For FULL LIST of Spring Lectures see our poster!
Fall 2009
"The Iranian Political Crisis: Duke and UNC Perspectives"
September 3, 2009, 12:00- 1:30 pm, Rare Book Room, Perkins Library
East Duke Building
Faculty Panel: Mark Emamian (Physics, Duke University), Mohsen Kadivar (Religion, Duke University), Charlie Kurzman (Sociology, UNC-CH), Negar Mottahedeh (Literature, Duke University). This event is cosponsored with the Duke Human Rights Center & SOLIMENA.
Conference: Barefoot across the nation: Maqbool Fida Husain and the idea of India An International Symposium, Duke University, Durham, NC
April 10-11, 2009
This conference will explore the entanglement of the artistic imagination in the cultural politics of risk in our troubled times by considering the oeuvre of Maqbool Fida Husain, arguably modern India’s most iconic and celebrated painter and also possibly that country’s most embattled artist today. Here is an example of his work entitled "Last Supper."
This conference has been funded by the North Carolina Center for South Asian Studies, and the following Duke units:, Visual Studies Initiative, Center for International Studies, Provost's Common Fund, Duke Islamic Studies Center, Arts and Sciences Council, the
Vice Provost for International Affairs, Department of History, John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute, John Hope Franklin Center for International and Interdisciplinary Studies, and the Trent Foundation.
For additional information, contact Sumathi Ramaswamy at sr76@duke.edu
“Security" is a goal that can spark wars and end wars. But too often we don't ask "Whose security?" Feminists from myriad countries pose a deep question for all of us: If we take seriously the sorts of insecurities that women experience in their daily lives, how would we go about re-making "national security policy" and "global security policy?" Looking afresh at the 6-year US-led war in Iraq gives us a chance to explore these urgent questions and craft some useful answers.
Cynthia Enloe (Ph.D. University of California-Berkeley, 1967) is Research Professor, Department of International Development, Community, and Environment and Women's Studies, Clark University (MA). Much of Professor’s Enloe’s work has focused on the struggle for women in developing countries to gain a political voice, and her research on how militaries, governments and corporations shape women’s lives has received international acclaim. She was the 2007 (and first female) recipient of the Susan Strange Award – given to that person judged to have done the most in a given year to challenge conventional wisdom in the international studies community. She is the author of a dozen books as well as numerous edited books and articles. Her most recent works are Maneuvers: The International Politics of Militarizing Women’s Lives (University of California Press, 2000); and Globalization and Militarism: Feminists Make the Link (Rowman and Littlefield, 2007). The talk will be sponsored by the Triangle Institute For Security Studies and co-convened by the UNC Curriculum in Peace, War and Defense, the UNC Curriculum in Women’s Studies, the Carolina Women’s Center, the Duke Women’s Studies Program, and the UNC-Workshop Series “Gender, War and Politics in Europe and beyond”.
This series, co-edited by Bruce Lawrence (Duke) and Carl Ernst (UNC-Chapel Hill), offers fresh perspectives of Muslim Networks. Click here to read more about the series.