Julia Mickenberg Interviewed For "Life of the Mind" Podcast
Welcome back, everyone. We hope you had a productive break. We get to start the year off with a treat: at the very beginning of January, The Humanities Media Project released a new episode of its podcast Life of the Mind (developed by UT AMS grad student Duncan Moench), featuring an interview with UT AMS faculty member Julia Mickenberg conducted by UT AMS grad student Caroline Pinkston. You can listen to the podcast here.Congratulations to all involved!
"75 Years of American Studies at UT Austin" Symposium Begins Thursday!
The UT Austin Department of American Studies is proud to present a two-day long symposium to mark the 75th Anniversary of American Studies at UT! The event will comprise two days of speeches and panels featuring faculty, former faculty, current students, and alumni of the graduate program discussing the various ways that they have brought their training in American Studies into the world--as scholars, educators, activists, journalists, artists, and administrators.The event kicks off on Thursday afternoon at 4 P.M. at the Prothro Theatre in the Harry Ransom Center. Dr. Maurie McInnis, the provost and executive vice president of the University of Texas, will present the Keynote Address for the symposium: "The Shadow of Slavery in American Public Life." Dr. Stephen Enniss, Director of the Ransom Center, will open the evening with introductory remarks.The remainder of the panels and speeches will occur throughout the day on Friday, November 4th, from 9 A.M. through 5 P.M. in the Harry Ransom Center. You can find a full schedule of events, as well as detailed descriptions and biographies of each panelist and speaker, here. Stay tuned for more posts about the symposium right here at AMS : ATX, and follow us on Twitter @AmStudies and on facebook. You can also follow live tweeting from the event using the hashtag: #amsatx75.
5 Questions with First-Years: This Week, Gaila Sims
In this second installment of AMS : ATX's 2016 "5 Questions with First-Years" series, doctoral student Gaila Sims answers five variations on the same confounding, existential question: why are you doing this? Sims, a graduate of Oberlin College who has worked as an educator in Austin for the past five years, discusses her time working at Austin's George Washington Carver Museum and Cultural Center, her academic and professional goals, and her interests in African American history, black feminism, museums, and California, among other subjects.
What are your goals for graduate school? What do you see yourself doing after you graduate?
Thursday: Dr. Doug Rossinow on Austin in the 60s
We hope you'll join us this Thursday, October 13th in Painter Hall 3.02 for a talk by Dr. Doug Rossinow, about Austin in the 1960s. Dr. Rossinow's book, The Politics of Authenticity, is commonly taught in UT AMS. We've included an image of the poster and a description of Dr. Rossinow's talk, below.
Austin was a major center of youth protest and dissident culture in the 1960s -- a radical center with a distinctive Texas identity. Civil rights agitation, dissident religion, peace mobilization, leftist radicalism, women's liberation, and a unique underground culture: it all happened here, and most of all at UT. Soon it will be fifty years since the world-shaking year 1968. Looking back with the benefit of a half-century’s perspective, Professor Rossinow will reflect on the significance of the 1960s for today, and on what Austin's Sixties tells us about that era.