Staying With The Question

Forum Features: Dirty Dirt_Transdisciplinary Panel

1 h 26 min · 14 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio Forum Features: Dirty Dirt_Transdisciplinary Panel

Descripción

In celebration of the Forum 2025-26 Annual Theme "Dirt," the Arts & Humanities Forum at the University of Oklahoma presents the fourth and final Trandsiciplinary Research Panel exploring "Dirt." This panel is entitled "Dirty Dirt: Thinking with Pollution, Pesticides, Noise, and Gossip." It features the research of OU Faculty Andreea Marculescu (MLLL), Peter Soppelsa (HSTM), Marcela Loría-Salazaar (Meterology), and Paul Feller-Simmons (Music). These panels are designed to gather expertise from across the arts, humanities, social sciences, and STEM. Together our panelists help us consider the many ways in which dirt is used to signal a boundary between the acceptable and unacceptable.

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42 episodios

episode Forum Features: Red Dirt Place-Making_Transdisciplinary Panel artwork

Forum Features: Red Dirt Place-Making_Transdisciplinary Panel

In celebration of the Forum 2025-26 Annual Theme "Dirt," the Arts & Humanities Forum at the University of Oklahoma presents the third of four Transdisciplinary Research Panels. This panel is entitled "Red Dirt Place-Making: Thinking with Community, Home, and Identity." It features the research of OU Faculty Allyson Shortle (Political Science), Rilla Askew (English), Bryan Bloom (Construction Science), Ken Marold (Architecture), and Kalenda Eaton (African and African American Studies). These panels are designed to gather expertise from across the arts, humanities, social sciences, and STEM. Together, our panelists help us consider the many ways in which Dirt (like the Red Dirt of Oklahoma) is tied to ideas about identity and home.

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episode NB&P: Benjamin Alpers - Happy Days artwork

NB&P: Benjamin Alpers - Happy Days

The hosts chat with Dr. Alpers about his recent book _Happy Days: Images of the Pre-Sixties Past in Seventies America (2024, Rutgers University Press).  The 1970's are frequently seen as a watershed period, an era from which sources of 21st-century American culture began to flow. But the 1970's are also seen as a particularly backward-looking time, seen by many critics as morbidly nostalgic for times before the wrenching changes that were associated with the 1960's. _Happy Days_ explores the relationship of the 1970's American culture to the pre-Sixties past through four case studies. Far from mere nostalgia, Americans' diverse reimaginings of the past were a significant part of what made the 1970's so culturally foundational for the decades to come. Interview by Public Humanities Intern Silma Nurfadhilah.

17 de feb de 20261 h 1 min
episode NB&P: Dustin Condren - An Imaginary Cinema artwork

NB&P: Dustin Condren - An Imaginary Cinema

The hosts chat with Dr. Condren about his recent book An Imaginary Cinema: Sergei Eisenstein and the Unrealized Film (2024, Cornell University Press).  Eisenstein directed some of the twentieth century's most important films, from the early classic of montage, Battleship Potemkin, to his late masterpiece, Ivan the Terrible. Alongside these, however, the Soviet filmmaker also toiled over a compelling array of unrealized projects, from ideas that never grew beyond complex, passionate notebook scrawls and sketches to productions that were mounted and shot to some degree of completion without ever being finished. Working from the archival remnants of several of the director's most fascinating unrealized projects, Dr. Condren's book reveals new aspects of Eisenstein's genius, showing the filmmaker in a constant state of process, open to working toward impossible and sometimes utopian ends, and committed to the pursuit of creative and theoretical discovery. Interview by Public Humanities intern Logan Pizzeck.

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