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DTSTAMP:20240425T063132
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20240410T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20240410T120000
SUMMARY:Careers / Jobs:Coffee Chat for Students with Disabilities - Meet Your Career Coaches
DESCRIPTION:When you ask graduates how they found their dream job\, they’ll often tell you\, sometimes\, it is simply having one person in your corner that can make all the difference. That’s why we want to connect with you about how to network with Alumni with disabilities. It is time to grow your network\, explore new career paths\, and start your career! We canalso answer or provide guidance about any questions you may have around disclosure as well as share the many tools available through the UCC for students with disabilities that they can leverage on their journey. Partnering with (SAAS) Academic Support and Access Partnerships and University Career Center.\n\nHandshake event link: https://app.joinhandshake.com/edu/events/1519035
UID:120464-21844792@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/120464
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:
LOCATION:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20240130T121547
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20240410T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20240410T170000
SUMMARY:Exhibition:Curriculum / Collection
DESCRIPTION:In Curriculum / Collection\, an incredible variety of University of Michigan courses take material form. Collected for each course are objects that address the nature of materiality\, time\, and human interaction in relation to our environments\, our wars\, our relationships\, and our eccentricities. \n \nWorking in collaboration with University faculty\, the works in this exhibition were selected for their capacity to provoke engagement with the guiding questions and themes of their specific courses\, while also offering students inspiration for research and art projects in their areas of study. The exhibition demonstrates some of the diverse and creative ways art plays a central role in learning across the disciplines. It also asks us to consider what we can learn from art objects across an infinite variety of specialties and subject matter.\n \nAs classes begin in Fall of 2021\, you’ll be able to use these pages to explore the collections designed for each course\, dive into the works themselves\, and hear from the professors and students about how they are engaging with art and objects in new ways. Who knows\, maybe you’ll learn something surprising along the way\, too.\n\nLead support for this exhibition is provided by the University of Michigan Office of the Provost\, Erica Gervais Pappendick and Ted Pappendick\, and the Eleanor Noyes Crumpacker Endowment Fund\, and the Oakriver Foundation.\n 
UID:86001-21795858@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/86001
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Art,Nature,Exhibition,Faculty,Museum,UMMA,Research
LOCATION:Museum of Art - Eleanor Noyes Crumpacker Gallery
CONTACT:
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DTSTAMP:20240130T121551
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20240410T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20240410T170000
SUMMARY:Exhibition:Unsettling Histories: Legacies of Slavery and Colonialism
DESCRIPTION:Organized as a response to the Museum’s recent acquisition of Titus Kaphar’s Flay (James Madison)\, this upcoming reinstallation of one of our most prominent gallery spaces forces us to grapple with our collection of European and American art\, 1650-1850.\n \nIn recent times\, growing public awareness of the continued reverberations of the legacy of slavery and colonization has challenged museums to examine the uncomfortable histories contained in our collections\, and challenged the public to probe the choices we make about those stories. Choices about which artists you see in our galleries\, choices about what relevant facts we share about the works\, and choices about what - out of an infinite number of options - we don’t say about them.\n \nPieces in this exhibition were made at a time when the world came to be shaped by the ideologies of colonial expansion and Western domination. And yet\, that history and the stories of those marginalized do not readily appear in the still lives and portraits on display here. By grappling with what is visible and what remains hidden\, we are forced to examine whose stories and histories are prioritized and why.  \n \nIn this online exhibition\, you can explore our efforts to deeply question the Museum’s collection and our own past complicity in favoring colonial voices. In the Museum gallery\, which will open in early 2021\, you’ll be able to experience the changes we’re making to the physical space to highlight a more honest version of European and American history. \n \nBy challenging our own practice\, and continuing to add to what we know and what we write about the works we display\, UMMA tells a more complex and more complete story of this nation - one that unsettles\, and fails to settle for\, simple narratives. \n \n“Invisible things are not necessarily ‘not there’.... Certain absences are so stressed\, so ornate\, so planned\, they call attention to themselves\; arrest us with intentionality and purpose\, like neighborhoods that are defined by the population held away from them.” \n \n— Toni Morrison\n\nLead support for Unsettling Histories: Legacies of Slavery and Colonialism is provided by the University of Michigan Office of the Provost\, the U-M Arts Initiative\, and the Susan and Richard Gutow Endowed Fund.\n 
UID:84303-21621256@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/84303
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Art,UMMA,European,Exhibition,History,Museum
LOCATION:Museum of Art - European and American Decorative Art
CONTACT:
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DTSTAMP:20240405T121626
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20240410T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20240410T132000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:#NotWarsaw: Jews and Culture in the Cities of Polish Lands
DESCRIPTION:This talk presents the book *Polish Jewish Culture Beyond the Capital: Centering the Periphery*\, coedited by Halina Goldberg and Nancy Sinkoff\, focusing on its historiographic framework. Polish Jewry has been often conceptualized through studies of the metropole\, Warsaw\, and its assimilating circles\, its Jewish press\, Jewish politics\, and more. Likewise\, the history of Jews in Poland in the modern period has also frequently been framed solely as a political narrative. Goldberg and Sinkoff’s approach emphasizes the capaciousness of the concept of Polish lands to accommodate the rootedness of Jews in Polish soil – and its link to the notion of *doikayt* (Yid. lit. hereness or at-homeness) – while at the same time underscoring their regional diversity. It highlights the vitality of Polish Jewish urban culture beyond Warsaw by addressing the production and consumption of culture – including literature\, film\, cabaret\, theater\, architecture\, the fine arts\, and music. It is Polish Jews’ engagement with music\, in particular\, that serves as a central narrative thread in this presentation.\n\nHALINA GOLDBERG is a professor of musicology and director of the Robert F. Byrnes Russian and East European Institute in the Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies at Indiana University–Bloomington. She is the author of *Music in Chopin’s Warsaw*\, editor of a special issue of the *Musical Quarterly* titled *Jewish Spirituality\, Modernity\, and Historicism in the Long Nineteenth Century: New Musical Perspectives*\, and director of the digital project *Jewish Life in Interwar Łódź* http://jewish-lodz.iu.edu.\n\nIf there is anything we can do to make this event accessible to you\, please contact us at crees@umich.edu. Please be aware that advance notice is necessary as some accommodations may require more time for the university to arrange.\n\nPresented by the Center for Russian\, East European and Eurasian Studies\; co-sponsored by the SMTD Department of Musicology\, International Institute\, Copernicus Center for Polish Studies\, Weiser Center for Europe and Eurasia\, and the Frankel Center for Judaic Studies.
UID:121175-21845926@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/121175
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Art,Culture,Diversity,Free,Interdisciplinary,Lecture,Music,Research,Scholarship,Talk
LOCATION:Off Campus Location
CONTACT:
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