Skip to main content

International Film Series and Spanish Film Club

THE INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES / SPANISH FILM CLUB

The Late Night FIlm Series is proud to work with the Department of Hispanic Studies to present the Spanish Film Club Latin American Film Series. With titles from all over Latin America, the Spanish Film Club offers students the chance to watch films that are nearly impossible to procure outside of their native countries. The Spanish Film Club series was made possible with the support of Pragda, the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports of Spain, and SPAIN arts&culture.

"Writing African American Biography: The Case of William Wells Brown, Kentuckian"

 

William Wells Brown, born into slavery in Kentucky, raised on the Missouri frontier on the farm adjacent to Daniel Boone's, and "rented" out in adolescence to a succession of steamboat captains on the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, escaped from his final master at age 19, quickly lifted himself out of illiteracy and innumeracy, and over a forty-year career reinvented himself as an author, public speaker, multimedia performer, civil rights activist, and medical doctor. He became the most prolific, pioneering nineteenth-century African American author.  His publications included the earliest known African American novel, play, travelogue, and history of the Civil War. Internationally known in his own time as a writer and lecturer, he disappeared from general sight with the advent of Jim Crow. Ezra Greenspan’s new comprehensive literary and political biography tells the story of one of the most remarkable Americans of his time and, in the process, with him in the center, retells the story of the life and times of nineteenth-century America.

 

 

Sponsored by UK Department of History, Department of English, African-American and Africana Studies Program

For more information, email Professor Jeremy Popkin of the Department of History at popkin@uky.edu.

Date:
Location:
Auditorium, W.T. Young Library

The Inception of the Solar System

Have you ever wondered how the solar system formed? Why are there rocky planets close to the sun while the giant planets reside farther away? What kinds of environments are suitable for the formation of our sun? In this talk we will investigate the current theories of solar system formation and evolution. We will also see different kinds of planetary systems around stars other than the sun and discuss abnormalities and their possible formation.

The University of Kentucky Department of Physics and Astronomy is pleased to welcome the public to our astronomical observatory. Part of our program of public outreach is a presentation on an interesting topic in astronomy followed by a visit to the observatory. The Kentucky SkyTalk is held on the second Thursday of every month.  A 45 minute program on astronomy will begin at 8:00 PM in Room 155 of the Chemistry-Physics Building. After the presentation, you are invited to view the sky through our 20-inch telescope, weather permitting.

Free parking is available on the top floor of parking structure #2, next to the observatory. With the exception of paid parking, without a valid parking permit, leaving your vehicle somewhere other than next to the observatory will result in a parking citation.

All are welcome and there is no charge. Tell your neighbors. Bring your kids.

A flyer in pdf format and a link to a campus map are available here:  https://pa.as.uky.edu/observatory

Date:
-
Location:
CP155
Event Series:

Biology Seminar "The Evolution of Developmental Diversity: Insights from Emerging Model Systems"

 

Speaker: Dr. Nipam Patel

University of California, Berkeley

http://www.patellab.net/

Host: Melissa Keinath

Sponsored by Department of Biology Ribble Endowment

*Refreshments served at 3:45

Date:
-
Location:
116 T.H. Morgan Bldg.

Civic Engagement on Campus: LEXengaged with Lynn Phillips and Rosie Moosnick

In Fall of 2015, a new initiative to connect campus and community will open its doors. LEXengaged, a Living Learning Community connecting undergraduate students to the city of Lexington, will welcome its first students. Lynn Phillips and Rosie Moosnick, faculty advisors and co-directors of the program, explain LEXengaged and the inspiration behind it. 

This podcast was produced by Cheyenne Hohman.

 

"My Father’s Paradise: How a Jewish Kid from Los Angeles Traveled to Wartime Iraq in Search of Roots, Identity and His Father's Improbable Life Story "

 

In his talk, Sabar will weave the remarkable story of the Kurdish Jews and their dying Aramaic tongue with the moving tale of how a consumate Californai kid came to write a book about his family's past in Iraqi Kurdistan. The book, "My Father's Paradise: A Son's Search for his Jewish Past in Kurdish Iraq," won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography, one of the highest honors in American letters.



Sponsored by the Jewish Studies Program

Date:
Location:
UKAA Auditorium @ WT Young Library
Subscribe to