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  1. After the Darkness? Holocaust Survivors’ Emotional, Psychological and Social Journeys in the Early Postwar Period

    none Emerging from the horror and ruins of the Holocaust, survivors were confronted with many challenges, both physical and psychological. The loss of their loved ones, the destruction of their world, and prolonged exposure to violence and suffering would ...

  2. J'ai Deux Amours: A Josephine Baker Symposium

    none Actress, artist, and activist, Josephine Baker was a whole revolution unto herself, showing us new ways of being in the world. This symposium celebrates her many avatars and the artists who have been inspired by her life and keep her legacy alive. Ov ...

  3. Discourse on the Plague (1347-1600):

    Related links Center for Media, Communication and Global Change Université Côte d’Azur Prof Brenton Hobart Download more information https://www.aup.edu/sites/default/files/widget-download/file/PROGRAMME_DISCOURS_SUR_LA_PESTE_VF.pdf Discourse on the Plagu ...

  4. Between Becomings: Narration and International Law

    none Rashmi Dharia, in conversation with Sneharika Roy – ‘Between Becomings: Narration and International Law’. What is at stake in telling stories in the work of international law? How can thinking like a literature scholar help? This talk explores those ...

  5. Shaping Degas’s Dancers, on Stage, in Wax, in the Press

    none Andrea Christmas and Liliane Erhart, in conversation with Cary Hollinshead-Strick– ‘Shaping Degas’s Dancers, on Stage, in Wax, in the Press’.  The nineteenth century saw a progressive feminization of the ballet dancer and masculinization of the imagi ...

  6. Queering the Quai: Paris’ Magic City

    none Patrick Preston, in conversation with Robert Payne,  ‘Queering the Quai: Paris’s Magic City.' There were drag balls at the Magic City, a pleasure space on the Quai d’Orsay and the Rue de l’Université (right near where AUP is now), from 1900-1934 ...

  7. Poisoned bread, the CIA, and the psychedelic humanities

    none Russell Williams, in conversation with Elizabeth Kinne, ‘Poisoned bread, the CIA, and the psychedelic humanities’.  History is weird. Did the CIA lace bread with LSD, and what happens when contemporary novelist Sophie Macintosh writes about it? Does ...

  8. Classical Chinese Philosophy as Philosophy Through Ideograms – A Book Launch with Dr. Yu-Jung Sun

    none Chinese philosophy is commonly perceived by Western readers as either spiritual contemplation or a way of life, hence is linked more to culture than a philosophical tradition. In Introduction à la philosophie chinoise: penser en idéogrammes, Yu-Jung ...

  9. Cabaret and Collaboration: A Symposium Honoring the Rich Life of Josephine Baker

    none A roaring brass section, limbs gliding effortlessly across the stage to the beat, shining costumes, or sometimes lack thereof, capturing the audience’s regard-- this was cabaret in the 20’s and the backdrop for the performances of one of the most mem ...

  10. Rory Brennan Poetry Reading

    none Image https://www.aup.edu/sites/default/files/images/widget-assets/image/Rory%20Brennan.png 0 Rory Brennan has published half a dozen collections of poetry and numerous reviews and articles. His work has appeared in The Irish Times, The Times Literar ...

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