Attend lectures, performances, and more!
January 18 – February 15, 7:30 PM |, Kane Hall
The medieval period has always occupied a paradoxical position in our cultural memory. An age of fantasy unimaginably distant from historical reality, it is also an era onto which writers and artists鈥攁nd now moviemakers and gamers鈥攈ave long projected their fears and desires. Why do cultures remake certain figures from the past鈥攂ut not others–in their own image?
Join Professor Emerita Robin Stacey for this five-lecture series where she looks at the present鈥檚 relationship with the past through the lens of the making and remaking of important historical figures鈥攕ome real, some fictional, and some the creatures of myth.
Free |
New Exhibition: , Henry Art Gallery
February 3, 7 – 9 pm |
Thick as Mud explores how mud animates relationships between people and place, with works by an international roster of artists. Across multiple geographies and a range of aesthetic approaches鈥攆rom figurative clay sculpture to audio recordings of the swamp鈥攖hese artists engage mud as a material or subject that shapes personal and collective histories, memory, and imagination.
Free |
February 8, 5:30 PM | , Communication 120

This talk considers how theatre鈥攍ike television and photography鈥攚as vital to the cultural and political fronts of the Civil Rights Movement. It explores how black artists and activists used theatre to stage a radical challenge to a violent racial project that I call black patience鈥攁 project that has historically delayed black freedom as a means of reinforcing anti-blackness and white supremacy. Mounting plays like Samuel Beckett鈥檚 Waiting for Godot and Lorraine Hansberry鈥檚 A Raisin in the Sun, these cultural workers used theatre to demand 鈥渇reedom now.鈥 In exploring theatre鈥檚 intervention into the violent cultures of black patience, this talk foregrounds the centrality of race to theories of ephemerality and disappearance in performance studies scholarship.
Free |
February 9 – 11, 8 PM | ,聽Meany Hall

Driven by the artistic vision of mother-daughters Ranee Ramaswamy, Aparna Ramaswamy (Artistic Directors) and Ashwini Ramaswamy (Choreographic Associate), Ragamala Dance Company is committed to the idea that while history is time bound, the stories we share are timeless. Rooted in the South Indian dance form of Bharatanatyam, Ragamala’s work is expansive 鈥 extending beyond the stage to embody their immigrant experiences and show a kindred relationship between ancient and contemporary within today鈥檚 world.
$48 tickets |
February 9, 6 PM | , Nordic Museum

The ever-popular Scand30 series returns with a twist! During the month of sweethearts and heartaches, join Olivia Gunn, Associate Professor in the Department of Scandinavian Studies, as she explores the practicalities of pairing off in modern Norway.
Co-presented with the聽91爆料’s Department of Scandinavian Studies, this latest iteration of our popular Scand30 series聽uses one object in the Museum’s collection as a point of departure for the speaker’s topic. These short, snappy talks are delivered by 91爆料 faculty and reflect current research. A light reception will follow the presentation.
Free |
February 10, 10:45 AM | Online

Gregg Colburn, Assistant Professor of Real Estate, and Emily Levesque, Associate Professor of Astronomy, will welcome NASA Astronaut Josh Cassada, LIVE from the International Space Station.
The highlight of this Friday in Space will be a 20-minute downlink with astronaut Cassada, currently stationed on the ISS. A downlink affords participants on Earth to see video and hear audio from the ISS, while the astronaut will have audio only from Earth鈥檚 side of the conversation. During the downlink, 91爆料 students, moderated by Prof. Colburn, will have the chance to ask questions directly of astronaut Cassada.
Free |
February 10, 4 PM |,听Communication 206

Celebrate the launch of Going Public, a podcast dedicated to exploring public scholarship and publicly-engaged teaching in the humanities. From 2015-2022, two successive Andrew W. Mellon Foundation funded grant initiatives under the name Reimagining the Humanities PhD and Reaching New Publics supported public scholars at the 91爆料. The Going Public podcast showcases the public-facing graduate seminars and doctoral student projects made possible by this generous support.
At this special event, you鈥檒l be able to independently listen to clips of the podcast and explore the Reimagining the PhD digital archive of graduate seminar syllabi and doctoral student projects. You鈥檒l have a chance to learn more about public-facing scholarship and teaching at the 91爆料 from many people who have been involved in the Reimagining the Humanities PhD program and talk with podcast host and co-producer Annie Dwyer about her vision for the Going Public project.
Free |
Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Lauren Zondag (zondagld@uw.edu).