Why Weird Tales? On Wednesday, October 28th, the Libraries will be live-streaming a series of dramatic readings of stories from the fabled pulp-fiction magazine Weird Tales. Why? The event, taking place on YouTube, is entitled “Weird Tales Out of Copyright.”…
The DH Reading Group will meet virtually December 1st at 3:00 to discuss Tanya E. Clement’s “Where Is Methodology in Digital Humanities,” a chapter in the 2016 Debates in the Digital Humanities. All are welcome. Registration Please register for the…
Please join us for a virtual meeting of the Digital Humanities Reading Group, to be held November 3rd at 3:00. We will have a demonstration of Urban Archive, followed by a discussion of Jen Jack Gieseking’s “Where Are We? The Method…
Stony Brook University Libraries, the Office of Veterans Affairs and Suffolk County Community College Libraries come together to bring you this program in honor of veterans on both campuses. Read a passage from a work written by a veteran or…
Last night marked the opening of the fall 2020 Art in Focus lecture series. Via Zoom, attendees from as far away as Texas and California tuned in to listen to Helen Harrison, the Eugene V. and Clare E. Thaw Director…
In this talk, Fernando Amador III, a PhD candidate in the History Department, will present digital humanities work completed during his Spring 2020 internship in the Center for Digital Humanities at Stony Brook University Libraries. Headed by Dr. Lori Flores,…
Speaker: Nancy Moses Author What’s real? What’s fake? Why do we care? In these days of fake news and pseudo-science, these questions are more relevant than ever. In her new book, Fakes, Forgeries, and Frauds, Nancy goes beyond the headlines,…
Speaker: Christian White Artist Christian will discuss the influences and ideas from Rome, Providence, and Tribeca that informed his career, including his family’s close ties to people like Fairfield Porter, Wolf Kahn, Paul Georges and Aldous Huxley. Having spent much…
Speaker: Helen A. Harrison Director, Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center Helen will examine the relationship between Jackson Pollock’s “action painting” technique, which reached its apogee in 1947-1950, and the jazz music he loved. His spontaneous creation of free-flowing forms is…
Please join us for a seasonal literary karaoke. All are welcome to read a short passage from a favorite autumn- or Halloween- themed text, or just to listen. This event will be held virtually. Please register in order to receive…