- LocationMemorial Student Center
- DescriptionFor service information visit transport.tamu.edu/busroutes (http://transport.tamu.edu/busroutes)
- Websitehttps://calendar.tamu.edu/live/events/319920-transit-fall-service
- CategoriesGeneral Interest
More from Upcoming Events
- Oct 294:00 PMColloquium Series: Tanner Ogle & Kim KattariPresenters:Tanner Ogle, Ph.D. Candidate | History"Re-Forming Rebels: Bute, Wilkes, and theScottishHighlands in Anti-Jacobite Conspiracy(1759-1765)"Kim Kattari, Associate Professor | Performance, Visualization & Fine Arts "Drone-Based Music, Transformative Experiences, and Activism" Abstracts:OgleImperial historians have oftendiscounted conspiracies ofScots in the imperial government between the 1760s and 1770sas mere polemicor as ethnic prejudice. In analyzing thePatriotMovement fostered by John Wilkes, Inot only contendthat these fears merit seriousconsideration, butargue that this movement's'Scotophobia'would be better understood as anti-Jacobitismgrounded in living memory.Revealing importantperceptionsabout Scottish imperial officials,Wilkitepropagandacentered not on Scotland, but on Highlanders who were blamed by both Scots andtheEnglish for theJacobite Rebellion of 1745.Thisresearchnot only contributes to scholarship on the origins of the American Revolution,itargues that the Jacobite Rising was a formative moment for the BritishEmpire, andrevealsanimportantstrain of 'highlandization'.Kattari I settled onto the floor as the first notes of the Drone Not Drones event wafted to my ears from the strike of a gamelan gong. From tambura to synthesizer, drum to accordion, Bulgarian chorus to powwow song, a musical drone was sustained for 28 continuous hours over the course of more than 45 performing groups. Drawing on my ethnographic research, I'll consider how the long-form event facilitated transformative experiences that allowed participants to reflect on the destruction caused by military drones and imagine a world at peace. This presentation offers new ways of thinking about drone-based music as a vehicle for exploring dystopia and utopia, a sonic medium for personal healing, and a catalyst for activist engagement. Chair: Juan Alonzo Please note that this is not a lecture, and thus, is not suited for class attendance. The Colloquium Series is intended to provide the presenter with a forum to discuss their research and receive feedback from colleagues and peers.
- Oct 294:00 PMUnlocking LinkedIn's Hidden PowerLearn how to make your LinkedIn profile more effective and how to use LinkedIn as a research, networking, and job finding tool. Insightful course for all skill levels from new user to expert.
- Oct 30All dayPattern RecognitionThe concept of pattern in the arts provides artists with tools that can limit creativity or suggest new avenues for exploration. They can offer a maker innovative options to explore with their accustomed materials and techniques; at times present a designer a means of control; advance a range of new ornaments and motifs to work with; and impart a new understanding of the relation between functional and decorative form. This exhibition will look at the impact of pattern in the arts using the University Art Galleries collections.
- Oct 30All dayTransit Fall ServiceFor service information visit transport.tamu.edu/busroutes (http://transport.tamu.edu/busroutes)
- Oct 304:00 PMFinding a Job/InternshipEffectively find job & internship postings using HireAggies, LinkedIn, and CareerShift!
- Oct 31All dayPattern RecognitionThe concept of pattern in the arts provides artists with tools that can limit creativity or suggest new avenues for exploration. They can offer a maker innovative options to explore with their accustomed materials and techniques; at times present a designer a means of control; advance a range of new ornaments and motifs to work with; and impart a new understanding of the relation between functional and decorative form. This exhibition will look at the impact of pattern in the arts using the University Art Galleries collections.