer, which offered her the opportunity to edit her manuscript. In an interview, she discusses her process and challenges that came up.

Journalist Noe Padilla: "Just Listening and Telling People's Stories"

Journalist Noe Padilla: "Just Listening and Telling People's Stories"

UC Santa Barbara Philosophy alum Noe Padilla ‘20 was recently awarded three first-place prizes from the Indiana Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists for reporting for the Lafayette Journal & Courier. Now a reporter with the Indianapolis Star, Padilla got his start in journalism writing for student newspaper The Bottom Line, eventually and pursing the journalism track in the Writing Program.

Amulets in ancient Egypt: "Personal Guardians"

Amulets in ancient Egypt: "Personal Guardians"

Historian Evan Axel Andersson spoke on amulets and daily life in ancient Roman Egypt at the 2024 Van Gelderen Lecture, hosted by UC Santa Barbara’s History Department. Andersson discussed how these ancient artifacts did much more than adorn—serving as vital protective and spiritual tools.

Raab Writing Fellows: Highlighting Research and Introspection

Raab Writing Fellows: Highlighting Research and Introspection

Twenty students in the 2024 Raab Writing Fellowship program presented their final projects at a showcase last week, displaying multimedia works from books and zines to videos games and interactive websites — including research, fiction and creative nonfiction. Topics ranged from jazz, to AI to incarcerated women, and an Athenian prostitute. The program is generously funded by Santa Barbara writer Diana Raab, a former UCSB Foundation Trustee. It is administered by the UCSB Writing Program.

From Reagan to Trump: Media and Religion in Politics

From Reagan to Trump: Media and Religion in Politics

UC Santa Barbara's Walter H. Capps Center hosted Diane Winston, Knight Chair of Media and Religion at the University of Southern California, for a lecture on her book Righting the American Dream: How the Media Mainstreamed Reagan's Evangelical Vision. She spoke about the role religion played in both Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump's presidency and how media helped popularize the politics of the Christian right.