Biology Department Seminar
"Genomic approaches to the study of sexual selection and male pregnancy"
Texas A&M University
Faculty Hosts: Dr.Craig Sargent
Sponsored by Biology Ribble Endowment
*Refreshments served at 3:45pm
"Genomic approaches to the study of sexual selection and male pregnancy"
Texas A&M University
Faculty Hosts: Dr.Craig Sargent
Sponsored by Biology Ribble Endowment
*Refreshments served at 3:45pm
UT-MD Anderson Cancer Center
Faculty Host: Dr. Ed Rucker
Sponsored by Biology Ribble Endowment
*Refreshments served at 3:45pm
Suffering Bodies, Dance and Transcendence in Caribbean Literature, Jacqueline Couti (University of Kentucky)
In Gisèle Pineau's Macadam Dreams, through the shifting metaphors of the drum and the cyclone, which signify not only sexual crime but also purification and healing, the instable identity of Creole subjectivity emerges. Many characters are in pain. Yet, in the mighty drumbeat of the tambour-ka lurks a power that can make an old and broken woman dance as if her life depended on it. This presentation examines the motif of the dancing body and explores dance as a contemporary site of resistance and healing in traditional and contemporary genres such gwo-ka. Such an approach intends to constitute an archeology of representations of dance and dancers as the expression of creolization and awareness of self in in French and Francophone Caribbean Studies.
Liminality of the Dancing Suffering Body, Gladys M. Francis (Georgia State University)
Liminality of the Dancing Suffering Body is an analysis of painful lived experiences expressed through Caribbean traditional dance performances that present cultural, political and memorial strategies, in addition to interpersonal relations. This presentation focuses on the works of contemporary Black Diasporic filmmakers who challenge traditional gendered spaces and politics while contextualizing the body's states of loss, its displacements, methods of transmission and resistance through innovative representations of the dancing body in pain. "Liminality of the Dancing Suffering Body" introduces the gwo-ka and bigidi dance aesthetic, both explored as a counter-point of history and a Maroon space of (modern) history. It is through the dancing body that I will expose transgressional identities shaping cartographies of pain that distort the perceptions of cultural formations, Creolization and globalization, and problematize notions of self-dependence, self-organization, choice, autonomy, and agency through class, gender, race, and locality.
The American Geophysical Union (AGU) is a nonprofit organization of geophysicists with over 62,000 members from 144 countries. At their most recent meeting last December, 24,000 people presented and discussed the newest interdisciplinary and international research in geophysics, which makes Liz Pillar’s accomplishments all the more impressive.
In a recent publication in the journal Science, the Kentucky Geological Survey examines seismic activity in the New Madrid Seismic Zone.
I am from Lexington, Kentucky and have worked for UK for almost seven years. I have been married three and a half years and my wife and I welcomed our first child into this world in January. I am an avid Cincinnati Reds baseball fan and enjoy watching UK football games.
1. What do you do in your spare time?
In my spare time, I play on an adult baseball team in town. I enjoy writing, exercising, and spending time with family.
2. What is your favorite movie or book?
My favorite movie is O'Brother Where Art Thou? In my opinion, this movie was the most superbly written and acted movie ever devised since the creation of cinema. Gopher, Everett?
3. What is the most interesting place you've been?
The most interesting place I have been has been Chiloteca, Honduras. I went with a team in college that worked with small business owners who had micro loans. We advised them on business practices. It was a humbling experience because of the extreme poverty and scorching heat.
4. What is your favorite food?
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Tracy K. Smith will give the keynote address at the 2014 conference, scheduled for Sept. 12 and 13.
UK Sustainability Coordinator Shane Tedder and Student Programming Coordinator for the Office of Sustainability Mariah Lewis, share some of their thoughts about the exciting new opportunity that Greenhouse can provide for students living on campus.
To celebrate the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year, UK Libraries will be showcasing Chinese art in William T. Young Library.