Happening @ Michigan https://events.umich.edu/list/rss RSS Feed for Happening @ Michigan Events at the University of Michigan. Submissions Deadline for Hopwood Writing Awards (January 12, 2022 12:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/84777 84777-21624934@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Wednesday, January 12, 2022 12:00pm
Location: Off Campus Location
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The submissions deadline for all writing contests administered by the Hopwood Awards Program is precisely noon, Eastern Time on January 12, 2022 except for students graduating in Fall 2021, who should submit by December 12, 2021. No late entries will be accepted. Online submissions only. Contests are open to University of Michigan graduate and undergraduate students at the Ann Arbor, Dearborn, and Flint campuses enrolled for a minimum of six (undergraduate) or three (graduate) credits. There is no fee to enter. See https://lsa.umich.edu/hopwood for contest descriptions, submission instructions, and other details.

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Other Fri, 12 Nov 2021 16:38:39 -0500 2022-01-12T12:00:00-05:00 2022-01-12T12:00:00-05:00 Off Campus Location Hopwood Awards Program Other Image of the Hopwood Room round table and bookcase
CANCELLED: Alexis Pauline Gumbs in conversation with Toshi Reagon (March 21, 2022 5:30pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/92061 92061-21686458@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Monday, March 21, 2022 5:30pm
Location: Rackham Graduate School (Horace H.)
Organized By: Institute for the Humanities

Regretfully, the talk between Toshi Reagon and Alexis Pauline Gumbs has been canceled. Please join us for other Octavia Butler Week and Parable Path events this week.

See all Octavia Butler Week events at https://myumi.ch/n8VAR.

Alexis Pauline Gumbs in conversation with Toshi Reagon is the 2022 Marc and Constance Jacobson Lecture. Can't attend in person? Watch the live-stream at https://myumi.ch/y9VNR.

Writer Alexis Pauline Gumbs talks to musician, composer, producer, and activist Toshi Reagon about her opera Parable of the Sower, based on the book by Octavia Butler. Moderated by Ebony Elizabeth Thomas.

About Octavia Butler Week:
Octavia Butler was a renowned African American author who received a MacArthur “Genius” Grant and PEN West Lifetime Achievement Award for her body of work. With Octavia Butler Week, we aim to explore the work and legacy of this visionary writer. It’s part of a larger series of events that include a community read, a multimedia performance, an open-mic night, and additional events that together comprise Parable Path A2Ypsi.

Culminating Parable Path A2Ypsi is Toshi Reagon and Bernice Johnson Reagon’s genre-defying musical adaptation of Octavia E. Butler’s novel Parable of the Sower. UMS will present this powerful performance March 25-27, 2022 at the Power Center in Ann Arbor. Tickets and info at ums.org.

About Toshi Reagon:
Toshi Reagon has been described as “a talented, versatile singer, songwriter and musician with a profound ear for sonic Americana—from folk to funk, from blues to rock” by critic/blogger Eva Yaa Asantewaa (InfiniteBody). “She masters each of these genres with vocal strategies that easily spiral and swoop from the expressively sinuous to the hard-charging, a combination of warmth and mischief.”

While her expansive career has landed her comfortably in residence at Carnegie Hall, the Paris Opera House and Madison Square Garden, you can just as easily find Toshi turning out a music festival, intimate venue or local club. Toshi finds home on any musical stage. Toshi has had the pleasure of working with Lenny Kravitz, Lizz Wright, Ani DiFranco, Carl Hancock Rux, Nona Hendryx, Pete Seeger, Chocolate Genius and many other amazing artists, including her favorite collaborator, her mom, Bernice Johnson Reagon.

Yaa Asantewaa writes, “Toshi knows the power of song to focus, unite and mobilize people. If you’ve been lucky enough to be in Toshi’s presence, you know you can’t walk away from her without feeling better about yourself as a human being. She aims for nothing less.”

Toshi has been the recipient of a NYFA award for Music Composition, The Black Lily Music and Film Festival Award for Outstanding Performance. She is a National Women’s History Month Honoree, and is the 2010 recipient of OutMusic’s Heritage Award.

