University of Florida Homepage

Teaching with ePortfolios

201 Bryant Space Science Center 1772 Stadium Rd, Gainesville, FL, United States

Learn about the impact of ePortfolio practice on student learning and gain an understanding of how ePortfolios can support integrative learning.  Get guidance and advice on how to implement ePortfolio projects.

Free

Evolve or Die: Redefining Jewish Literature for the 21st Century – Myla Goldberg

Judaica Suite, Library East

Bestselling novelist, winner of the Borders New Voices Prize, a finalist for the Hemingway Foundation/PEN award, the NYPL Young Lions award, and the Barnes & Noble Discover award, and recipient of a Sustainable Arts Foundation grant, Goldberg writes and teaches in Brooklyn, where she lives with her husband Jason Little and their two daughters. Made

Free

Les Belles au bois dormant – Charlotte Trinquet du Lys (University of Central Florida) and Rori Bloom (UF)

Library West 212 (Scott Nygren Studio)

Taking inspiration from Charles Perrault’s late seventeenth-century fairy tale, “La Belle au Bois dormant,” Drs. Trinquet and Bloom will explore several versions of the “Sleeping Beauty” story, including Italian sources and French variations on the theme. Their aim is to treat a familiar, classic text in order to explore its literary and cultural complexity.  This

Free

HESCAH Lecture – Roberto Obregón: Achroma Vanitas – Luis Pérez-Oramas

Chandler Auditorium (Harn Museum of Art)

This HESCAH lecture is on the work of Venezuelan artist Roberto Obregón, whose career spanned the decades from the 1960s to his death in 2000 and who is a key figure of global conceptualism. Obregón decided to focus a significant part of his artistic production on one of consumer society’s favorite symbols: the rose. For

Free

Local Author Series: Amanda Concha-Holmes and Anthony Oliver-Smith

Matheson History Museum 513 E University Avenue, Gainesville, FL, United States

Join local authors Amanda Concha-Holmes and Anthony Oliver-Smith for the presentation of their new volume Disasters in Paradise: Natural Hazards, Social Vulnerability, and Development Decisions (Lexington Books, 2019).  Long considered ground zero for global climate change in the United States, Florida presents the perfect case study for disaster risk and prevention. Building on the idea

Free

Concerning the Erotic

Harn Museum of Art 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, Florida

Bob Mueller, Associate Professor of Printmaking will discuss the direct link between the material and philosophical genesis of the work, delving deeper into erotic theory as the wellspring of idea in the contemporary landscape. Mueller will explore print as the physical manifestation of a search for completion. This conversation is offered in conjunction with the

Free

Fall 2019 Campus Weeks Event – November Commemorative Evening

Pugh Hall Ocora

Campus Weeks 2019 events culminate in a catered Commemorative Evening on Thursday, November 14 (in the Ocora Room of Pugh Hall) in remembrance of the November 9th “Night of Broken Glass” (Kristallnacht) and the 30th anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, and following in the tradition of UF’s previous “Freedom without

Free

True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight For Equality – Film Screening

Hippodrome Cinema

True Justice: Bryan Stevenson's Fight For Equality examines the personal journey of Bryan Stevenson, a public defender in Alabama and director of the Equal Justice Initiative, who is working to bring justice to the incarcerated, wrongfully convicted and disadvantaged. This film weaves together Stevenson’s own story, those of his clients, and a history of injustice

Free

Beyond the Wild: Park Rangers and Regime Security in Africa – Christopher Day

Grinter 404 1523 Union Rd, Gainesville, FL, United States

Join Christopher Day of the College of Charleston for this Baraza Lecture. Dr. Day's research interests extend to international security, counterinsurgency, proxy warfare, and the institutional role of different armed state actors in Africa. A former disaster relief worker with Médécins Sans Frontières, he is also interested in humanitarian affairs.

Free

The Letters of George Long Brown: A Yankee Merchant on Florida’s Antebellum Frontier

Matheson History Museum 513 E University Avenue, Gainesville, FL, United States

In 1840, twenty-three-year-old George Long Brown migrated from New Hampshire to north Florida, a region just emerging from the devastating effects of the Second Seminole War. This volume presents over seventy of Brown’s previously unpublished letters to illuminate day-to-day life in pre–Civil War Florida. Brown’s personal and business correspondence narrates his daily activities and his

Free

Gainesville Sesquicentennial on the Lake

Earl Powers Park 5910 SE Hawthorne Rd, Gainesville, FL, United States

The Samuel Proctor Oral History Program (SPOHP) invites you to join them on November 17, 2019 to celebrate Gainesville's sesquicentennial. The Cultural Arts Coalition (CAC) and the Greater Duval Neighborhood Association are hosting this free outdoor event at Lake Pithlachocco / Newnan's Lake from noon until 5:00 PM at Earl Powers Park, on Hawthorne Road.

