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SUMMARY:ONLINE: Deep Dish Dialogues with Chitra Saravanan
DESCRIPTION:Join us remotely for the next episode of Deep Dish Dialogues. This month features Chitra Saravanan of Krisha Indian Cooking School and Katherine Eckert\, Arrell Scholar and Ph.D. Candidate at the University of Guelph. Chitra is the owner and instructor at Krisha Indian School and she will show us how to make peas pulao and coconut chickpea curry. Our discussion will revolve around nutrition and how culture and cooking education impacts acceptance of a plant-based diet. \nThis event will be broadcast live from the Anita Stewart Memorial Food Laboratory at the University of Guelph. Register now and you will receive the link to watch the day before the event. Register online. \nDeep Dish Dialogues is a monthly live web series designed to showcase chefs and food experts diving into impactful subjects. The series is brought to you by the University of Guelph’s Arrell Food Institute and the School of Hospitality\, Food and Tourism Management at the Gordon S. Lang School of Business and Economics. \nView previous episodes of Deep Dish Dialogues.
URL:https://guides.uoguelph.ca/event/online-deep-dish-dialogues-with-chitra-saravanan/
LOCATION:ONLINE\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Homepage,Intranet Events
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SUMMARY:ONLINE: Thinking Spaces - "Why Music Festivals Now? Ellen Waterman and Ajay Heble in Conversation"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces: The Reading Group and Speaker Series is pleased to present “Why Music Festivals Now? Ellen Waterman and Ajay Heble In Conversation.” The event will take place via Zoom. A moderated Q&A will follow the talk. Please note the Thursday day change from our usual Fridays. \nIf you are interested in attending\, please register online. A Zoom link will be sent the day before the event. \nFestival studies has become a vital and growing field of research that draws insights from cultural studies\, music\, sociology\, anthropology\, ecology\, geography and history\, among others. It has arguably emerged as a discipline in its own right. The socio-musicologist Simon Frith pertinently notes that “Festivals seem to attract more academic attention across more disciplines than any other popular music topic.” Drawing on their histories of involvement as festival organizers and researchers\, Ellen Waterman and Ajay Heble will engage one another in conversation about the opportunities and challenges that music festivals can offer to our understanding of how\, where and why we (as artists\, academics and arts presenters) do our work. In light of recent international crises – the COVID-19 pandemic\, protests against racialized violence\, ecological degradations spurred by climate change\, sustained threats to democratic governance – might festivals play a role in positioning us to respond to the social\, political\, and ecological threats we face\, and to meet the challenges\, and the unknowns\, of the future? Please join us for this session about the role that music festivals can play in our current moment. \nBiographies \nEllen Waterman is professor in the School for Studies in Art and Culture and holds the Helmut Kallmann Chair for Music in Canada at Carleton University. She is both a music scholar and a flutist specializing in creative improvisation. With Gillian Siddall\, she is co-editor of Negotiated Moments: Improvisation\, Sound\, and Subjectivity (Duke). Ellen is founder and director of the Research Centre for Music\, Sound\, and Society in Canada\, dedicated to exploring the complex and diverse roles that music and sonic arts play in shaping Canadian society. Between 2003 and 2019\, Ellen conducted a cross-Canada comparative research project on experimental music festivals. Currently\, she is the primary investigator for two collaborative research-creation projects on themes of accessibility and equity funded by the SSHRC and the Canada Council for the Arts. \nAjay Heble is the founding Director of the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI)\, and professor of English in the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph. His research has covered a full range of topics in the arts and humanities and has resulted in 15 books published or in press\, numerous articles or chapters\, and over 100 graduate students and post-doctoral fellows trained and mentored. He was the founding Artistic Director of the award-winning Guelph Jazz Festival and Colloquium (he served in that capacity for 23 years\, retiring in 2016)\, and is a founding co-editor of the peer-reviewed journal Critical Studies in Improvisation/Études critiques en improvisation. Dr. Heble is the recipient of numerous awards\, including the 2016 SSHRC Impact Award in the Partnership category\, the 2014 Dr. Winegard Exemplary Volunteer Award\, and a Teaching Excellence Award from the Student Senate Caucus at the University of Guelph. In 2019\, he was awarded an honorary degree (Doctor honoris causa) from 17\, Instituto de Estudios Criticos in Mexico. \nAs always\, Thinking Spaces is free and open to all!\nhttp://improvisationinstitute.ca/
URL:https://guides.uoguelph.ca/event/online-thinking-spaces-why-music-festivals-now-ellen-waterman-and-ajay-heble-in-conversation/
LOCATION:ONLINE\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Homepage,Intranet Events
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