About Alexis Pauline Gumbs:
Alexis Pauline Gumbs is a Queer Black Feminist Love Evangelist and an aspirational cousin to all life. She is/they are the author of several books, most recently Undrowned: Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Mammals and the co-founder of the Mobile Homecoming Trust, an intergenerational experiential living library of Black LBGTQ brilliance.

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Lecture / Discussion Sat, 19 Mar 2022 14:31:43 -0400 2022-03-21T17:30:00-04:00 2022-03-21T19:00:00-04:00 Rackham Graduate School (Horace H.) Institute for the Humanities Lecture / Discussion Rackham Graduate School (Horace H.)
Reading Octavia Butler: A Panel Discussion (March 22, 2022 5:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/92062 92062-21686459@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Tuesday, March 22, 2022 5:00pm
Location: Rackham Graduate School (Horace H.)
Organized By: Institute for the Humanities

See all Octavia Butler Week events at https://myumi.ch/n8VAR.

Octavia Butler was a renowned African American author who received a MacArthur “Genius” Grant and PEN West Lifetime Achievement Award for her body of work. With Octavia Butler Week, we aim to explore the work and legacy of this visionary writer. It’s part of a larger series of events that include a community read, a multimedia performance, an open-mic night, and additional events that together comprise Parable Path A2Ypsi.

Today's panel will discuss Octavia Butler's enduring influence as a writer, thinker, and creator. Featuring U-M faculty Bénédicte Boisseron (Afroamerican and African studies, Romance languages and literatures), Jeremy Glover (PhD candidate, English), Aliyah Khan (English and Afroamerican and African studies), Ebony Elizabeth Thomas (School of Education), Antoine Traisnel (English and comparative literature).

Culminating Parable Path A2Ypsi is Toshi Reagon and Bernice Johnson Reagon’s genre-defying musical adaptation of Octavia E. Butler’s novel Parable of the Sower. UMS will present this powerful performance March 25-27, 2022 at the Power Center in Ann Arbor. Tickets and info at ums.org.

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Lecture / Discussion Wed, 09 Mar 2022 15:55:29 -0500 2022-03-22T17:00:00-04:00 2022-03-22T18:00:00-04:00 Rackham Graduate School (Horace H.) Institute for the Humanities Lecture / Discussion Octavia Butler Quote
Hopwood Reading: Jia Tolentino (April 7, 2022 5:30pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/89275 89275-21661670@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, April 7, 2022 5:30pm
Location: Rackham Graduate School (Horace H.)
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

A reading by Jia Tolentino, the 2022 Hopwood Lecturer. Jia is a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of the essay collection Trick Mirror. Copies of Trick Mirror will be available for purchase. The reading is free and open to the public. This event will be in-person and live-streamed; no pre-registration necessary. Log in here: https://tinyurl.com/ZellWriters

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Performance Mon, 04 Apr 2022 09:36:52 -0400 2022-04-07T17:30:00-04:00 2022-04-07T19:00:00-04:00 Rackham Graduate School (Horace H.) Hopwood Awards Program Performance Jia Tolentino wearing a black top and jeans. Photo credit: Elena Mudd.
Critical Conversations: Poetry (April 11, 2022 12:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/93810 93810-21708371@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Monday, April 11, 2022 12:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Department of English Language and Literature

"Critical Conversations" is a monthly lunch series organized by the English Department for 2021-22. In each session, a panel of four faculty members give flash talks about their current research as related to a broad theme. Presentations are followed by lively, cross-disciplinary conversation with the audience.

Presentations begin at 12:00pm, followed by discussion. The session concludes at 1:30 pm.

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Lecture / Discussion Tue, 22 Mar 2022 00:41:09 -0400 2022-04-11T12:00:00-04:00 2022-04-11T13:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Department of English Language and Literature Lecture / Discussion "There is always light if only we are brave enough to see it. If only we're brave enough to be it."
The 26th Annual Comparative Literature Intra-Student Faculty Forum (CLIFF) (May 20, 2022 10:00am) https://events.umich.edu/event/94977 94977-21788177@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Friday, May 20, 2022 10:00am
Location: Off Campus Location
Organized By: Comparative Literature

How are our affective encounters with literature, art, and media bound by time, and how are we also—in such encounters—temporally unbound? If literary texts have variously been framed as anticipating, disruptive of, conforming to, producing, inhabiting, and/or responding to axes of time (as “timely,” “untimely,” “ahead of their time,” “nostalgic,” or “avant-garde”), they have likewise been understood as objects of pure fascination, aesthetic experience, and enchantment.