Free

Time Suspended: Transforming Still Images

Harn Museum of Art 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, Florida

Join the HARN Museum of Art for an afternoon of movement and sound in the exhibition Global Perspectives: Highlights from the Contemporary Collection. Student interns will infuse the gallery with original musical composition, choreography, poetry and prose, then welcome audience questions and reflections.

Free

Pushing the Boundaries of Painting and Drawing

Harn Museum of Art 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, Florida

Three SA+AH painting/drawing faculty — Professor Richard Heipp, Associate Professor Ron Janowich and Associate Professor Julia Morrisroe — will present and discuss the similarities and differences in their studio practice addressing, their concepts, process, and use of technology. This conversation is offered in conjunction with the 53rd SA+AH Studio Faculty Art Exhibition.

Free

Local Author Series: Kaya Gravitter

Third House Books 113 N Main St, Gainesville, FL, United States

Join local author Kaya Gravitter for coffee, doughnuts and conversation. The author of After She Said Yes will be doing a book signing, reading, and a Q&A!

Free

Intercultural Communication: Implications for Globalizing your Teaching

201 Bryant Space Science Center 1772 Stadium Rd, Gainesville, FL, United States

An important part of globalizing your teaching is the inclusion of intercultural communication.  This session will focus on how you can introduce intercultural communication in your courses.

Free

Vodou Inscriptions of the Self in Zora Neale Hurston’s Haitian Ethnography – Kevin Meehan

Library West 212 (Scott Nygren Studio)

Dr. Kevin Meehan is professor of English at the University of Central Florida. He is the author of People Get Ready: African American and Caribbean Cultural Exchange (University Press of Mississippi, 2009), and numerous articles on literature and decolonization in the Americas. This event is free and open to the public.  It is part of

Free

The Wandering Chess Player: Chess, Traveling, and the Jewish Condition – Francesc Morales

Judaica Suite, Library East

In 1941, a series of articles entitled “Jewish and Aryan Chess” appeared under the name of world-chess champion, Alexander Alekhine in the journal Die Deutsche Zeitung in den Niederlanden. Alekhine’s articles claimed that Jewish players had a destructive effect in the development of chess and that there had never been a real chess artist of

Free

Exhibit Opening – Pictures of Nursing

HPNP Auditorium 1225 Center Dr, Gainesville, FL, United States

The UF Health Science Center Library is hosting the National Library of Medicine’s traveling exhibition Pictures of Nursing: The Zwerdling Postcard Collection between November 4 and December 12, 2019. Celebrate the arrival of the National Library of Medicine’s travelling exhibit on Tuesday, November 19th, from 5-7pm, in the HPNP Auditorium Foyer. This exhibit uses antique postcards to examine perceptions of the nursing

Free

The Trial of Lizzie Borden – National Humanities Center Live Stream Discussion

When Andrew and Abby Borden were brutally hacked to death in Fall River, Massachusetts, in August 1892, the arrest of the couple’s younger daughter Lizzie turned the case into international news and her trial into a spectacle unparalleled in American history. The defendant was relentlessly scrutinized for signs of guilt or innocence. Everyone—rich and poor,

Free

SciArt Meetup: Astronomy

Florida Museum of Natural History 3215 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL, United States

Calling all art enthusiasts! Visit the Florida Museum of Natural History after hours for SciArt Meetups to explore exhibits and create art inspired by Florida nature and culture! With partners Santa Fe College Art Gallery and Wayfaring Painter, join the museum on Nov. 19 from 6:30 to 9 p.m. for a brief art or science

$7

Women on the Front Lines: Lebanon Today – Elise Salem

Ustler Hall 200

Dr. Salem will share some of the challenges and opportunities of living and working in Lebanon, especially during this historic October 17 revolution.  She will discuss gender equity in Lebanon and Lebanese American University, a university with roots in the 19th century as a school for girls that became the first College for Women early

Free

We Are Titans (Film Screening)

Weimer Hall 3032 1885 Stadium Rd, Gainesville, FL, United States

From international football journalist Angela Akua Asante, the 10-minute documentary "We are TITANS" is about the importance of recognizing journalists in Ghana and opening the way for upcoming ones to benefit from opportunities that exist under the International Sports Press Association (AIPS). Asante, who’s covered international soccer tournaments for more than a decade now, is

Free