Articles tagged with: department of classics

  • Environmental humanities to take symposium spotlight

    Image caption: The 2023 Visual Arts (VISA) Walker Cultural Leader Series featuring visiting artist Trudi Lynn Smith invited the Brock community to learn about environmental humanities research-creation methodologies. Organized by Elysia French, Assistant Professor of Visual Arts and presenter at the upcoming Humanities Research Institute Symposium, participants harvested amaranth from the VISA plot at Brock’s community garden to be used as artist materials in a subsequent workshop.

    Wednesday, December 04, 2024 | by 

    The relationship between humanities scholarship, ecology and the environment will be front and centre at an upcoming event hosted by the Faculty of Humanities.

    Taking place Monday, Dec. 9, the biannual Humanities Research Institute (HRI) Symposium will shed light on environmental humanities at the University and beyond, including a new minor open to all Brock students.

    Elizabeth Vlossak, Associate Professor of History and Dean of Research and Graduate Studies, said the symposium will highlight the research endeavours of faculty members and graduate students working in this important field.

    “Presentations will explore methodologies and teaching practices to address complex environmental issues,” she said.

    Daniel Samson, Associate Professor of History, said environmental humanities is a sprawling, transdisciplinary field drawing together established areas such as cultural geography and environmental history alongside newer disciplines like ecocriticism and political ecology.

    “Scientific fields are also interested in human roles in nature and exploring the relationship between nature and culture,” he said.

    At the symposium, Samson will share his perspective on how he teaches environmental humanities through the lens of digital public history and 17th- and 18th-century Acadian and Mi’kmaw stories.

    “My students are examining basic questions of resource extraction and sustainability. We can learn important lessons from historic populations on how to live more sustainably by, for example, learning how they produced food with lower energy use, made use of nutrient-rich saltmarshes or maintained healthy soils with manure,” he said.

    At the same time, Samson said, the costs of sustainability need to be addressed. In the 18th-century colonial world of Isle Saint-Jean, present day Prince Edward Island, putting cattle on those marshlands meant destroying Indigenous people’s food resources such as eels and waterfowl.

    “Environmental research usually poses scientific questions, but those questions are seldom free of human roles and human understandings,” he said.

    Elysia French, Assistant Professor in the Department of Visual Arts (VISA), said environmental humanities has been building bridges between academic disciplines —specifically arts and science— for decades.

    These bridges, French said, have paved the way for collaborative responses to pressing environmental and social issues.

    “The interdisciplinary nature of environmental humanities facilitates new and exciting conversations and directs attention, both within and beyond the academy, toward critical environmental happenings shaping our world,” she said.

    At the symposium, French will introduce her ongoing and collaborative project, Ecologies in Practice, which uses creative research methodologies such as arts-based work and podcasting to encourage greater public awareness about environmental issues.

    “This area of knowledge matters as it supports collaboration and alternative methods of research-creation,” she said.

    The symposium runs from 9 a.m. to noon on Dec. 9 in Sankey Chamber and includes the following presentations:

    • “Literary Journalism and Ecocriticism” by Rob Alexander, Associate Professor of English Language and Literature
    • “Find the Lad/y: An Ecofeminist Reads a Roman Garden” by Katharine von Stackelberg, Associate Professor of Classics and Archaeology
    • “Separability and Cyclicity: Decoding the Logic of Temporal Representation through the Clock” by Liao Zixuan, PhD in Interdisciplinary Humanities candidate
    • “Teaching/Doing Environmental Humanities: Mapping People, Animals and Resources on 18th-Century Isle Saint-Jean” by Daniel Samson, Associate Professor of History
    • “A Work-in-Process: Collaborative and Creative Methodologies in the Environmental Humanities” by Elysia French, Assistant Professor of Visual Arts

    The symposium will culminate in a panel discussion addressing the present and future of Environmental Humanities at the University. The Brock and wider community are invited to attend all presentations and the discussion panel with no registration required.

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    Categories: Faculty & Instructors, News, Walker Cultural Leader

  • New year brings Brock Talks back to St. Catharines library

    Visual Arts Associate Professor Donna Szoke will talk about her work when Brock Talks returns to the St. Catharines Public Library Jan. 15. (Image courtesy Donna Szoke; Shot / Counter Shot: Self-portrait as mother. Grimsby Art Gallery Commission, Digital print on Hahnemuhle, Editioned print, 47 x 61 cm. 2018.).


    (From The Brock News, January 9, 2018 | By: Alison Innes)

    Gladiators of Pompeii, the planet’s artistic inspiration and the invisible history of radioactive mice will be highlighted by Brock experts during an upcoming public lecture series.

    Brock Talks returns to the St. Catharines Public Library on Tuesday, Jan. 15. The free series connects scholars in Brock’s Faculty of Humanities with the local community.

    The January talk, “Invisible Animals,” features Associate Professor Donna Szoke, whose work examines the human relationship to animals through prints, videos, art installations and media artwork. Szoke contributed to a Toronto exhibition on Digital Animalities this past November.

    Her work includes a free app mapping nuclear waste at a Niagara Falls, N.Y., storage site, where more than 270,000 mice used in radioactive experiments have been buried. Her most recent piece, Midst, uses video projectors and fog machines to create animations of large animals on a wall of fog to explore issues of encroachment of cities into wild space.

    Szoke will talk about her work as “research-creation” and explore how making art is a form of doing research and creating new knowledge.

    The Second Brock Talks session of the year will take place Feb. 27 and feature Earth Sciences Professor Francine McCarthy. In her presentation, “Scientific Insights from Poets, Painters and Philosophers,” McCarthy will explore research as a creative endeavour and look at how artists interpret and draw inspiration from the natural world.

    The final Brock Talks event this season takes place March 12, when Classics Instructor Nadine Brundrett will speak on “Spectacular Games in Ancient Pompeii.” Brundrett will share how the destruction and preservation of the city of Pompeii in 79 CE by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius offers insight into the daily lives of ancient Romans, including diverse spectacles used to provide entertainment. In addition to gladiatorial combat, bull fighting, boxing, Greek athletics and even pantomime acting were common practice.

    Brock Talks is a collaboration between the Faculty of Humanities and the St. Catharines Public Library. The series connects community members with current Humanities scholarship at Brock.

    All talks are held at 7 p.m. in the Mills Room, Central Library and are free.

    What: Brock Talks, a free public lecture series
    When: Jan. 15, Feb. 27 and March 12
    Where: St. Catharines Public Library, Central Branch, 54 Church St., St. Catharines

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    Categories: Events, Faculty & Instructors, News