Enchantment, in particular, is frequently understood as an ephemeral experience, unique to the moment of our encounter with the enchanting. We are enchanted by things for brief, passing moments; we sometimes return to a once-enchanting object only to find the glamor it once cast upon us has broken; and at other times, this rediscovery itself—re-encountering a text or encountering it in a new (translated, adapted) form—prompts our re-enchantment.

To mark its 26th anniversary, the University of Michigan Comparative Literature Intra-Student Faculty Forum (CLIFF) organizes a virtual graduate conference that critically and creatively explores the intersection of world literatures, temporalities, and enchantment. We welcomed work that investigates literary and artistic constructions of and responses to notions of temporality and enchantment from aesthetic, historical, industrial, material, technological, speculative, post/colonial, feminist, queer, religious, translational, local and/or global perspectives.
CLIFF 2022 received submissions from graduate students (U-M and beyond) and was open to academic papers from across disciplines that deal with a wide variety of languages and time periods as well as creative and experimental genres.

Michael Allan’s research focuses on debates in world literature, postcolonial studies, literary theory, as well as film and visual culture, primarily in Africa and the Middle East. In both his research and teaching, he bridges textual analysis with social theory, and draws from methods in anthropology, religion, queer theory and area studies. He is the author of In the Shadow of World Literature: Sites of Reading in Colonial Egypt (Princeton 2016, Co-Winner of the MLA Prize for a First Book) and of articles in venues such as PMLA, Modernism/Modernity, Comparative Literature Studies, Early Popular Visual Culture, The International Journal of Middle East Studies, and the Journal of Arabic Literature. He is also a guest editor of a special issue of Comparative Literature (“Reading Secularism: Religion, Literature, Aesthetics”), and with Elisabetta Benigni, an issue of Philological Encounters (“Lingua Franca: Toward a Philology of the Sea”). He is at work on a second book, Picturing the World: The Global Routes of Early Cinema, 1896-1903, which traces the transnational history of camera operators working for the Lumière Brothers film company.


CLIFF 2022 Schedule

May 20, Friday

10:00 - 11:15 EST Panel 1: Fictions of Magic
Respondent: Cameron Cross

Himani Wadhwa, “Res(crip)ting the Gaze: Envisioning Disability through the Lens of Magical Realism”
Janine Hsiao Sobers, “‘The Terrifying Card of Faith:’ Decolonial Syncretism and the Enchanted Worldview in Alejo Carpentier’s The Kingdom of This World”
Lee Czerw, “The Tyrant as Witch in Early Modern German Tragedy”


11:30 - 12:45 EST Panel 2: Metamorphoses
Respondent: Supriya Nair

Anthony Revelle, “Where’s the Meat Gone? Empty Skins in the Kitchen & The Sartorial Body of the Werewolf”
Daniela Crespo-Miró, “[Trans]mogrifying the Body [Politic]: Queer Embodiment and Puerto Rican Self-Making in Raquel Salas Rivera’s ‘notas sobre las temporadas/notes on the seasons’”
Jahnabi Barooah Chanchani, “A Talking Parrot’s Tales of Enchantment and Ethics”


12:45 - 14 EST Lunch


14 - 15:15 EST Panel 3: The Poetic
Respondent: Aaron Coleman

Tom Abi Samra, “Circumstantial Poetics: ‘Epigrams’ in the Travelogues of ʿAbd al-Ghanī al-Nābulusī (d. 1143 AH/1731 AD)”
Griffin Shoglow-Rubenstein, “‘The voice / of a drop falling’: N.H. Pritchard and the Temporalization of the Page”
Marianna Hagler, “How to Be Completely Living: Lyn Hejinian’s Gertrude Stein”


