The Swarthmore College Dance Program (Department of Music and Dance) presents the 2012 Fall Student Dance Concert at 8PM on 12/7 and 12/8 in the LPAC Pearson-Hall Theatre. Ballet, Taiko, Tap, and Drum & Dance performances will be included this year. Come celebrate the end of Fall semester and the hard work of all our dance students and faculty. The concert, which is appropriate for all ages, is free and open to the public.
Monthly Archives: November 2012
Student Dance Concert 12/7 & 12/8
The Swarthmore College Dance Program (Department of Music and Dance) presents the 2012 Fall Student Dance Concert at 8PM on 12/7 and 12/8 in the LPAC Pearson-Hall Theatre. Ballet, Taiko, Tap, and Drum & Dance performances will be included this year. Come celebrate the end of Fall semester and the hard work of all our dance students and faculty. The concert, which is appropriate for all ages, is free and open to the public.
Honors Thesis auditions 11/17 &18!
Check out the LPAC Theater Department bulletin boards for more info about auditions for Meryl Sands and Jeannette Leopold. They are prepping for their Honors Thesis projects in the spring!
Peace & Conflict Studies Courses for Spring 2013
As you are planning for your spring 2013 semester, here are courses on offer that may be counted toward a minor in Peace and Conflict Studies.
Peace & Conflict Studies – Spring 2013
ARAB 025. War in Arab Literature and Cinema
ECON 051. The International Economy*
ECON 081. Economic Development*
ECON 151. International Economics*
HIST 037. History & Memory: Perspectives of Holocaust
JPNS 083. War/Postwar in Japanese Culture
LITR 025A. War in Arab Literature and Cinema
LITR 083J. War/Postwar in Japanese Culture
PEAC 071B. Strategy: Non-Violent Struggle
PEAC 077. Peace Studies and Action
PEAC 090. Thesis
PEAC 093. Directed Reading
PEAC 180. Senior Honors Thesis [W]
PHIL 021. Social and Political Philosophy*
POLS 004. International Politics
POLS 047. Democracy, Autocracy and Regime Change
PSYC 035. Social Psychology*
RELG 039. Good and Evil
SOAN 010J. War, Sport and Masculine Identity
SOAN 071B. Strategy Non-Violent Struggle
* Courses marked with an asterisk (*) are eligible for credit upon prior arrangement with the instructor and the program coordinator. Download the appropriate form from the PCS website.
Peace Studies and Action Course Spring 2013
Advising week is here, and we know you are planning your spring schedules. Our upper-level Peace and Conflict Studies course, “Peace Studies and Action” PEAC 077, will be offered by Prof. Lee Smithey during the spring semester.
Peace Studies and Action aims to bridge the gaps between peace research, theory, and implementation by encouraging students to move between each as we study nonviolent ways of conducting conflict and the challenges of developing and sustaining peace work. Emphasis will be placed on getting close to the experience of peacemakers and activists by reading autobiographical writings, visiting local peace organizations, and dialogue with invited guests. As a class, we will seek an opportunity to contribute to the work of a local organization. Discussion about the readings and exploration of peace studies literature will also be emphasized. This course will encourage collaboration and active participation in delivering the content of the course.
“Education without social action is a one-sided value because it has no true power potential. Social action without education is a weak expression of pure energy. Deeds uninformed by educated thought can take false directions. When we go into action and confront our adversaries, we must be as armed with knowledge as they. Our policies should have the strength of deep analysis beneath them to be able to challenge the clever sophistries of our opponents.”
– Martin Luther King, Jr. Where Do We Go from here: Chaos or Community? (p. 155)
The class will meet on Tuesdays 1:15-4:00 in the Lang Center Seminar Room (#106).
(“Introduction to Peace and Conflict Studies” is a pre-requisite for this course.)
Auditions for Production Ensemble 2013! 11/17 2-6PM Kohlberg 115
This year’s play for Production Ensemble will be THREE SISTERS by Anton Chekhov in a new adaptation by Benedict Andrews. It recently premiered in London, where it received stellar reviews. THREE SISTERS will be directed by Richard Hamburger, with a set designed by Assistant Professor Matthew Saunders, costumes designed by Assistant Professor Laila Swanson, and lights designed by James Murphy.
Born and raised amid the culture and excitement of Moscow, the three sisters chafe at the constraints of life in the small provincial backwater town, where they moved with their late father, an army General. Chekhov creates vibrant portraits of a family struggling to fulfill individual dreams through work and love, while facing painful new economic and social realities. Benedict Andrews’ uninhibited new version transposes Chekhov’s nineteenth century classic to contemporary Russia, drawing out the play’s pointed humor and restlessness. This is Chekhov for the 21st century.
All levels of experience are welcome to audition. Freshmen are especially encouraged.
