Events

« October 06, 2008 - November 05, 2008 »
 
10 / 6
Start: 4:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm
The Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race
Co-sponsored by The Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race and The Center for Ethnomusicology

Monday, Oct. 6, 2008
4PM-6PM
420 Hamilton Hall

In this talk Denilson Lopes discusses the theoretical basis of his current research called Transcultural Landscapes in Contemporary Cinema, establishing a dialogue with the ideas by Silviano Santiago, Néstor García Canclini and Arjun Appadurai. At this talk he also mentions the theoretical efforts of film criticism to address the issues of interculturality and multiculturalism. In exploring this issue, Denilson places Latin American critical theory in relation to authors who have addressed the topic of multiculturalism in film such as Robert Stam, Hamid Naficy, Laura Marks and Andréa Franca.
10 / 7
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10 / 9
Start: 12:15 pm
End: 2:15 pm
On Thursday, Oct. 9, at 12:15 PM, David Novak will give a talk entitled "The Ghost World of Bollywood" in the Heyman Center Common Room (East Campus).

David Novak is a Fellow of the Columbia Society for Fellows in the Humanities, and holds the PhD in ethnomusicology from Columbia University.
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 7:00 pm
“Oyinbo, I go chop your dollar”: Yahoo Boyz, dirty money, and 419 politics in Nigerian popular music
A talk by Christopher Waterman
Dean of the School of the Arts and Architecture, UCLA

Thursday, October 9
5:00 PM
701C Dodge Hall

In Africa as elsewhere, popular music has long been complexly articulated with the struggle to create, texture and defend viable life-spaces under challenging economic circumstances. This talk is a reflection on recent developments in Nigerian popular music, focusing on songs dealing with the 419/internet scammer controversy ("Yahoozee," by Olu Maintain, "No More Yahoozee [The Reply]," by Harri Best Moradiyo, and "Oyinbo, I Go Chop Your Dollar," by Nkem Owoh), and on musicians' reactions to the Central Bank of Nigeria's recent attempt to outlaw the "spraying" of cash at ceremonies.

10 / 10
10 / 11
10 / 12
10 / 13
10 / 14
10 / 15
10 / 16
10 / 17
Start: 8:00 pm
End: 10:00 pm
Dimensions, 
Columbia University's Center for Ethnomusicology &
Barnard College's Center for Research on Women 
Present

The 5th Annual Guria Benefit 
Friday October 17th, 2008 
8pm | Roone Alredge Auditorium 
Lerner Hall, Columbia University

An evening of classical South Asian music and dance. 
Dinner will be served
10 / 18
10 / 19
10 / 20
10 / 21
10 / 22
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10 / 24
10 / 25
10 / 26
10 / 27
10 / 28
10 / 29
Start: 12:00 pm
End: 2:00 pm
The presentation will address social conflict from the perspectives opened by ongoing research projects being carried out in marginalized areas of the city of Rio de Janeiro.
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:30 pm
Brett PyperThe Center for Jazz Studies invites you to join us for the inaugural lecture of the fall 2008 semester of our Louis Armstrong Visiting Professorship program

"You Can't Listen Alone":
On The Sociality of Listening in a Vernacular South African Jazz World

featuring
Brett Pyper
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
 
Introduced by Gwen Ansell
the Louis Armstrong Visiting Professor
at the Center for Jazz Studies, Fall 2008
 
Wednesday, October 29, 2008, 7:30 pm
301 Philosophy Hall
, Columbia University Morningside Campus
10 / 30
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm
The Columbia University Center for Ethnomusicology invites you to attend an event in the series "New Evidence, 1400-1800" (co-organized by Columbia's Interdepartmental Committee on Medieval and Renaissance Studies and the Bard Graduate Center).

Thursday, Oct. 30, 6-8PM, IAB Room 802

Jaime Lara (Yale University): "Aztec Christians: Reluctant Collaborators or Enthusiastic Partners?"

José Pardo Tomás (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Spain):  "Medical Knowledge and Practices in a Creole Society: Texts, Objects and Images from New Spain 1576-1626"

Co-sponsored by the Department of Spanish and Portuguese; the Department of Religion; the Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life; the Institute for Latin American Studies; the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society; and by the Mexican Cultural Institute of New York.

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