15: 30 - 16:45 EST Graduate Student Event (TBD)





May 21, Saturday

10 - 11:15 EST Panel 4: Reception & Representation
Respondent: Will Stroebel

Chandrica Barua, "Anachronistic Attachments: Out of Time Blackness and Brownness in Bridgerton"
Katherine Ponds, “Tragic Enchantment: Rethinking Adrienne Kennedy’s Electra”
Alexander K. Sell, “Re-enchanting the Void: Ontological Slippages between Weird Fiction and Fantasy”


11:30 - 12:45 EST Panel 5: Nostalgias & Utopias
Respondent: Caryl Flinn

Qingyi Zeng, “The Poetics of Elsewhere in Jia Zhangke’s 24 City”
Júlia Irion Martins, “All Trad is Cope: Nostalgic Futures + American Empire in ‘Retvrn’ Twitter”
‘Gbenga Adeoba, “‘Back there Calendar was useless’: Ishion Hutchinson’s Ambivalent Temporalities”


12:45 - 14 EST Lunch


14 - 15:15 EST Panel 6: Imagined Americas
Respondent: Antoine Traisnel

Blythe Lewis, “‘My life is a withered tree’: Empire, Ships, and Deforestation in Georgian Drama”
Ben Larsen, “Disenchanting the Banjo: Temporal Reclamation through Spatial Practice”
Ziyang Li, “The Enchanting Gold that Overflows: Gold Rush, Ecology, and Asian American Identity in C Pam Zhang’s How Much of These Hills is Gold”


15: 30 - 16:45 EST Keynote Lecture

Michael Allan, “Picturing Enchantment: Archival Looks and Cinematic Worlds”



To register:
https://umich.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0lde6rqjsiH9NHt-OeH3YRJWmJ94KSeNkL

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Livestream / Virtual Tue, 10 May 2022 11:06:50 -0400 2022-05-20T10:00:00-04:00 2022-05-20T18:00:00-04:00 Off Campus Location Comparative Literature Livestream / Virtual Poster of the event.
The 26th Annual Comparative Literature Intra-Student Faculty Forum (CLIFF) (May 21, 2022 10:00am) https://events.umich.edu/event/94977 94977-21788178@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Saturday, May 21, 2022 10:00am
Location: Off Campus Location
Organized By: Comparative Literature

How are our affective encounters with literature, art, and media bound by time, and how are we also—in such encounters—temporally unbound? If literary texts have variously been framed as anticipating, disruptive of, conforming to, producing, inhabiting, and/or responding to axes of time (as “timely,” “untimely,” “ahead of their time,” “nostalgic,” or “avant-garde”), they have likewise been understood as objects of pure fascination, aesthetic experience, and enchantment.

Enchantment, in particular, is frequently understood as an ephemeral experience, unique to the moment of our encounter with the enchanting. We are enchanted by things for brief, passing moments; we sometimes return to a once-enchanting object only to find the glamor it once cast upon us has broken; and at other times, this rediscovery itself—re-encountering a text or encountering it in a new (translated, adapted) form—prompts our re-enchantment.

To mark its 26th anniversary, the University of Michigan Comparative Literature Intra-Student Faculty Forum (CLIFF) organizes a virtual graduate conference that critically and creatively explores the intersection of world literatures, temporalities, and enchantment. We welcomed work that investigates literary and artistic constructions of and responses to notions of temporality and enchantment from aesthetic, historical, industrial, material, technological, speculative, post/colonial, feminist, queer, religious, translational, local and/or global perspectives.
CLIFF 2022 received submissions from graduate students (U-M and beyond) and was open to academic papers from across disciplines that deal with a wide variety of languages and time periods as well as creative and experimental genres.

