Viewing entries in
News

Reunion Through Theater: NAKED SHAKES performs Twelfth Night

Reunion Through Theater: NAKED SHAKES performs Twelfth Night

For Irwin Appel, UCSB theater professor and artistic director of the NAKED SHAKES company, there was no better play to highlight the return of in-person instruction than Shakespeare's famous comedy, Twelfth Night. Approximately 450 people attended four outdoor performances that marked the return of in-person theater this fall after 18 long months of remote performances.

Faculty Diversity: UCSB Wins A First For Arts Within the UC System

Faculty Diversity: UCSB Wins A First For Arts Within the UC System

A team of UC Santa Barbara arts faculty and staff have received a $175,000 grant from the UC Office of the President’s initiative to advance faculty diversity by setting up an arts ‘commons’ that features an artists-in-residence program.It is the first arts initiative in the UC system to receive this diversity grant from UCOP, the office of the UC president, since the grant program began five years ago.


 Media Art and Movement: A UCSB Alum Opens a Museum

Media Art and Movement: A UCSB Alum Opens a Museum

In the midst of a pandemic, UC Santa Barbara alumnus Marco Pinter has opened a new museum in Santa Barbara — the Museum of Sensory and Movement Experiences —which features work from other digital media artists affiliated with the university’s MAT graduate program. Pinter recently sat down for an interview with the HFA to discuss his work and the museum’s creation.

Raab Writing Fellowship Changes Lives

Raab Writing Fellowship Changes Lives

One student wrote powerful poetry about a prison hunger strike. Another explored sado-masochism and non-monogamy as safe spaces for healing. And another looked at the role hair plays in self-image. Whatever the project topic, a UC Santa Barbara writing fellowship funded by Santa Barbara author Diana Raab is changing lives.

 Taming the Titans: How Should We Regulate Big Tech?

Taming the Titans: How Should We Regulate Big Tech?

In a UC Santa Barbara online forum, Taming Titans: How Should We Regulate Big Tech? four legal experts discussed the issue of large tech companies intruding people’s public and private lives with little regulation.

Blending Color and Culture: A Virtual Studio Tour

Blending Color and Culture: A Virtual Studio Tour

In a recent behind the scenes studio tour arranged by UC Santa Barbara’s Art, Design, and Architecture Museum, Los Angeles-based painter Sandy Rodriguez showed attendees her process for producing art from materials of the natural world. In addition, she previewed work that will be on display from January 8, 2022 until December 12, 2023 at the AD&A Museum.

Race in the Literature of the American Dream

Race in the Literature of the American Dream

The American Dream promises idealistic notions of upward mobility and economic prosperity, but is this narrative really accessible for all? In a recent Zoom event hosted by UCSB’s Interdisciplinary Humanities Center, English professor Swati Rana discussed her new book, “Race Characters: Ethnic Literature and the American Dream.” The event was part of the IHC Humanities Decanted series, which highlights faculty members’ new work in an online interview/dialogue format.

A Year of Silver Linings: The UCSB Dance Company On Film

A Year of Silver Linings: The UCSB Dance Company On Film

Due to the COVID 19 pandemic, the UCSB Dance Company had to forego its annual European tour and instead starred in its first documentary, UCSB Dance Company: In Flight and on Film. The film kicks off with a sequence of ten solo performances, each choreographed by the dancers themselves, expressing their feelings about the pandemic, followed by a group piece choreographed by company director Delilah Moseley, and three other films by guest choreographers.

 Borders: Past, Present and Future

Borders: Past, Present and Future

Cecilia Méndez, director of the Latin American and Iberian Studies (LAIS) program at UC Santa Barbara, along with Spanish and Portuguese Professor Juan Pablo Lupi organized the second UCSB Latin American and Iberian Studies graduate student conference on the topic of Borders, Power, and Transgression last month. In an interview, Méndez said understanding the connections between power and transgression of borders is a global concern.

