Languages - Programs and Posters
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Languages - Programs and Posters by Title
Now showing 1 - 20 of 26
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item The Academy of American Poets Prize (Poster)(2018-04-23) Lasky, Dorothea (Judge)Item The Aesthetic of Chinese Art, Music, and Culture (Poster)(Bennington College, 2010-04-21)Item Beauty of Suffering (Poster) : Representations of Violence Against Women in Spain (17th-21st Century)(2015-04-09) Perez Villanueva, Sonia; Isabelle Kaplan Center for Languages and Cultures; East Academic CenterWe will focus on the aesthetics of suffering, particularly on representations of gendered violence in Spain from the seventeenth century to contemporary times. We will analyze narrative forms— theatre, novels and scripts—and visual depictions—paintings and film—of violence, or in other words, we will explore the “beautiful” or grotesque spectacle of female suffering. This research has, of course, a common denominator: the control of women and the violence against them. In spite of the progress of time and the political efforts to protect victims of domestic violence in Spain, fiftythree women were killed by their husbands in 2014. Dr Sonia Pérez-Villanueva is Assistant Professor of Spanish in the Department of Humanities at Lesley University. She is the author of The Life of Catalina de Erauso, The Lieutenant Nun: An Early Modern Autobiography (2014).Item Bennington College's Language Series Offers Interdisciplinary Events in French, Japanese, Chinese, Italian and Spanish (Press release)(2019-04-01) Bennington College; Isabelle Kaplan Center for Languages and Cultures; Redmond, Natalie (Associate Writer)Press release, April 1, 2019.Item Bennington Translates (Poster)(2016-03-07) Harris, Susan (Speaker); Simpson, Wade (Artist)Susan Harris, Executive Director of WordsWithouBorders.org. CAPA Symposium, 4:10pm-6:10pmItem Black French Matters(2018-11-02) Casey (French rap artist); Soumahoro, MaboulaCASEY, French rap artist in conversation (in English) with Maboula Soumahoro, professor of African-American Studies at Université de Tours, France. Sponsored by: French, Office of Diversity & Inclusion, Provost's and Dean's Office, SCT, and Music.Item Chinese Night (Poster) : When 9 to 5 becomes 6 to 10 : My experiences with contemporary education in Western China(2015-03-10) Ward, Kelly (Class of 2012)Poster of a program held at the East Academic Center at Bennington College on March 5, 2015. “Wanted: Adventurous teacher to work with 100 amazing students in the most beautiful place in the world.” This was the job advertisement that drew KELLY WARD ’12, to begin teaching English to underserved teenagers from remote nomadic areas in Western China. In her presentation, she will introduce the Tibetan community she lives and works in as a microcosm through which to explore the ever-changing landscape of education in China and the challenges f acing Chinese and Tibetan teens today. Kelly is currently Head Teacher and Curriculum Developer at a small high school intensive English program on the Qinghai Tibetan Plateau. Her book, Fading Memories, Faded Lives: Mongghul Photographs from Qinghai, China, which she co-authored with Limushiden, Jugui, and Dr. Kevin Stuart, was published in December 2014.Item Cinema Reuse and Neighborhood Revitalization in Rome (Poster)(2015-05-14) Bowen, Edward; Tombini, Claudia (Photograph)Date, time and place of event : May 14, 2015, 7pm, East Academic Center 1. In Rome—Italy’s political and cinematic capital— there are currently 40 abandoned cinemas. City leaders and activists have seen different political, economic, and social potentials in the recovery of these spaces. This talk presents the discourses and practices of the activists who physically occupied the Cinema America from 2012 to 2014 to prevent its demolition and protect its zoning for cultural purposes. Based on findings from a survey and interviews conducted with residents, this talk examines to what extent the protest frames of the occupiers resonated with city residents. Paolo Sorrentino presents Fellini’s La dolce vita at the occupied Cinema America. Photo by Claudia TombiniItem Cultural Studies and Languages Presents: Mario Bellatin(Bennington College -- Events, 2022-03-24) Bellatin, MarioBorn in Mexico, Mario Bellatin studied theology and film. He has over 60 books published that have been translated into 22 languages.Item Dancing with Brush Marks with Yeachin Tsai (Poster)(2014-10-09)An evening of Sumi ink and brush strokes - an introduction to Traditional Chinese Calligraphy and Brush Painting by Yeachin Tsai. Tsai will demonstrate the principles of these ancient disciplines and discuss how the practice can bring us vividly into the present moment. The evening will include a demonstration and contemporary artwork presentation.Item The Demonstration of Ikebana by Yuji Ueno (Poster)(2014-10-02)Yuji Ueno is an independent floral artist who has developed his own unique philosophy and artistic sensibility—by turns outrageously passionate and exceptionally tranquil. Formerly trained in traditional Japanese floral arrangement, Sogestu Ikebana, Ueno later sought greater freedom to chart his own course and to develop his own flower concept that he calls Hanaike. His aim is to draw out the essence of the natural world and convey the true meaning of beauty in fine ‘flower arrangements’. At Bennington College he will give a demonstration of his floral art, seeking inspiration from