Columbia University Professor Hamid Dabashi Speaks at Block
October 13, 2010 by admin
Filed under Asian Classics, Exhibits, Film/Television
Iranian-born Shirin Neshat has played a pivotal role in discourse about identity and gender in her native country and the Islamic faith. Saturday, October 16, 2 pm matinee FREE Shirin Neshat: Films and Discussion Special event at Block Cinema: an afternoon of screenings of artist and filmmaker Shirin Neshat’s best video work, including Turbulent and [...]
Into the Deep: America, Whaling & the World
May 11, 2010 by admin
Filed under Exhibits, Film/Television
Into the Deep: America, Whaling & the World, a new American Experience documentary by Ric Burns, is alive with the all-or-nothing ethos of the nineteenth-century whaleman. Drawing its central narrative arc from two of the most famous man-versus-whale tales of the era—the true, though at the time unthinkable, story of the Essex, a whaleship sunk [...]
Lecture: Egyptomania! James Henry Breasted and the Birth of American Egyptology
Emily Teeter lectured on the father of American Egyptology, James Henry Breasted, on Sunday, May 16, 1 pm at the Chicago Cultural Center (Claudia Cassidy Theater). Ms. Teeter, who holds a PhD in Egyptology from the University of Chicago, is research associate and special exhibits coordinator at the Oriental Institute. She is the author of [...]
Reading Dickens: news of Little Dorrit and A Christmas Carol
December 6, 2009 by admin
Filed under Articles, Books, Exhibits, Film/Television
Hardcover or paperback? Until recently those were our reading options. As with everything else, whether it’s ice cream or television, things are much more complicated now. We are way beyond vanilla and chocolate, way beyond the corner bookstore and neighborhood library and into a multiplicity of forms and platforms and technologies and interfaces that could [...]
The Supper at Emmaus
Caravaggio’s famous painting is in Chicago through January 2010. Two of Jesus’ disciples were walking to Emmaus after the Crucifixion when the resurrected Jesus himself drew near and went with them, but they did not recognise him. At supper that evening in Emmaus ‘… he took bread, and blessed it, and brake and gave to [...]
A Woman’s Wit: Jane Austen’s Life and Legacy
November 13, 2009 by admin
Filed under Exhibits, Jane Austen
This exhibition at the Pierpont Morgan, November 6, 2009 through March 14, 2010, is organized into three sections: Austen’s life and personal letters, her works, and her legacy. The exhibit concludes with a documentary-style film. Manuscripts on display include: personal letters from Austen to her sister, Cassandra; the only complete surviving manuscript of a Jane [...]

