Dr. Janecek
Professor Jerry Janecek's "Last Lecture"
Professor Jerry Janecek's "Last Lecture"
Doug Boyd is the Director of the Louie B Nunn Center for Oral History, part of the University of Kentucky Libraries. The great thing about oral history is its subjectivity and content; the not-so-great thing about it is that most of it is in analog format, un-transcribed, and time-consuming for researchers to use. Boyd and his team have been working diligently on software known as the Oral History Metadata Synchronizer, which will enable users to synch up transcribed interviews to their place in an audio or video recording.
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.
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
During this academic year, the Division of Russian and Eastern Studies (RAE) in the Dept of Modern and Classical Languages organizes a series of activities under the unified theme of "Discover Asia." Through film showings, faculty research presentations, and a public lecture, we intend not only to discover, explore, and analyze various parts and aspects of Asia, but we also will interrogate how Asia is discovered, by raising questions such as: What/where is Asia? Who—in terms of race, class, and gender—discovered it? In what ways? To what ends? In what historical contexts?
An integral part of our “Discover Asia” activities is a brown bag series of RAE faculty research presentations over the course of the year. The next presenter is Professor Jeanmarie Rouhier-Willoughby of Russian Studies and she will give an exciting presentation entitled “Gulag Victims as Orthodox Martyrs: The Development of the Holy Spring of Iskitim, Siberia.” Come and join us.
Synopses: Russian folk Orthodoxy is characterized by a belief in holy springs. Bathing in the springs or drinking their water is said to improve physical well-being of the healthy and cure the sick. Iskitim, a city in Eastern Siberia, is the home to a "new" holy spring that is attracting attention in the local community. Visitors come year-round to gather the water, to bathe in the spring, or to be baptized. The spring is located at a former quarry, which served as a Gulag until the 1950s. It is believed that a group of Gulag prisoners were executed at the spring, an event that has led to the spring's classification as holy. This paper will examine the intersection of folk religious belief in holy springs, Orthodox doctrine and the experience of the Soviet past. These intermingled conceptions leads to the conclusion that the Gulag victims were indeed Orthodox martyrs. Ironically, a majority of Siberians still vote for the communist party in elections. These oppositional cultural strands demonstrate the complexity of folk religion in the post-Soviet world.
In case you missed it during the hectic holiday season, A&S English professor Nikky Finney was featured on “UK at the Half” with Carl Nathe during the UK vs. Loyola basketball game. Finney’s book, “Head Off & Split,” was the winner of the 2011 National Book Award in Poetry. The National Book Awards is one of the most anticipated events in the publishing world. Finney has taught at UK for decades and is a member of the Affrilachian Poets group that includes Frank X Walker and Kelly Norman Ellis.
To hear the "UK at the Half" interview, click here.
Jenny Rice studies rhetoric: the art and science of effective persuasion and communication. In this podcast, Rice discusses rhetoric's past, its place in an institution like the University of Kentucky, and its importance in an age of text messages, e-mails, and widespread access to digital devices.
This podcast was produced by Stephen Gordinier.
Building bridges between campus and community, Matthew Wilson's GIS Workshop course will connect various Fayette and Lawrence county organizations with groups of students to develop partnerships, gather data for GIS analyses, and create unique maps. GIS, an acronym for 'geographic information sciences,' examines intersections of technology, cartography and culture.
This podcast was produced by Samuel Burchett.