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  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Nia Wilson (PERF) – 4/13/2021

    "Producing Sexuality and Cultural Authenticity through Bachata Dance Technique"
    Meeting ID: 919 3362 4221
    Password: Wilson

  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Alexander Crist (PHIL) – 3/23/2021

    "Paul Celan and the Possibilities of Interpretation in Carnal Hermeneutics: Pneuma, Handwerk, and ‘Seelenblind’”
    Meeting ID: 914 3700 4440
    Password: Crist

  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Landon Sadler (ENGL) – 3/9/2021

    "Introducing What’s Queer about Care"
    Meeting ID: 935 6380 3394
    Password: Sadler

  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Nathalie Mendez (POLS) – 4/7/2020

    “Why Do Bureaucrats Work Together? Micro Explanations for Cooperation in the Public Service” Rescheduled to Tuesday, April 7, 2020.  Zoom Meeting information: Meeting ID: 777 318 067 https://tamu.zoom.us/j/777318067 In compliance with recommendations surrounding COVID-19, our Colloquium Series is being moved online for the remainder of the semester. Tuesday, April 7, 2020 Tuesday, March 31, 2020, […]

  • Rescheduled to 3/24/20: Graduate Colloquium Series: Edudzi Sallah (PERF)

    In compliance with recommendations surrounding COVID-19, our Colloquium Series is being moved online for the remainder of the semester. Rescheduled to Tuesday, March 24, 2020. More information about joining via Zoom forthcoming.

  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Damian Robles (HISP) 2/25/20

    “Excavating the Pragmatic Relics of the Early Modern Period: The Vocative Panorama of Insults and Honorifics in Don Quixote (1607-1620)” Tuesday, February 25, 2020, 4-5 p.m. Location: 311 Glasscock Building Damian Robles PhD candidate, Department of Hispanic Studies| 2019-2020 Glasscock Graduate Research Fellow Abstract: Words can shape our understanding of human identities; it is through […]

  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Christina Lake (HIST) 2/11/20

    “If You (Re)Build It, They Will Come: Creating and Remembering Fred Harvey’s Invention of Authentic Native American Experience in the Southwest” Tuesday, February 11, 2020, 4-5 p.m. Location: 311 Glasscock Building Christina Lake PhD candidate, Department of History | 2019-2020 Glasscock Graduate Research Fellow Abstract: This paper examines the conspicuous absence of Native women in […]

  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Seul Lee (ENGL) 1/28/20

    “Militarism and Transnational Adoption: The Obscured Violence in Beneficence of Care and Multiculturalism“ Tuesday, January 28, 2020, 4-5 p.m. Location: 311 Glasscock Building Seul Lee PhD candidate, Department of English | 2019-2020 Glasscock Graduate Research Fellow Abstract: This paper intervenes in the issue of adoption, unsettling assumptions about the “beneficence of care,” and articulating the […]

  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Rachel Turner (TLAC) 10/29/19

    “The Evolving Curriculum: Integration in the Social Studies Across the 20th Century” Tuesday, October 29, 2019, 4-5 p.m. Location: 311 Glasscock Building Rachel Turner PhD candidate, Department of Teaching, Learning and Culture| 2019-2020 Glasscock Graduate Research Fellow Abstract: Integrated curriculum is a buzzword in elementary classrooms yet fails in its promise to bring relevance to […]

  • Graduate Colloquium Series: Michaela Baca (ENGL) 10/15/19

    “Mythmaking, Propaganda, Rolls, and Scrolls: The Material Legacies of Tudor Legitimacy” Tuesday, October 15, 2019, 4-5 p.m. Location: 311 Glasscock Building Michaela Baca PhD candidate, Department of English | 2019-2020 Glasscock Graduate Research Fellow Abstract: The Tudor era is perhaps one of the best-known eras of the English monarchy. This was the period of the […]