A Journey from Incarceration to Award-Winning Literary Research

A Journey from Incarceration to Award-Winning Literary Research

UC Santa Barbara graduate student Clint Terrell has been awarded a Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship for his work examining themes of redemption in prison literature and narratives. After his own experience with incarceration, Terrell channeled his passion for reading classical literature in prison to obtaining a college education and further exploring narratives of prisoners. In a recent interview, Terrell described how he became inspired to pursue his Ph.D., why he chose prison narratives, and how the Ford Foundation Fellowship will impact his work and its societal reach.

Creating the World: Transdisciplinary Connections in Virtual Space

Creating the World: Transdisciplinary Connections in Virtual Space

After a trial run back in 2017, the Media Arts and Technology (MAT) graduate program at UC Santa Barbara officially established undergraduate courses for the first time this academic year.

The series of courses, titled Mediated Worlds, are led by MAT graduate professor Marcos Novak, a virtual architect and the founder and director of the department’s transLAB research facility, which investigates how technology affects virtual space in art and science.

In a recent virtual interview, Novak discussed the new undergraduate courses and the importance of cross-disciplinary connections to frame knowledge.

Asian Americans: Visibility and Violence

Asian Americans: Visibility and Violence

Asian Americans have made recent gains in the realm of popular culture at the same time as hate crimes are on the rise, Sameer Pandya and Lisa Sun-Hee Park of UCSB’s Asian American Studies Department told an audience. As Asian Americans become more visible, they also become more vulnerable to violence, especially since the COVID-19 outbreak, they said during their talk: What We Talk About When We Talk About Anti-Asian Violence. The discussion was part of the virtual All Gaucho Reunion, which invited both current and former UCSB students to join in communal discourse.

Diving into Nihilism and Terrorism: The Joker

Diving into Nihilism and Terrorism: The Joker

William Chavez, a doctoral candidate in Religious Studies at UC Santa Barbara, has studied exorcism, dark fantasy and science fiction. Currently an Engaging Humanities Graduate Fellow at UCSB, he has been exploring terrorism’s links to nihilism – an absence of morals, values or beliefs - and how both are incorporated into the Joker, a fictional supervillain created in the 1940s for the comic book Batman.

Tales From the Valley:  A Student Author Publishes a Memoir

Tales From the Valley: A Student Author Publishes a Memoir

UCSB Writing and Literature student Via Bleidner has her first book coming out on August 10, 2021. The book is a collection of short stories and personal essays detailing her life growing up in Calabasas. Bleidner recently sat down for an interview to discuss her journey to becoming a published student author.

Diabetes in Rural Black America

Diabetes in Rural Black America

Texas A&M University health and kinesiology professor Idethia S. Harvey gave a lecture to UCSB’s Center for Black Studies Research called “Diabetes is a Struggle.”

In this talk, Harvey said the high rate of Type 2 diabetes among rural black Americans can be traced to “stressors” faced by this community such as poverty, substance abuse issues, and food deserts.

HFA Speaks: An Earth Day Agenda

HFA Speaks: An Earth Day Agenda

Each of us can take meaningful steps to lower our carbon footprint and help the planet, Humanities and Fine Arts faculty members told a UC Santa Barbara audience at HFA Speaks: An Earth Day Agenda. English professor Ken Hiltner and Film and Media Studies professor Alenda Chang shared their vast knowledge and interdisciplinary insights with students to honor Earth Day.

On Algorithms and Criminal Justice

On Algorithms and Criminal Justice

UC Berkeley electrical engineering and computer science professor Hany Farid and founder of Stanford’s Computational Policy Lab Sharad Goel spoke with UCSB students last week about the accuracy, fairness, and limits of the use of artificial intelligence and machine learning in the sphere of criminal justice.

Cinema and Activism: El Norte's Role in Immigration Reform

Cinema and Activism: El Norte's Role in Immigration Reform

UCSB's Carsey-Wolf Center hosted experts from the University of Michigan and the University of Texas, Austin to discuss the groundbreaking 1983 film "El Norte," which was recently restored. They said the film catalyzed immigration reform activism in the United States.