Intercultural Literature Citizenship and Public Discourse.
UConn Humanities Institute
Homer Babbidge Library, 4th Floor
369 Fairfield Way, Unit 1234
Storrs, CT, 06269
Maps & Directions
Phone +1 (860) 486-9057
Email: uchi@uconn.edu
Wednesday, October 4th, 2023
12:15 PM - 01:15 PM
Homer Babbidge Library
UCHI Dissertation Scholar David Evans will be giving a talk on “Rediscovering Hunger: The Human Right to Food and US Politics in the 1970s”
with a response by Kathryn Angelica
This event will also be livestreamed.
“Rediscovering Hunger” examines the political struggle surrounding the effort to embed the human right to food into US foreign and domestic policy in the mid-1970s. Following a disastrous world food crisis that lasted from 1973-1974, US citizens and political leaders re-awoke to the ethical problem that hunger presented. The promise of the modernization projects of the 1960s gave way to a reality in which wealthy countries remained well-fed, the global poor starved and suffered. Therefore in 1976, various US Congressional leaders, supported by a broad coalition of religious and secular activists, sought to establish the human right to food in US policy. The effort represented one of the earliest efforts in a wider human rights project that came to dominate US politics by the end of the decade. The episode also illustrated the constraints of effectively achieving human rights, as food producers and market fundamentalists contested the meaning and viability of the human right to food despite its moral universality.
Thursday, October 5th, 2023
All Day
UConn Foundation
A celebration of Millikan’s groundbreaking contributions to philosophy and the 40th anniversary of her seminal book Language, Thought, and Other Biological Categories (LTOBC) bringing together researchers from a variety of disciplines - philosophy, linguistics, psychology, anthropology, and biology - to engage both critically and creatively with Millikan’s work. Registration form is here: https://ecomresearchgroup.com/millikanfest/
Friday, October 6th, 2023
All Day
UConn Foundation
A celebration of Millikan’s groundbreaking contributions to philosophy and the 40th anniversary of her seminal book Language, Thought, and Other Biological Categories (LTOBC) bringing together researchers from a variety of disciplines - philosophy, linguistics, psychology, anthropology, and biology - to engage both critically and creatively with Millikan’s work. Registration form is here: https://ecomresearchgroup.com/millikanfest/
Wednesday, October 11th, 2023
12:15 PM - 01:15 PM
Homer Babbidge Library
Dissertation Research Scholar Geoffrey Hedges-Knyrim gives his fellow’s talk on “Political Power during the Iron Age of the Southern Levant Through the Lens of Agricultural Production.”
with a response by Xu Peng
Contact Information:
MoreWednesday, October 18th, 2023
12:15 PM - 01:15 PM
Homer Babbidge Library
UCHI Fellow Alexander Diener (Geography, University of Kansas) will give a talk on “The Middle of Somewhere: Place Attachment and the Geographies of Being”
with response by Martine Granby (Journalism, UConn).
This event will also be livestreamed.
Place attachment is a burgeoning field of scholarship maturing in theory, method, and application. The phenomenon obviously relates to concepts of residency, including key questions such as: Who moves and why? Who stays and why? Who returns and why? But place attachment also encompasses broader networks of place and geographic contingency, including questions such as: How do place attachments form? Why do people form attachments to some places and not others? How are concepts of home and homeland negotiated within and across varied conditions of mobility? In this talk, Alexander Diener approaches place attachment as an assemblage of materiality, performance, and narration. Rather than being static or deterministic, this model points to people’s varied capacities to make and remake place attachments, and how this shapes everyday routines (e.g. routes to work, shopping, social interactions), major life choices (e.g. places of residence, education, vacations), and identities (e.g. civic, national, religious). Keywords: place attachment, territorialization, environmental psychology, homeland, place identity, place dependency).