Michael Allan’s research focuses on debates in world literature, postcolonial studies, literary theory, as well as film and visual culture, primarily in Africa and the Middle East. In both his research and teaching, he bridges textual analysis with social theory, and draws from methods in anthropology, religion, queer theory and area studies. He is the author of In the Shadow of World Literature: Sites of Reading in Colonial Egypt (Princeton 2016, Co-Winner of the MLA Prize for a First Book) and of articles in venues such as PMLA, Modernism/Modernity, Comparative Literature Studies, Early Popular Visual Culture, The International Journal of Middle East Studies, and the Journal of Arabic Literature. He is also a guest editor of a special issue of Comparative Literature (“Reading Secularism: Religion, Literature, Aesthetics”), and with Elisabetta Benigni, an issue of Philological Encounters (“Lingua Franca: Toward a Philology of the Sea”). He is at work on a second book, Picturing the World: The Global Routes of Early Cinema, 1896-1903, which traces the transnational history of camera operators working for the Lumière Brothers film company.


CLIFF 2022 Schedule

May 20, Friday

10:00 - 11:15 EST Panel 1: Fictions of Magic
Respondent: Cameron Cross

Himani Wadhwa, “Res(crip)ting the Gaze: Envisioning Disability through the Lens of Magical Realism”
Janine Hsiao Sobers, “‘The Terrifying Card of Faith:’ Decolonial Syncretism and the Enchanted Worldview in Alejo Carpentier’s The Kingdom of This World”
Lee Czerw, “The Tyrant as Witch in Early Modern German Tragedy”


11:30 - 12:45 EST Panel 2: Metamorphoses
Respondent: Supriya Nair

Anthony Revelle, “Where’s the Meat Gone? Empty Skins in the Kitchen & The Sartorial Body of the Werewolf”
Daniela Crespo-Miró, “[Trans]mogrifying the Body [Politic]: Queer Embodiment and Puerto Rican Self-Making in Raquel Salas Rivera’s ‘notas sobre las temporadas/notes on the seasons’”
Jahnabi Barooah Chanchani, “A Talking Parrot’s Tales of Enchantment and Ethics”


12:45 - 14 EST Lunch


14 - 15:15 EST Panel 3: The Poetic
Respondent: Aaron Coleman

Tom Abi Samra, “Circumstantial Poetics: ‘Epigrams’ in the Travelogues of ʿAbd al-Ghanī al-Nābulusī (d. 1143 AH/1731 AD)”
Griffin Shoglow-Rubenstein, “‘The voice / of a drop falling’: N.H. Pritchard and the Temporalization of the Page”
Marianna Hagler, “How to Be Completely Living: Lyn Hejinian’s Gertrude Stein”


15: 30 - 16:45 EST Graduate Student Event (TBD)





May 21, Saturday

10 - 11:15 EST Panel 4: Reception & Representation
Respondent: Will Stroebel

Chandrica Barua, "Anachronistic Attachments: Out of Time Blackness and Brownness in Bridgerton"
Katherine Ponds, “Tragic Enchantment: Rethinking Adrienne Kennedy’s Electra”
Alexander K. Sell, “Re-enchanting the Void: Ontological Slippages between Weird Fiction and Fantasy”


11:30 - 12:45 EST Panel 5: Nostalgias & Utopias
Respondent: Caryl Flinn

Qingyi Zeng, “The Poetics of Elsewhere in Jia Zhangke’s 24 City”
Júlia Irion Martins, “All Trad is Cope: Nostalgic Futures + American Empire in ‘Retvrn’ Twitter”
‘Gbenga Adeoba, “‘Back there Calendar was useless’: Ishion Hutchinson’s Ambivalent Temporalities”


12:45 - 14 EST Lunch


14 - 15:15 EST Panel 6: Imagined Americas
Respondent: Antoine Traisnel

Blythe Lewis, “‘My life is a withered tree’: Empire, Ships, and Deforestation in Georgian Drama”
Ben Larsen, “Disenchanting the Banjo: Temporal Reclamation through Spatial Practice”
Ziyang Li, “The Enchanting Gold that Overflows: Gold Rush, Ecology, and Asian American Identity in C Pam Zhang’s How Much of These Hills is Gold”


15: 30 - 16:45 EST Keynote Lecture

Michael Allan, “Picturing Enchantment: Archival Looks and Cinematic Worlds”



To register:
https://umich.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0lde6rqjsiH9NHt-OeH3YRJWmJ94KSeNkL

