51品茶Center for Global Humanities announces 2019-2020 Lecture Series
The Fall 2019 semester will be a busy one for the 51品茶鈥檚 Center for Global Humanities as it hosts eight events.
Now in its eleventh season, the Center will host most of its events in a larger venue than previously in response to the overflow crowds its lectures have attracted in recent years. Most events will now take place at Innovation Hall on the 51品茶Portland Campus.
As the schedule below details, the topics slated for exploration this semester include an examination of black trauma and its national effects, a discussion of the United States鈥 history of multiculturalism, and an exploration of the Electoral College and its role in deciding our presidential elections.
In addition, a special event on November 4, co-sponsored by the Portland Society for Architecture (PSA), will bring New York Times graphics editor and geographer Tim Wallace to campus to discuss the role new technologies are playing in reshaping our modern cities.
These events and others promise to treat the 51品茶community and visitors from across Southern Maine to the same thought-provoking discussions attendees have come to expect from the Center over the course of more than 100 lectures during the previous ten academic years.
All lectures begin at 6 p.m. and are preceded by a public reception at 5 p.m. Lectures are also live-streamed at .
Fall 2019 Center for Global Humanities Lecture Series
September 30, 2019: 鈥淗ow to Be an Epicurean鈥
Catherine Wilson, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, City University of New York
Innovation Hall, Portland Campus
October 7, 2019: 鈥淪hakespeare in the Arab World鈥 鈥 Portland Campus
Khalid Amine, Professor of Humanities, Abdelmalek Essaadi University, T茅touan, Morocco
Innovation Hall, Portland Campus
October 8, 2019: 鈥淪hakespeare in the Arab World鈥 鈥 Biddeford Campus
Khalid Amine, Professor of Humanities, Abdelmalek Essaadi University, T茅touan, Morocco
Alfond Center for Health Sciences 106, Biddeford Campus
October 24, 2019: 鈥淏lood Libel in America鈥
Edward Berenson, Chair of the History Department, New York University
WCHP Lecture Hall in Parker Pavilion, Portland Campus
October 28, 2019: 鈥淎cknowledging Black Trauma and its National Effects鈥
Fran莽oise Hamlin, Associate Professor of History and Africana Studies, Brown University
Innovation Hall, Portland Campus
November 4, 2019: 鈥淭he City: Sensed, Imagined, and Realized鈥
Tim Wallace, Graphics Editor and Geographer for The New York Times
Innovation Hall, Portland Campus
November 25, 2019: 鈥淎merican Democracy and the Electoral College鈥
Robert Alexander, Professor of Political Science, Ohio Northern University
Innovation Hall, Portland Campus
December 9, 2019: 鈥淒reaming of a Hemisphere without Walls and Borders鈥
Paul Ortiz, Associate Professor of History, the University of Florida
Innovation Hall, Portland Campus
51品茶 the Center for Global Humanities
The offers lectures by leading scholars to help us better understand the challenges besetting our civilization and outline new solutions for nations and peoples to live together without prejudice. Global in perspective, the Center鈥檚 lectures are streamed live on the Internet, allowing our speakers to answer questions from any country. Because the Center believes in the vital necessity of a humanities culture to civic and democratic life, it works closely with the local community to encourage reading, discussion, and debate. The Center was founded in 2009 by 51品茶scholar Anouar Majid, Ph.D., who serves as its director.