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DTSTAMP:20240923T143205
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20241001T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20241001T170000
SUMMARY:Reception / Open House:NERS Open House
DESCRIPTION:RSVP to attend the NERS Open House. First-year and undeclared second year students will have the opportunity to connect with Nuclear Engineering students\, faculty\, and student orgs. If ready\, second-year students will also be allowed to declare their Engineering Physics or Nuclear Engineering major. Free food/swag will be provided!\n\nTuesday\, October 1st\n4-5 PM\nBaer Room at Mortimer E. Cooley Building (2355 Bonisteel Blvd.)\n\nStudents can arrive anytime between 4-5 PM.
UID:126846-21857991@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/126846
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences,Nuclear,Michigan Engineering
LOCATION:
CONTACT:
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DTSTAMP:20240911T115301
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20241001T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20241001T170000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:Technologies of Sex: Humanizing the Clinical Gaze in Interwar Social Hygiene Films
DESCRIPTION:Sex research in the early-twentieth century German-speaking world was a wide-ranging and interdisciplinary project\, and by the 1920s popular interest in this booming field was facilitated by the exciting technological possibilities of film\, as sex reform activists\, doctors\, feminists and advocacy organizations forged productive alliances with commercial studios. This period saw rapid developments in form and genre\, from the explicitly pedagogical\, anti-STI documentaries of the immediate post-war years to more sensational productions such as the Der Steinach Film (The Steinach Film\, 1922\, Germany\, dir. Thomalla)\, which delves into the latest endocrinological and “rejuvenation” research\, and more narratively driven\, melodramatic Aufklärungsfilme centred on themes of STI transmission\, abortion\, prostitution or homosexuality\, such as Falsche Scham (False Shame\, Germany\, 1925/26\, dir. Biebrach)\, Anders als die Andern (Different from the Others\, 1919\, dir Oswald)\, and Mysterium des Geschlechts (Mystery of sex\, 1933\, dir. Golte). \n\nThis talk presents work-in-progress from a co-authored book project with Birgit Lang (University of Melbourne) on photography and film in early German sexual science. It argues that interwar Aufklärungsfilme were crucial in democratizing interwar sexual science\, depicting doctors as not simply authoritative experts\, but as sympathetic\, accessible and even vulnerable mediators of the latest sex research. They show doctor-scientists taking their lectures and life-lessons out of the traditional clinics and laboratories into spaces such as nightclubs\, funfairs\, and domestic homes\, at times ceding some of their authority to newly recognized social actors such as female medical students or gender-diverse subjects. Film\, queer and affect theorists emphasize how the embodied experience of cinemagoing can foster unique forms of identification and empathy\, from “prosthetic memories” (Landsberg) to “embodied affects” (Rutherford). We examine how these shifts worked to humanize the clinical gaze and gesture towards more emancipatory futures\, even as we also consider ways in which these sources remain ethically troubling for historians of gender and sexuality today.\n\nKatie Sutton is Associate Professor of German and Gender Studies at the Australian National University and a cultural historian of the German-speaking world. Working at the intersection of gender\, sexuality\, medicine and popular culture\, Sutton’s work focuses particularly on queer and trans histories and cultures\, sexual science and psychoanalysis. They are author of Sexuality in Modern German History (Bloomsbury\, 2023)\; Sex between Body and Mind: Psychoanalysis and Sexology in the German-Speaking World\, 1890s-1930s (Michigan UP\, 2019)\; and The Masculine Woman in Weimar Germany (Berghahn\, 2011). Sutton’s research has been supported by the Australian Research Council\, DAAD\, and British Academy/Leverhulme\, including a current collaborative ARC Discovery Project with Professor Birgit Lang at the University of Melbourne on photography and film in early sexual science on which this presentation is based.
UID:124730-21853678@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/124730
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Germanic Languages And Literatures,German Studies,German
LOCATION:Modern Languages Building - 3308 (Conference Room)
CONTACT:
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DTSTAMP:20240903T180500
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20241001T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20241001T180000
SUMMARY:Workshop / Seminar:To Stop a Tyrant: How Courageous Political Followers Make a Crucial Difference
DESCRIPTION:In the past twenty years\, the world of leadership studies has been challenged to acknowledge its inseparable counterpart: Followership. Leadership programs now increasingly incorporate followership theory\, practice and development in their curriculum. Our speaker\, Ira Chaleff\, has been in the forefront of this movement with his classic work\, The Courageous Follower: Standing Up To and For Our Leaders. Having spent much of his career in the political sector\, he is now applying the lens of followership to understanding one of humanity’s most intractable phenomenon: the rise of tyrannical political leaders on both the political left and right. \n\nIn his new book\, To Stop a Tyrant\, rather than focus on the leader\, or lament the blight they bring to freedom\, Chaleff walks us through a new way of understanding the power of followers to interrupt the toxic trajectory. In a politically polarized climate\, he brings a refreshing non-partisan voice that invites us to better understand the dynamics of how we can create political leaders that use appropriate power for the public good.\n\nThis event is intended for University of Michigan students\, staff\, faculty\, and alumni.\n\nPre-speaker reception at 4 PM with appetizers.\nHosted with support from our campus partners: CEW+\, Sanger Leadership Center\, and the Ford School Leadership Initiative.
UID:124369-21852957@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/124369
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Social Impact,Public Policy,Politics,Leadership,Free,Civic Engagement,Barger Leadership Institute,Activism
LOCATION:Weiser Hall - 10th floor
CONTACT:
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