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UNC Foreign Language & Area Studies Fellowships Information Session

September 3, 2019

UNC Foreign Language & Area Studies Fellowships Information Session

Date: October 30, 2019
Time: 12:00pm _ 1:00pm
Address: UNC Law School, 160 Ridge Road, Room 4082

Attend one of the six information sessions offered this fall regarding the Scholarships for Language Study!

What is FLAS?
Foreign Language & Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowships support students taking less commonly taught language and area studies coursework. This program provides both academic year and summer fellowships to graduate and undergraduate students at the intermediate level and above.

The goals of the program include:

to assist in the development of knowledge, resources, and trained personnel for modern foreign language and area/international studies;

to stimulate the attainment of foreign language acquisition and fluency; and

to develop a pool of international experts to meet national needs.

FLAS Fellowships are possible because of grants provided from the U.S. Department of Education to the UNC area and global studies centers. Students must submit through the FLAS@UNC online application which is used by all Title VI FLAS granting Centers.

Find out more information here https://areastudies.unc.edu/flasunc/

UNC Foreign Language & Area Studies Fellowships Information Session

September 3, 2019

UNC Foreign Language & Area Studies Fellowships Information Session

Date: October 22, 2019
Time: 12:30 – 1:30
Address: Fed Ex Global Education Center, Room 3009, 301 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill, NC

Attend one of the six information sessions offered this fall regarding the Scholarships for Language Study!

What is FLAS?
Foreign Language & Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowships support students taking less commonly taught language and area studies coursework. This program provides both academic year and summer fellowships to graduate and undergraduate students at the intermediate level and above.

The goals of the program include:

to assist in the development of knowledge, resources, and trained personnel for modern foreign language and area/international studies;

to stimulate the attainment of foreign language acquisition and fluency; and

to develop a pool of international experts to meet national needs.

FLAS Fellowships are possible because of grants provided from the U.S. Department of Education to the UNC area and global studies centers. Students must submit through the FLAS@UNC online application which is used by all Title VI FLAS granting Centers.

Find out more information here https://areastudies.unc.edu/flasunc/

Adam Matthews Digital Database Event

August 29, 2019

Demonstration on Adam Matthew databases

Date: September 12, 2019
Time: 2:00PM
Address: Davis Library 214 A & B

Join us on Thursday September 12th at 2:00 PM in Davis Library 214 A&B for a demonstration of several recently-acquired Adam Matthew databases. A representative from Adam Matthew Digital Ltd. will be demonstrating our new Area Studies-focused databases including:

Apartheid South Africa: 19498-1980
China, America and the Pacific- Trade and Cultural Exchange
China: Culture and Society
Confidential Print: Latin America, 1833-1969
Foreign Office Files for the Middle East: 1971-1981
Global Commodities: Trade, Exploration and Cultural Exchange
India, Raj and Empire
Meiji Japan (The Edward Sylvester Morse Collection from the Peabody Essex Museum)
Travel Writing, Spectacle and World History
The Grand Tour
London Low Life
Eighteenth Century Journals I-V
Victorian Popular Culture: Sections I-IV
Medieval Family Life
Popular Culture in Britain and America, 1950-1975
British History; Cultural Studies
British History, Government Information

Why Central American Women Fleeing Violence Seek Asylum

August 20, 2019

Lynn Stephen: Why Central American Women Fleeing Violence Seek Asylum

Date: October 14, 2019
Time: 6:00pm
Address: Fed Ex Global Education Center, Room 1005, 301 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill, NC

The George and Ann Platt Distinguished Lecture presents Lynn Stephen. Dr. Stephen is the Philip H. Knight Chair and Distinguished Professor of Arts and Sciences, a Professor of Anthropology, and a participating faculty member in Ethnic Studies, Latin American Studies, and Women’s and Gender Studies. She founded the Center for Latino/a and Latin American Studies (CLLAS, http://cllas.uoregon.edu/) and served as director for 9 years (2007-2016). She served as President Elect and President of the 12,000 member Latin American Studies Association from 2017-2019.

Her scholarly work centers on the impact of globalization, migration, nationalism and the politics of culture on indigenous communities in the Americas. She engages political-economy, ethnohistory, gender analysis, and ethnography to create a hemispheric lens on major challenges faced by indigenous peoples (out-migration, tourism, economic development, and low-intensity war) and their creative responses to these challenges. Her work engages the history of Latino communities spread across multiple borders through her concept of transborder communities and migrations. She has a strong commitment to collaborative research projects that produce findings accessible to the wider public and her work includes films such as Sad Happiness: Cinthya’s Transborder Journey (https://vimeo.com/154235511) and websites (see http://faceofoaxaca.uoregon.edu/introduction/) as well as scholarly publications. She recently finished a book titled Stories that Make History: Remembering Mexico through Elena Poniatowska’s Crónicas, that will be published by Duke University Press. With co-editor Shannon Speed, she is completing an edited book provisionally titled, Heightened States of (In)justice: Indigenous Women Seeking Gendered Justice,” to be published by University of Arizona Press.

Her current collaborative research explores the structural opportunities and challenges that facilitate and impede indigenous women’s access to gendered justice in Guatemala and the U.S. She explores this question through comparative research on two routes to gendered justice that some indigenous Guatemalan women have used: specialized courts for Crimes of Femicide and other Forms of Violence Against Women in Guatemala and gender-based asylum in U.S. immigration courts. Fieldwork is ongoing in several locations in Guatemala as well as in the states of Oregon and Washington in the U.S. Stephen has authored or edited 14 books, three special journal issues and over 80 scholarly articles. She also works actively as a pro-bono expert witness, primarily for indigenous women and men seeking asylum to escape violence in Mexico and Central America. She has served as an expert witness on more than 80 asylum cases or the past six years.

