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Events

Intellectual collaborations thrive in environments where ideas are shared, freely and respectfully, among people representing different backgrounds and perspectives. This is why the Neubauer Collegium regularly opens its inquiries and conversations to the public.

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A Conversation with Rick Lowe

Discussion

A Conversation with Rick Lowe

Neubauer Collegium Curator Dieter Roelstraete and Visiting Fellow Rick Lowe will discuss a new book about Lowe's artistic practice.

Houston-based artist Rick Lowe, a Neubauer Collegium Visiting Fellow, is widely known for his pioneering contributions to the development of “social practice art.” What few people realize is that he was originally trained as a landscape painter. In recent years, Lowe has increasingly turned back to painting, producing complex multi-panel and quasi-abstract images that are deeply rooted in thirty years of work creating “social sculptures,” recalling the urban fabric of cities around the world that have formed the backdrop of many of his community-based art projects. A new book jointly published by Gagosian and the Neubauer Collegium is the first dedicated to the work of this important American artist, focusing on his painterly practice and its origins in his work in the public sphere. At this event, hosted by the Seminary Co-op Bookstores, Neubauer Collegium Curator Dieter Roelstraete will discuss the book with Lowe.

Seminary Co-op Bookstore

The Silk Road and the Rhetoric of Connected History

Lecture

The Silk Road and the Rhetoric of Connected History

At this lecture Tamara Chin will discuss the narratives that modern historians crafted to explain complex interactions across Asia.

In the second event for the Silk Road Imaginaries project at the Neubauer Collegium, Tamara Chin (Brown University) will share work from her book manuscript The Silk Road Spirit and the Modern Human Sciences, 1870–1970, in which she argues that the modern colonial encounter in and around China prompted unprecedented interest in the connected past. Chin will discuss the narrative frameworks and tropes that modern historians in East Asia, South Asia, and East Africa introduced over the period 1870–1970 for the systematic study of historical contact, showing the profoundly local figurations of the connected past for diverse histories of colonialism, enslavement, and religion. Prasenjit Duara (Duke University) will serve as the respondent.

This event is co-sponsored by the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Chicago with support from a Title VI National Resource Center Grant from the U.S. Department of Education.


About the Speakers

Tamara Chin is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at Brown University. She is the author of Savage Exchange: Han Imperialism, Chinese Literary Style, and the Economic Imagination (Harvard, 2014).

Prasenjit Duara
is the Oscar Tang Chair of East Asian Studies at Duke University. He is the author of Culture, Power, and the State: Rural North China, 1900–1942 (Stanford, 1988), Rescuing History from the Nation (University of Chicago, 1995), Sovereignty and Authenticity: Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern (Rowman, 2003), and The Crisis of Global Modernity: Asian Traditions and a Sustainable Future (Cambridge, 2014).

Neubauer Collegium

The Price Is Wrong: Why the Market Will Never Solve the Climate Crisis

Lecture

The Price Is Wrong: Why the Market Will Never Solve the Climate Crisis

At this talk, geographer Brett Christophers will explore the barriers to green investment and propose alternative strategies.

Lecture by Brett Christophers (Uppsala University), with interlocutor Jo Guldi (Emory University)

What if our understanding of capitalism and climate is back to front? What if the problem is not that transitioning to renewables is too expensive, but that saving the planet is not sufficiently profitable? This is the claim Brett Christophers makes in his new book, The Price Is Wrong: Why Capitalism Won't Save the Planet (Verso 2024). At this talk, Christophers will show that the global economy is moving too slowly toward sustainability because the return on green investment is too low. Today's consensus is that the key to curbing climate change is to produce green electricity and electrify everything possible. The main economic barrier in that project has seemingly been removed. But while prices of solar and wind power have tumbled, the golden era of renewables has yet to materialize. The problem is that investment is driven by profit, not price, and operating solar and wind farms remains a marginal business, dependent everywhere on the state's financial support. We cannot expect markets and the private sector to solve the climate crisis while the profits that are their lifeblood remain unappetizing. But there is an alternative to providing surrogate green profits through subsidies: to take energy out of the private sector's hands.

Presented by the Committee on Environment, Geography and Urbanization (CEGU), in affiliation with the Economic Planning and Democratic Politics project at the Neubauer Collegium.

1155 E. 60th St., Room 344

Cultures of Restitution: Decolonial Histories, Justice, and the Museum

Workshop

Cultures of Restitution: Decolonial Histories, Justice, and the Museum

This workshop brings together an interdisciplinary group of scholars and practitioners to discuss the challenges of post-colonial restitution claims.

“Cultural restitution” is often understood as a set of policies and practices that act on cultural objects: museum artworks that are returned from one country to another, for example. But cultural restitution is also a tremendously creative field, which itself produces cultural life: new languages, new forms of knowledge production, new communities of interest, new works of art. This workshop brings together a cross-disciplinary group of scholars and practitioners working with colonial and postcolonial heritage to inquire into these cultures of restitution, to delineate their histories, and to understand their capacity to shape new worlds.

The workshop will culminate in an artist talk by Chidi Nwaubani, a co-founder of the artist collective Looty, which has experimented with the "digital repatriation" to Africa of looted objects housed in Western museums. (Anyone can attend Nwaubani’s talk, regardless of whether they attend other parts of the workshop.)

A recent Pozen News article previewed how panel participants will approach the topic of restitution.

VIEW THE SCHEDULE >

Co-sponsored by the Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry and the Pozen Center for Human Rights, in partnership with the Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society.

Neubauer Collegium