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Keynote icon aesthetic5/10/2023 ![]() “Humanities to the Rescue,” is a carefully conceived programming vehicle that shifts concern for the humanities as a collective of disciplines in need of rescue to recognizing that the disciplines within the humanities provide the tools, insights and analysis necessary “to rescue us,” according to David Castillo, HI director and professor in the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures at UB. It includes cabaret performances, exhibits, lectures, masterclasses and concerts through May. “Sounds” is among the events included in the “ Kurt Weill Festival: A Story of Immigration,” a creative partnership that joins the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and UB’s College of Arts Sciences’ Collaboratory in celebration of Weill’s legacy. in 215 Baird Hall on the university’s North Campus. That symposium, organized by HI’s Modernisms Research Workshop, is titled “Sounds: Avant-Garde, Fascism, Modernism” on Monday, April 8, from 8:30 a.m. ![]() Her address, which is free and open to the public, is the first of a two-pronged event schedule that also includes a book signing following her keynote and a symposium next month celebrating composer Kurt Weill. in 147 Diefendorf Hall on the University at Buffalo South Campus to open this year’s installment of “ Humanities to the Rescue,” an ongoing public humanities project sponsored by UB’s Humanities Institute (HI).Ĭrabapple is the HI’s 2018-19 Eileen Silvers Visiting Professor in the Arts and Humanities and her work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the New-York Historical Society. ![]() – Molly Crabapple, an internationally acclaimed author, journalist and artist, who serves as a contributing editor at Vice and whose work has been featured in the New York Times, Vanity Fair, The Paris Review, CNN and The Guardian, will deliver the keynote address on Friday, March 8, at 8 p.m.
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