When Mines are Like Women and Men are Like Mercury: Riddling Human-Environmental Relations

August 20, 2019

When Mines are Like Women and Men are Like Mercury: Riddling Human-Environmental Relations

Date: September 23, 2019
Time: 3:35-5:00pm
Address: Alumni Building, Room 308

Ruth Goldstein is an Assistant Professor of Global and International Studies at the University of California, Irvine. Her research interests are in environmental, medical, and feminist anthropology. Her current book project, Life in Traffic: Women, Plants, and Gold Along the Interoceanic Highway, examines the socio-environmental consequences of transnational infrastructure projects and climate change along Latin America’s recently-constructed thoroughfare, La Interoceánica, with a particular focus on intersections of race, indigeneity, cis and trans women’s health, and “earth” rights in Brazil, Peru, and Bolivia. Her subsequent research project examines and contests the racialized violence propagated by elemental mercury, the toxic and highly mobile global pollutant that is the key instrument of artisanal gold mining and a main contaminant of ocean-life. She interrogates how international efforts to ban the heavy metal have framed migrant labor populations from the Amazon to the Arctic, often indigenous, as socially, mentally, and physically contaminated.

Latin America and the US in the 21st Century Seminar

August 20, 2019

Phillip Brenner: A Policy of Ill Repute: The Monroe Doctrine in the Trump Era

Date: November 18, 2019
Time: 6:00pm
Address: Fed Ex Global Education Center, Room 1005, 301 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill, NC

The Latin American and the United States in the 21st Century Lecture Series presents Dr. Philip Brenner. Dr Brenner is Professor at the School of International Service at American University. He has published widely on U.S./Cuba relations, U.S./Latin American relations, contemporary U.S. foreign policy, and the Cuban Missile Crisis. His most recent book is Cuba Libre: A 500-Year Quest for Independence, co-authored with Peter Eisner [Rowman and Littlefield].

Fidel Castro and the Problem of Knowledge: Can we Comprehend Him?

August 20, 2019

Jonathan Hansen: Fidel Castro and the Problem of Knowledge

Date: September 9, 2019
Time: 6:00pm
Address: Fed Ex Global Education Center, Room 1005, 301 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill, NC

Jonathan Hansen is Senior Lecturer on Social Studies and Faculty Associate, David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, at Harvard University. An intellectual historian, he is author of The Lost Promise of Patriotism: Debating American Identity, 1890-1920 (Chicago, 2003) and Guantanamo: An American History (Hill and Wang, 2011), along with articles, opeds, and book reviews on U.S. imperialism, nationalism, cosmopolitanism, and race and ethnicity. He recently published a biography of Fidel Castro (YOUNG CASTRO, Simon & Schuster). In recent years, Hansen has taught Social Studies 10 (Introduction to Social Studies), a junior tutorial on “Justice and Reconciliation after Mass Violence,” a freshman seminar on PTSD in American history, and (with Robert Mnookin) Harvard Law School seminars on Reconciliation with Cuba and Intractable Conflicts.

ISA Faculty Lecture Series

May 14, 2019

ISA Faculty Lecture Series: Petal Samuel: ‘The Loudest Place on Earth’: Caribbean Soundscapes, Antiblackness, and Right to Quiet Discourse

Date: September 30, 2019
Time: 6:00pm
Address: Fed Ex Global Education Center, Room 1005, 301 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill, NC

The ISA Faculty Lecture Series presents Petal Samuel. Dr. Samuel is Assistant Professor in the Department of Africa, African-American and Diasporas Studies at UNC. She specializes in twentieth-century Afro-Caribbean literature and Caribbean anticolonial thought, politics, and aesthetics. Samuel’s current project examines how the management of the soundscape—through noise abatement laws and public discourses condemning noise—has served as a crucial avenue of racial and colonial governance in both the pre- and post-colonial Caribbean and throughout the Caribbean diaspora. The manuscript highlights the work of Afro-Caribbean women writers who embrace forms of “noisemaking” against the grain of these laws and public discourses, reclaiming them as subversive grammars that are integral to decolonization. From 2016-18, Samuel held a position as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies at the University of Virginia. Her work is published in Anthurium, the Journal of West Indian Literature, The Black Scholar, and small axe salon.

NC Latin American Film Festival

April 12, 2019

NC Latin American Film Festival : Time Machines | Maquinas del tiempo

Date: November 3, 2019 – November 3, 2019
Time: 7:00pm
Address: Various locations

The NC Latin American Film Festival celebrates the power and artistry of Latin America’s film and audiovisual production. Its mission is to provide a space in North Carolina for Latin American images, sounds, and stories to reach a wider audience. The Festival was founded in 1986, by Sharon Mújica. Since 2008 the festival has been directed by Miguel Rojas-Sotelo sharing both classics and new releases from different genres of a rich and prolific Latin American cinema tradition. The Festival invites filmmakers from many of the 26 countries of the region, it has shown films in 13 languages and has become a bridge between universities and cultural centers in the region. In response to the demographic changes in North Carolina, the Festival has screened films on issues such as migration, globalization, and new political landscapes in the Americas.

View the Latin American Film Festival Trailer here: https://youtu.be/gmrn6oyfJig

View the program schedule here: https://jhfc.duke.edu/latinamericauncduke/2019-nc-latin-american-film-festival/

LTAM Major Orientation

April 12, 2019

LTAM Major Orientation

Date: September 18, 2019
Time: 5:30pm
Address: Fed Ex Global Education Center, Room 4003, 301 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill