Skip to main content

Appalachian Center Events

Spoken Stories by Gurney Norman

 

The UK English Department Events committee presents:

English Department Colloquium “Spoken Stories” by Gurney Norman

 Associate Professor, Department of English, University of Kentucky Author of Kinfolks and other works

Introduced by Erik Reece, Author of Lost Mountain and American Gospel

Friday April 6, 3:00p.m. in Room 211 Student Center

Refreshments served

Date:
-
Location:
Student Center Room 211

Assistance to Appalachian KY communities affected by tornadoes

Here are some ways you can help:

  • 1) Donate to the Red Cross if possible.
  • 2) On campus we are also collecting canned goods, cleaning supplies, blankets, and pet food at the Appalachian Center (624 Maxwelton Court). Please see the attached list of supplies needed in Morgan County, KY.  Donations will also be taken this Friday, March 9 by 4:00 p.m. to be delivered to Magoffin County over the weekend.
  • 3) Check out Morehead State University's MSU Cares.
  • 4) Follow WUKY on Twitter for news updates.
  • 5) Follow WEKU on Twitter for news updates. Information about Tornado/Disaster Relief.
Date:
-

GWS Research Matters Series: Melissa Stein "Bodies of Knowledge: Historical Perspectives on Race, Gender, and Biological Determinism""

GWS Research Matters Series presents:

Melissa Stein

"Bodies of Knowledge:  Historical Perspectives on Race, Gender, and Biological Determinism"

Date:
-
Location:
107 Breckinridge Hall

Kathleen Fitzpatrick

A talk by Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Professor of Media Studies, Ponoma College and Director of Scholarly Communication, Modern Language Association. What if the academic monograph is a dying form? If scholarly communication is to have a future, it's clear that it lies online, and yet the most significant obstacles to such a transformation are not technological, but instead social and institutional. How must the academy and the scholars that comprise it change their ways of thinking in order for digital scholarly publishing to become a viable alternative to the university press book? This talk will explore some of those changes and their implications for our lives as scholars and our work within universities.

Date:
-
Location:
Room 211 Student Center

Seeking the Good Life in America: Lessons From the Appalachian Past - Ronald D. Eller

The 2011-2012 Distinguished Professor Lecture will be delivered by Ronald D Eller, a professor of Appalachian Studies and History. His lecture is entitled "Seeking the Good Life in America: Lessons From the Appalachian Past". It will take place in the William T. Young Library Auditorium on Thursday, April 12, at 7:30p.m. The event is free and open to the public.

Date:
-
Location:
William T. Young Library Auditorium

Appalachian Forum on Home Food Preservation in Eastern Kentucky - Lisa Conley

Interest in home gardening and food preservation practices has increased over the last several years, especially in urban areas. Many urban foodies are discovering the joys of home production, and participation in the local food movement is strong. These practices are not novel, however, to many people who have grown and preserved their own food for generations. Three home producers from Appalachian Kentucky, Betty Tyra Gregory and Gary Rose from Campton, and Rowena Borders from Louisa, will share their experiences growing and preserving food. Vanessa Oliver, Graduate Student, UK Department of Nutrition and Food Science will be on hand to address questions of food safety. Lisa Conley, UK Department of Sociology, will be moderating the panel and debuting her short film, “Talking Food: Home Food Preservation in Eastern Kentucky” created from interviews with home food preservation practitioners in Wolfe and Lawrence Counties.

Sponsored by the Appalachian Center and Appalachian Studies

Date:
-
Location:
UK Student Center, Room 206

Appalachian Forum Series

This showcase will feature three films produced by AMI students that cover a wide range of content.  The films are "Searching for an Appalachian Accent" 15 mins- which explores the stigma attached to regional dialects, "A Little Piece of Me" 10 mins- which focuses on three stories about growing up gay in the mountains and "True Cost of Coal" 13 mins - which through personal stories explores the mark the coal industry has left on Eastern Kentucky communities.

Appalachian Media Institute strives to:

    Build the confidence levels and creative capacity of central Appalachian youth

    Position youth from central Appalachia as initiators of dialogue and social action around crucial community issues

    Highlight rural voices and to inform national audiences and diverse communities of the unique challenges that face rural Appalachian communities

    Enable our participants to become informed, tolerant, and engaged citizens and to recognize the interconnections between central Appalachia and the rest of the world"

 

Date:
-
Location:
Young Library Auditorium
Subscribe to Appalachian Center Events