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DTSTAMP:20250115T121509
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250118T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250118T153000
SUMMARY:Conference / Symposium:Impossible Conversations: Symposium
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a day of conversation\, reflection\, and connection at Stamps Gallery\, featuring special screenings of the film Impossible Conversations and two panel discussions. Attendees will have two opportunities to watch the film\, listen to panelists\, and join the conversation. The filmmakers\, Pratāp Rughani and David Chung\, along with the central figures of the film\, Arno Michaelis and Pardeep Kaleka\, will be present. All are welcome\; attendance is free.\nSymposium Schedule\n10 - 10:15 a.m.: Welcome / Stamps Gallery Director\, Srimoyee Mitra\n10:15 - 10:45 a.m.: First Screening\n11 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.: First Panel - Sikh Responses to Racialized Gun Violence in AmericaThis opening session offers a tangential reflection on “Impossible Conversations” by shedding light on some of the complexities of the Sikh community’s struggles to mourn\, memorialize\, and at the same time publically respond to the Oak Creek massacre. The panelists offer personal and critical observations inviting the audience to think about racialized gun violence as a problem that goes beyond individuals and institutions.\n\nModerator: Arvind-Pal Mandair\, Professor of Asian Languages and Culture and Chair\, Sikh Studies\, U-M\nHarleen Kaur\, Assistant Teaching Professor in Sociology at Arizona State University\nGurkirat Sekhon\, PhD candidate in the joint program in English and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan\n\nNoon - 1:30 pm: Lunch break\n1:30 - 2 p.m.: Second Screening\n2:15 - 3:30 p.m.: Second Panel -Trauma and Forgiveness: The Courage to Have Impossible ConversationsCan impossible conversations provide a way forward in contentious times? How do we bring more voices to the table? This roundtable invites us to think through these questions in conversation with persons who come to the restorative justice process from varied perspectives\, including practitioners and those who have experienced harm as victims and perpetrators. \nModerator: Francine Banner\, Chair\, UM-Dearborn Behavioral Sciences DepartmentPardeep Kaleka\, Conciliation Specialist with the US Department of Justice-Community Relations Service\; Central figure in the Impossible Conversations filmArno Michaelis\, Public speaker\, filmmaker\, and author\; Central figure in the Impossible Conversations filmJulio Figueroa-Martinez\, Restorative Justice Practitioner\, Macomb Correctional FacilityBarbara Jones\, Community Dispute Resolution Specialist and Faculty Instructor\, Center for Peace and Conflict Studies\, Wayne State UniversityCarrie Landrum\, Adaptable Resolutions and Restorative Practices Lead\, Equity\, Civil Rights\, and Title IX Office\, University of Michigan\nAbout the Speakers\nFrancine Banner (she / her)Francine Banner is Professor and Chair of Behavioral Sciences at UM-Dearborn. She has spent many years teaching in the prison system in Michigan. She is a legal scholar and author of Beyond Complicity: Why We Blame Each Other Instead of Systems.\nPardeep Kaleka (he / him)Pardeep is a Conciliation Specialist with the US Department of Justice-Community Relations Service. With a background in clinical psychology and trauma\, Pardeep is a subject matter expert on the impacts of hate on communities and the need for collective healing. In 2012\, following the murder of his father in the hate killings at the Sikh Temple in Oak Creek\, he co-founded Serve2Unite\, an organization nationally recognized for bridging school and community groups. He is the author of The Gifts of Our Wounds and an award-winning columnist.\nHarleen Kaur (she / her)Harleen Kaur is an Assistant Teaching Professor in Sociology at Arizona State University. She studies the subjectivity formation of the US Sikh Punjabi diaspora through empire\, memory\, and advocacy for social and political inclusion. Her current project\, Martialing Race\, traces the co-optation of Sikh embodied sovereignty and community negotiations for safety and recognition into empire- and state-driven tactics of increased surveillance\, militarization\, and policing.\nCarrie Landrum (she / they)Carrie Landrum has been forging pathways to peace and facilitating healing justice using restorative practices with faculty\, staff\, and students at the University of Michigan since 2007. Carrie serves as the Adaptable Resolution and Restorative Practices Lead within the Equity\, Civil Rights\, and Title IX Office at U-M\, and also serves on the Cultivating Committee of the Metro Detroit Restorative Justice Network\, a project of the Detroit Justice Center. Carrie has passion and expertise in peacebuilding and conflict transformation\, healing justice\, restorative peacemaking practices\, trauma healing &amp\; healing-centered engagement\, and a variety of healing arts. \nBarbara Lynette Jones (she/her)Barbara L. Jones\, a restorative justice practitioner and Educator in the Office of Sexual Violence Prevention and Education at Wayne State University. With a career spanning roles such as Senior Underwriting Representative\, WDET\, and Community Dispute Resolution Specialist\, she has championed social justice\, conflict resolution\, and trauma-informed approaches for nearly two decades. Barbara’s dual identity as a co-survivor of violent crime and advocate for restorative justice informs her transformative approach to empowering survivors and promoting accountability. \nArvind-Pal S. Mandair (he / him)Arvind-Pal Mandair is a Professor in the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures and holds an endowed Chair in Sikh Studies at the University of Michigan. He is the author of many books\, including Violence