Update (2/27/24): The YAWP Spring Break Camp has been canceled.
A component of the Central Arizona Writing Project, YAWP (Young Adult Writing Program) is designed to offer young writers a non-evaluative environment in which to explore the power of writing.
More information: https://english.asu.edu/yawp
The Arizona Chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages Spring 2024 Conference (https://aatseel.arizona.edu/) featuring:
Keynote Address @ 10:00 AM
"Stefania Turkevych: The Lost History of Ukraine's First Female Composer"
By Erica Glenn, Assistant Professor, Culture, Language & Performing Arts, BYU-Hawai'i, and an ASU alum.
A research and lecture series, A. Knight at the Phoenix Public Library celebrates the contributions of book collector, businessman and civic leader Alfred Knight to the Phoenix community.
A research and lecture series, A. Knight at the Phoenix Public Library celebrates the contributions of book collector, businessman, and civic leader Alfred Knight to the Phoenix community.
The Arizona Women's Collaborative 6th Annual Concert of new works has been inspired by "Community and Unity." Our teams of creatives have asked themselves what makes up a community? How does community shape our sense of self? Who makes up the communities we belong to? And how do we unify communities which seem so distant?
Join us for an encore presentation of The Craft Advantage and the preview of Super-Architect: The Future of Architecture that will be launched in late 2024.
Dr. Jake Aronoff is a Postdoctoral Research Scholar at Arizona State University.
Jake is a human biologist studying the biological pathways linking environmental exposures to health. He completed his PhD in Biological Anthropology at Northwestern University in 2022, where he studied the relationship between social inequality and immune function, including inflammation and immune aging.
How does the term "creaturely" change our understanding of humans and nonhumans? This is a coffee conversation open to all. We will talk with visiting professor Alexander Regier and SILC professor Natalie Lozinki-Veach about their work on the creaturely. This is the second in an ongoing Let's Talk about Animals series.
Refreshments will be provided.
This talk addresses the puzzling circumstance that although sport is ubiquitous in daily life, and widely covered in cultural studies, media studies, sociology, history and sometimes philosophy, there are next to no studies of sports writing. I will suggest that there is a particular formal resistance to sports writing. The explosion of scholarly work around the issue of sports as one of the most visible forms in which pressing contemporary issues, such as race, gender, and disability, are discussed highlights the timeliness of this topic, especially for scholars of the overl