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- The University of Colorado Boulder Romanticism Collective and the Romantic Bicentennials project will host a symposium on “Resistance in the Spirit of Romanticism” to be held in Boulder, CO, September 6 - 8, 2018.
- The Archives Transformed Advisory Team presents "Archive Transformed: CU Boulder Artist/Scholar Collaborative Residency" at Old Main Theatre, CU Boulder from May 13th to 18th, 2018.
- The Department of Anthropology presents "Objectivity and Trained Judgement: Toward an Ethnography of Experimental Psychology" on Friday, April 20, 2018 at 4:00 P.M. in Hale 230. This distinguished lecture in cultural anthropology is given by Emily Martin, Professor Emerita, New York University.
- The Department of History presents guest lecturer, Dr. Tami Davis Biddle, a historian of 20th Century Warfare. Dr. Biddle’s talk titled, “On the Crest of Fear: The Final Months of World War II” on April 10, 2018, 5-6:30 PM in Hale 270.
- The Department of English, the President’s Fund for the Humanities, and the Center for Western Civilization present "The Symposium on the Undergraduate English Curriculum: New Approaches to English Studies" on March 2, 2018 in the Center for British and Irish Studies, Norlin Library.
- This event is part of a nationwide debate tour with Messrs. Farage and Fox. Other stops on our tour include University of Colorado-Colorado Springs, University of Maryland and Lafayette College (Easton, PA). It is our mission to provide students –
- The Philosophy Department presents “Raw Virtue and Its Refinements: The Ranking of Divine Goods in Plato’s Laws” on Friday January 26, 2018 at 3:15-5:00 P.M. in Hellems 269.
- The CU Mediterranean Studies Group, the Graduate Committee on the Arts and Humanities & The Center for Western Civilization present Prof. Ana Maria Seabra de Almeida Rodrigues (Faculty of Letters, University of Lisbon), “From Treasury to Collection: The Sumptuous Objects of Royal Iberian Women from the 14th to the 16th Centuries,” on Wednesday, 24 January, 4–5:30pm in the Flatirons Room at C4C with Kirk Ambrose (ARTH), Hannah Friedman (ARTH) & Núria Silleras-Fernandez (SPAN) responding
- Kohlmann argues that literature written in the ‘reformist literary mode’ imagines the emerging institutional structures of the welfare state as deeply connected to the fabric of social life rather than as an ensemble of bureaucratic processes located outside it or detached from it.
- Guest Lecture by Dr. Melissa Frazier, Prof. and Assoc. Dean, Sarah Lawrence College, Thursday, Dec. 7, 3:30-4:45 p.m. HLMS 211. All are welcome! Light refreshments will be served. Please contact jillian.porter@colorado.edu with any questions.