Faculty Lecture Series
The Faculty Lecture Series, sponsored by the Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences, will present five talks in the fall 2008 semester centered around the college’s 2008–2009 academic theme of “Life and Death.” These lectures are free to the public.
The Faculty Lecture Series draws from the knowledge and expertise of more than 100 full-time faculty members within the Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences. The series explores the college faculty’s diverse areas of interest in the arts, humanities, social sciences, and physical sciences. In addition to mentoring students in independent research projects, guiding study-abroad experiences, delivering campus lectures that share their passion for education and research, and participating in the development of their fields through publications and involvement in their disciplines’ global communities, faculty members of the Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences support the college mission by sharing their experiences with students through this insightful series.
Fall 2008 Semester Schedule
“Posing Off”: Performance and Body Language on the Jamaican StageAndrea Shaw, Ph.D., assistant professorDivision of Humanities Tuesday, November 11, 2008, 12:00–1:00 p.m. in the Parker Building, room 240 This lecture will primarily explore reggae dancehall album covers and the seductive yet dismissive ways in which bodies on these albums pose for the camera while concurrently seeming to ignore it. These resistive poses seem particularly prevalent when album images are set in an approximation of a dancehall. What accounts for this intrigue with the camera, as well as an apparent repulsion toward it?
The Life and Death of Species: The Sirenians as a Case StudyEd Keith, Ph.D., associate professorDivision of Math, Science, and Technology Tuesday, December 2, 2008, 12:00–1:00 p.m. in the Parker Building, room 241 There are only five extant species in the mammalian order Sirenia. All of them are in danger of extinction, primarily from anthropogenic threats. This lecture will review the biology and natural history of these unique animals, discuss the variety of risks they face, and summarize the efforts to protect and conserve them. The focus will be on the ecological roles of manatees and dugongs and the probable ecosystem consequences of their demise. The philosophical rationale for protecting endangered species will also be addressed. Winter 2009 Semester Schedule Stress KillsJaime Tartar, Ph.D., assistant professor
Fiends and Murderers: Edgar Allan Poe's Influence on Death as Depicted in American MediaChristine Jackson, Ph.D., professor
Euthanasia and the Law: Protecting the Right to Life or Violating the Right to Death with Dignity?Jessica Garcia-Brown, Ph.D., assistant professor
Musical Sketches of Divine Life: A Spiritual Gaze at the Incarnation and Birth of Christ by Olivier MessiaenJennifer Donelson, D.M.A., assistant professor Can music speak about non-musical things? Can music be theological? French composer Olivier Messiaen's work for piano, Vingt Regards sur l'Enfant-Jésus, provides not only a beautiful sonic sketch, but also one composer's answers to these questions. This lecture will explore various pieces in the cycle through performance and discussion.
Indian Classical Dance: A Reflection of Indian Living Madhavi Menon, assistant professor
The Long Reach of Famine: Sex Ratios, Mating Dynamics, and Sex-Biased Parental Investment Glenn Scheyd, Ph.D., assistant professor
Life and Death in Post-Invasion IraqTim Dixon, J.D., associate professor This lecture will focus on the lives and deaths of the Iraqi people––the threats to life and limb as well as the everyday trials of existence in a war zone where basic services have been devastated. This lecture will include a discussion of the plight of the Iraqi refugees, the war losses of the Coalition forces, and the life they face when they return from the war zone, as well as the conditions of others, including UN representatives, NGO personnel, journalists, and volunteer groups.
Irdische Leben/Himmlische Leben: Life and Death in the Music of Gustav MahlerMark Cavanaugh, Ph.D., associate professor The existential symphonies of Gustav Mahler (1860-1911) explore his deepest concerns with his own mortality and the
meaning of life. Late in life, Mahler consulted Sigmund Freud as a result of a severe marital crisis. This lecture
will investigate the relationship of that brief episode of psychoanalysis to the psychology of Mahler's music, and
may feature a brief performance of one of Mahler's songs. |
Events you just missed Human Nature: An Integrative PerspectiveMichael Voltaire, Ph.D., assistant professorDivision of Social and Behavioral Sciences Tuesday, October 21, 2008, 5:10–6:00 p.m. in the Parker Building, room 241 This lecture will explore some of the characteristics we commonly share as human beings—such as ways of thinking, feeling, and acting. Are humans intrinsically good or bad? How do moral beings turn into evil individuals? Is the influence of hereditary factors more powerful than that of environmental influences? Various perspectives from the fields of developmental psychology, evolutionary psychology, sociology, biology, theology, and philosophy will be discussed. The views of many writers, such as Aristotle, Rousseau, Locke, Hobbes, Freud, and Zimbardo, will also be considered. What It’s Like to be Dead: Ancient, Medieval, and Early Modern Philosophers on the Possibility of Disembodied Experience Darren Hibbs, Ph.D., assistant professor Is it possible for a person to survive the biological death of his or her body? If so, what sort of experiences would be possible for a disembodied person? This lecture will provide a concise survey of influential responses to these questions, drawing from ancient, medieval, and early modern philosophical sources. I, Rigoberta Menchu: The Collision of Literature and Politicsas a Life or Death IssueBarbara Brodman, Ph.D., professor The first lecture of the 2008–2009 Faculty Lecture Series will feature an analysis of the controversy surrounding the "autobiography" of Nobel laureate, Rigoberta Menchu, its relationship to life and death issues, and its place in educational curricula. |
Previous Series
2007-2008 Faculty Lecture Series
"Duppy or Gunman?": Articulations of the Supernatural in Caribbean Popular Culture
Andrea Shaw, Ph.D., assistant professor
Are Inappropriate Relationships Inappropriate?
Michael D. Reiter, Ph.D, associate professor
Stacking the Deck: Japan, the International Whaling Commission, and the Resumption of Commercial Whale Harvests
Ed Keith, Ph.D., associate professor
Who’s the Man? Truth and Power in America
Jason E. Piccone, Ph.D., assistant professor
Fuzzy Truth: What We Learn from Observing the World
Evan Haskell, Ph.D., assistant professor
Truth and Politics:
The White Rose: The Courage to Challenge Evil by Stephen R. Levitt, LL.M., associate professor
How to Tell the Truth About the Past: Lessons from Eastern Europe by Alex Cuc, Ph.D., assistant professor
Philosophical Conceptions of Truth
Darren Hibbs, Ph.D., assistant professor
The Soul of the Psychopath
Tom Fagan, Ph.D., associate professor
Truth and Power in Modern China
Tim Dixon, J.D., associate professor
Truth, Power, and the Mexican Cult of Death: The Life and Art of Frida Kahlo
Barbara Brodman, Ph.D., professor
For more information, please contact Jim Doan, Ph.D., professor in the Division of Humanities.

