Hosted by the Sound and the Humanities Research Cluster, with support from the Public Humanities Hub.
Co-convened by xwélmexw (Stó:lō/Skwah) artist, curator and writer, Professor Dylan Robinson (UBC School of Music) and Professor Julen Etxabe (Allard School of Law), the Cluster’s Spring event series revolves around the theme Indigenous Knowledge, Law & Sound.
The first event of the series is a reading group discussion of scholarship by Prof. Robinson: the recent article, “Reparative Interpellation” (2022), and chapter 2 of the award-winning Hungry Listening: Resonant Theory for Indigenous Sound Studies (2020). Robinson will be present for the event, so join us on Tuesday, February 7, from 2:30-4PM in the Great Performers Lounge of the Chan Centre for a stimulating conversation with the author and tasty refreshments.
Please REGISTER here to attend, and find the PDFs of the article and chapter here. As always, this is a read-all-that-you-can discussion group, so if you can’t make it through both texts, no problem! We will also have two copies of Hungry Listening on hand for a book giveaway!
All Cluster events are free and open to the public.