Auditions: Saturday November 17, 2-6pm in Kohlberg 115
Callbacks and further auditions: Sunday November 18, 2-6pm in Kohlberg 115
Additional Audition time and callbacks will be on Monday, November 19 9:30-11:30pm in Kohlberg 115
Sign up for an audition slot on the sign up sheet outside the Department of Theater’s office (LPAC 13)
Please come dressed in shoes and clothing that you can move freely in, and be ready to read one or two scenes from the play. You may pick up the scenes in advance on the shelf outside the Department of Theater’s office (LPAC 13). Feel free to take a look at any translation of THREE SISTERS in the library.
Practical information about the production:
Three Sisters will be performed in Pearson Hall Theater in LPAC on April 5-7, 2013.
Production Ensemble is a one-credit course (Thea 22) and fulfills one of the requirements for the major and minor.
BIOS
Anton Chekhov (1860 –1904) was a major Russian playwright and master of the modern short story. His four final plays, The Seagull, Uncle Vanya, The Three Sisters and The Cherry Orchard are considered pinnacles in modern drama.
Benedict Andrews is an Australian author, adaptor and director. He was Resident Director of the Sidney Theatre Company and has directed at the English National Opera, the Barbican and the Young Vic in London.
Richard Hamburger served fifteen years as Artistic Director at Dallas Theater Center and is now DTC’s first Artistic Director Emeritus. He has directed a wide range of classic and contemporary plays, including new work by Octavio Solis, Lynn Siefert, Erik Ehn, Eric Overmyer, and Chay Yew, among others. Mr. Hamburger served for five years as Artistic Director of Portland Stage Company. He has directed at Pittsburgh Public Theatre, Arizona Theatre Company, Portland Center Stage, The Acting Company, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Yale Repertory Theatre, Baltimore Center Stage, California Shakespeare Festival, American Place Theatre, Eugene O’Neill Theater Center, and Great Lakes Theater Festival, where he served as Associate Director. Mr. Hamburger has written two plays: Memory of Whiteness, produced at the American Place Theatre and Family Face, mounted at the O’Neill Center’s National Playwrights Conference. He was awarded a Rockefeller Grant in playwriting and has held fellowships at the Albee Foundation and the Virginia Center for the Arts. He served on the faculties of the Juilliard Theatre Center and Circle in the Square Theatre School, on numerous panels for the National Endowment for the Arts, and as a panelist for the Whiting Foundation. Mr. Hamburger also directed the critically acclaimed version of THE SOUND OF MUSIC for The Salzburg Marionette Theater which is currently on a world wide tour. Most recently he directed Alan Ayckbourn’s MY WONDERFUL DAY and Sam Shepard’s CURSE OF THE STARVING CLASS for Philadelphia’s Wilma Theater.
THE INTENSE FRAGILITY in the Gazette
Katie Van Winkle ’07 in DIONYSUS IN 69 (revisited with the Rude Mechanicals)
Katie van Winkle ’07 will be touring to NYC’s Live Arts with Austin theater company, the Rude Mechanicals.
From Katie: “In 2009, we re-created The Performance Group’s production of Dionysus in 69 , a long-running cult classic from 1968 based on Euripides’ The Bacchae. We trained with environmental/experimental theater exercises from Grotowski and Schechner, and worked with the Brian de Palma D69 film, and the original script published in a casebook–looking at both in great detail, trying to recreate both the exact mise-en-scene and the ever-changing, risky, truly-conditional experience of performers and audience/participators.”
November 6-10 at 8 pm
and November 9 at 10:30 pm
http://www.newyorklivearts.org/event/dionysus_in_69
http://www.austinchronicle.com/arts/2009-12-18/930112/
http://www.austinchronicle.com/arts/2009-11-27/921516/
New video: Swarthmore’s Northern Ireland Semester
North Ireland Semester from Swarthmore Peace Studies on Vimeo.
Dr. Crossan is the Regional Director of the Swarthmore College Northern Ireland Semester Programme. Visit http://northernireland.swarthmore.edu If you are even vaguely interested in the Northern Ireland Semester, please contact Rosa Bernard (rbernar1) in the Off Campus Study office TODAY to see if you can arrange to meet with Denise Crossan about the possibility of studying in Northern Ireland. You don’t have to commit to the program to chat and imagine what your semester in Northern Ireland might look like. There will also be a general information session about the program on Tuesday at noon in Sharples Room 6, which you are welcome to attend.
We hope you’ll be able to attend Denise’s lecture on social entrepreneurship tomorrow / Monday afternoon at 4:15 p.m.; see https://blogs.swarthmore.edu/academics/2012/10/24/crossan-lecture-social-entrepreneurship/ for more information.
Follow the Northern Ireland Semester at:
Video of Prof. Mubarak Awad’s 2011 visit
Spurred by Dr. Kuttab’s visit to campus this past week, we are posting video of his colleague, Prof. Mubarak Awad’s visit to Swarthmore College on November 7, 2011. Photos are available here. The Daily Gazette covered the event. Both of these events were sponsored by Students for Peace and Justice in Palestine.
Mubarak Awad speaks at Swarthmore College November 7, 2011 from Swarthmore Peace Studies on Vimeo.