and the Sikhs (Cambridge\, 2022). His teaching portfolio includes courses on violence\, race and religion. \nArno Michaelis (he/him)Arno Michaelis is a public speaker\, filmmaker\, author of My Life After Hate\, and co-author of The Gift of Our Wounds. His storytelling stems from an intention to inspire people to see themselves in others\, and see others in themselves. Arno also works as a Peer Support Specialist at Parents 4 Peace\, helping to lead people away from all violent extremist ideologies\, and to support their families. Refuge\, his latest film project\, is now available on Amazon Prime Video. Arno has been a professional public speaker since 2010\, and has captivated audiences around the world with his story of transformation and message of love and peace. Uniquely positioned to facilitate healing for people who have been targets of hate\, he has dedicated the past 15 years to forging compassion. \nJulio Martinez-Figueroa (he /him)Julio Martinez-Figueroa is a practitioner trained in restorative justice practices who spent many years conducting restorative justice programs as part of the Theory Group at Macomb Correctional Facility. \nGurkirat Singh Sekhon (he / him)Gurkirat Singh Sekhon is a PhD candidate in the joint program in English and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan. At the intersection of Sikh Studies\, transnational feminisms\, and postcolonial theory\, his work is concerned with how honor crime discourse and its attendant Islamophobic logics inform Sikh feminist efforts to both challenge and rework \"izzat\,\" a Punjabi-Sikh iteration of \"honor.\"\nExhibition curated by Srimoyee Mitra. Impossible Conversations has been supported in part by the Arts Research: Incubation &amp\; Acceleration (ARIA) program of The University of Michigan Office of the Vice President Research and the Arts Initiative\, Institute of Firearm Prevention Pilot Grant\, the Stamps School of Art and Design\, and the University of the Arts London.
UID:129930-21864896@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/129930
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Art
LOCATION:Off Campus Location
CONTACT:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20241205T091454
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250118T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250118T180000
SUMMARY:Conference / Symposium:Valerie Traub Retirement Conference - Knowledge Relations: A Conference on Historical Epistemologies\, Emerging Methodologies\, Contemporary Practices
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, January 17\, 12:00pm - 6:00pm\nSaturday\, January 18\, 10:00am - 8:00pm\n\nThe last several years have seen a flourishing of work on historical epistemology\, as scholars ask how we know what we think we know about the cultural artifacts we analyze. This work has entailed rethinking foundational methodologies like genealogy\, philology\, phenomenology\, and humanism\, as well as influential critical paradigms developed in the 1980s and 90s such as feminist and queer studies. At the same time\, we have seen a flourishing of new critical methodologies\, including disability studies\, trans studies\, environmental studies\, global studies\, digital humanities\, and critical race studies. \n\nInspired by the scholarship and mentorship of Valerie Traub\, this conference brings these critical trends into conversation to think about how the questioning\, revising\, and renewing of older critical methodologies relates to the emergence of new critical methodologies and their effect on our modes of inquiry. How\, we ask\, is our knowledge of the past shaped by the methods of our inquiries and the networks in which we practice them? How do we build on earlier critical efforts even as we critique them? Who has been included and excluded in our knowledge relations with various periods\, specific topics\, disciplines and institutions? \n\nThis conference will bring together over two dozen leading scholars and teachers alongside professionals in related fields to reflect on the past and future of our intellectual practices\, including how we can and do impact contemporary culture outside of academia. The conference will feature new work from scholars in performance studies\, critical race studies\, empire studies\, new philology\, trans studies\, and disability studies\, among others. It will explore the opportunities for synergies both topical and professional. By bringing a diverse range of practitioners together\, Knowledge Relations explores how we might make the past and the future\, together. \n\nSPEAKERS:\nMisty Anderson\, Abdulhamit Arvas\, Amanda Bailey\, Tiffany Ball\, Gina Bloom\, Andrew Bozio\, Theresa Braunschneider\, Hannah Bredar\, Katherine Steele Brokaw\, Lauren Eriks Cline\, Amrita Dhar\, Holly Dugan\, Will Fisher\, Ari Friedlander\, Joey Gamble\, Rebecca Hixon\, Gavin Hollis\, Sarah Linwick\, Maureen McDonnell\, Cecilia Morales\, Amy Rodgers\, Marjorie Rubright\, Stephen Spiess\, Aaron Stone\, Chad Thomas\, Kathryn Will\, and Laura Williamson.\n\nhttps://sites.google.com/umass.edu/knowledge-relations/home
UID:128171-21860388@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/128171
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Retirement,History,Trans Studies,Women's Studies,Disability,Humanities,institute for the humanities,lgbtq,Queer Studies
LOCATION:Michigan League - Vandenberg Room
CONTACT:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20250118T181557
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250118T100000
SUMMARY:Sporting Event:Women's Track & Field vs Simmons-Harvey Invitational
DESCRIPTION:Women's Track & Field vs Simmons-Harvey Invitational
UID:131307-21868162@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/131307
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Athletics
LOCATION:Off Campus Location
CONTACT:
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