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Livestream / Virtual Tue, 10 May 2022 11:06:50 -0400 2022-05-21T10:00:00-04:00 2022-05-21T18:00:00-04:00 Off Campus Location Comparative Literature Livestream / Virtual Poster of the event.
Hopwood Tea (September 8, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794194@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, September 8, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-09-08T16:00:00-04:00 2022-09-08T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
RC Convocation & Open House 2022 (September 9, 2022 4:30pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97802 97802-21795153@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Friday, September 9, 2022 4:30pm
Location: East Quadrangle
Organized By: Residential College

Join the RC community for our official Fall kick-off event! Catherine Badgley, Director of the RC, will give a short welcome to the Class of 2026 followed by food, fun, and exploration.

Come for the short ceremony, stay to learn all about RC classes and majors, meet different student groups, and try your hand at improv or visual art.

ALL RC Students Welcome to Attend!!

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Rally / Mass Meeting Wed, 07 Sep 2022 14:05:11 -0400 2022-09-09T16:30:00-04:00 2022-09-09T20:00:00-04:00 East Quadrangle Residential College Rally / Mass Meeting RC Courtyard
Hopwood Tea (September 15, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794195@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, September 15, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-09-15T16:00:00-04:00 2022-09-15T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (September 22, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794196@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, September 22, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-09-22T16:00:00-04:00 2022-09-22T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (September 29, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794197@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, September 29, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-09-29T16:00:00-04:00 2022-09-29T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (October 6, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794198@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, October 6, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-10-06T16:00:00-04:00 2022-10-06T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (October 13, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794199@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, October 13, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-10-13T16:00:00-04:00 2022-10-13T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (October 20, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794200@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, October 20, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-10-20T16:00:00-04:00 2022-10-20T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (October 27, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794201@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, October 27, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-10-27T16:00:00-04:00 2022-10-27T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (November 3, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794202@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, November 3, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-11-03T16:00:00-04:00 2022-11-03T17:30:00-04:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
1922-2022: A Century of Border Making and Refugeehood (November 9, 2022 12:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/100809 100809-21800376@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Wednesday, November 9, 2022 12:00pm
Location: Off Campus Location
Organized By: Comparative Literature

Please join us for a virtual webinar-roundtable discussion on the special issue of the Journal of Modern Greek Studies (JMGS):

1922-2022: A Century of Border Making and Refugeehood

with JMGS co-editor Johanna Hanink (Brown University)
JMGS guest editors Kristina Gedgaudaitė (University of Amsterdam)
and Will Stroebel (University of Michigan)

authors: Kalliopi Amygdalou, Emine Çiğdem Asrav, Aslı Iğsız, Ioannis N. Grigoriadis, Graham Liddell, Evi Papada, Erol Saglam, Ioannis Tsekouras, Lina Venturas

and facilitator and MGSA Vice President Artemis Leontis (University of Michigan)

Register here: https://umich.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_RaP9tRaAT--SQG_abQkReg

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Livestream / Virtual Fri, 28 Oct 2022 11:18:17 -0400 2022-11-09T12:00:00-05:00 2022-11-09T13:30:00-05:00 Off Campus Location Comparative Literature Livestream / Virtual Event Poster
Hopwood Tea (November 10, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794203@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, November 10, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-11-10T16:00:00-05:00 2022-11-10T17:30:00-05:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (November 17, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794204@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, November 17, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-11-17T16:00:00-05:00 2022-11-17T17:30:00-05:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room
Hopwood Tea (December 1, 2022 4:00pm) https://events.umich.edu/event/97246 97246-21794206@events.umich.edu Event Begins: Thursday, December 1, 2022 4:00pm
Location: Angell Hall
Organized By: Hopwood Awards Program

The Hopwood Program is pleased to announce the return of Hopwood Teas for the 2022-23 academic year. Students, faculty, staff and community members are invited to enjoy tea, coffee, light refreshments and conversation in the Hopwood Room on most Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.

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Other Mon, 22 Aug 2022 15:50:24 -0400 2022-12-01T16:00:00-05:00 2022-12-01T17:30:00-05:00 Angell Hall Hopwood Awards Program Other Wing chair, bookcase, and round table in the Hopwood Room