the place to forge an artistic piece within the local context.Item Diasporic Translations : A Conversation with Katrina Dodson (Poster)(2018-04-04) Dodson, Katrina; Center for the Advancement of Public ActionKatrina Dodson is the translator from the Portuguese of The Complete Stories, by Clarice Lispector (New Directions, 2015), winner of the PEN Translation Prize and other awards.Item Don't Shovel (Poster) : The Use of Farming and Culinary Tools as Resistance in Julie Otsuka's "The Emperor Was Divine"(2015-03-26) Izumi, Katsuya; East Academic CenterJulie Otsuka’s When the Emperor Was Divine (2002) discusses the traumatic experiences of a Japanese American family who, along with more than 110,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans, was sent to internment camps during the aftermath of the Pearl Harbor attack. With its unusual use of farming and culinary tools, this novel can be read as a resistance statement both in its historical context and in Asian American literary traditions. Dr. Katsuya Izumi’s research focuses on food and identity in Asian American literature. He has taught American literature, English writing, and Japanese.Item The Fall 2015 Foreign Language Series (Poster)(2015) Stanton, Domna (CUNY); Siniawer, Eiko Maruko (Williams College); Validivieso, Christina '16; Yeachin, Tsai; Harnett-Marshall, Patrick '16; Lombardi, Giancarlo (CUNY); Village School of North BenningtonDate, time and place of events : September 10, 2015, 7:00 pm, CAPA Symposium, Professor Domna Stanton (CUNY) (French) Enslaved to Chocolate: Empire and Religion, Commerce, and Gender in Louis XIV’s France (Lecture) -- September 24, 2015, 7:00 pm, EAC 1, Professor Eiko Maruko Siniawer (Williams College) (Japanese) Remembering World War II in Japan (Lecture) -- October 6, 2015, 7:00 pm, EAC 1, Cristina Valdivieso ’16 (Spanish) Exclusion and Architecture: The Myth of Old Guayaquil (Advanced Work Presentation) -- October 22, 2015, 7:00 pm, EAC 1, Yeachin Tsai (Chinese) Meditation in Daily Life (Workshop) -- November 3, 2015, 7:00 pm, EAC 1, Patrick Harnett-Marshall ’16 (Spanish) Sor Juana after Calderón (Advanced Work Presentation) -- November 19, 2015 | 7:00 pm, EAC 1, Student teachers at Village School of North Bennington, Language Teaching Insights (Presentation by Bennington students) -- December 3, 2015, 7:00 pm, EAC 1, Professor Giancarlo Lombardi (CUNY) (Italian) Screening Terror: Cinematic Representations of Italian Political Terrorism (Lecture)Item Foreign Language Series (Poster)(2016) Underwood, Benjamin '13; Beasley, Faith (Dartmouth); Paco, Diana di (Universidad de Murcia); Scott, Alex; Kennon, Heather; Smedley, Bryce (Visiting Faculty); Alfano, Barbara; Anastas, Ben; Coronel-Molina, Serafin; Baumann, Michael (Chef, Chanticleer Restaurant)Date, time and place of events : How to Conduct Independent Research Abroad: Lessons learned from developing clean energy projects in Nepal and China / Benjamin Underwood, MARCH 24, 2016 -- France and India in the Seventeenth Century / Professor Faith Beasley (Dartmouth) APRIL 7, 2016 -- Life Beyond Bennington: Teaching English Overseas / Alex Scott and Heather Kennon, and visiting faculty member, Bryce Smedley, APRIL 28, 2016 -- Bewitched, Bothered, or Bewildered? A conversation about Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan novels / Barbara Alfano and Benjamin Anastas, MAY 12, 2016 -- Minority Languages Rights, Preservation / Dr. Serafin Coronel-Molina, MAY 19, 2016 -- French Cuisine / Chef Michel Baumann of Chantecleer Restaurant, Manchester, VT, TBA All events at 7 pm at EAC 1Item Foreign Language Series (Poster)(2016-09) Danison, Ned; Nussbaum-Barberena, Laura; Diallo, Rokhaya; Matsue, Jennifer MiliotoChinese; Spanish; Italian; French; Japanese; Chinese, French, Spanish. Sept. 12, Oct. 3, Oct. 24, Nov. 6, Nov. 21, Nov. 28, 2016.Item Foreign Language Series (Poster) Presented by Bennington College and The Isabelle Kaplan Center for Languages and Cultures(2017-03)Poster for lecture series held Spring 2017.Item Foreign Language Series (Poster) Spring 2018(2018-03) Whimberly, Michael (Presenter); Martinez, Evett (Presenter); Barney, Nick (Presenter); Hennessy, Nick (Presenter); Mame-Fatou, Niang (Presenter); MacPhee, Eleanor (Presenter); Nam Phuong Thi Doan (Presenter); Montano, Domenica (Presenter); Prescott, Anne (Presenter); Gilman, Anne (Presenter); Ugolini, Beatrice, Class of 2016 (Presenter); Seifert, Lewis (Presenter)Lectures and performances presented by the Kaplan Center for Languages and Cultures.Item Graphic Novels and the Art of Storytelling Post 9/11 (Poster)(2015-04-02) Takakjian, Cara; East Academic CenterCARA TAKAKJIAN - Assistant Professor - Languages, Cultures and Linguistics, Bucknell University. In a discussion of contemporary Italian graphic novels, we will see how the comic medium—with its hybrid language and focus on reader participation—is uniquely adept at storytelling in the post 9/11 era. An analysis of the works of the comics artist, Gipi, reveals the comic form’s potential for melding the personal and the universal, and for engaging with contemporary problems of visuality in terms of looking, seeing, and understanding. Ultimately, Gipi’s comics comment on the ethical implications of our participation, or lack thereof, in the events that surround us, as he implicates himself and his readers in our current historical moment.Item Homage to Neruda: Late and Posthumous Poems: 1968-1974 (Poster)(Bennington College, 1989-05-09) Belitt, Ben, 1911-2003; Córdova, José