Past Events

Past Events

Abraham Taylor Reparative Research Symposium

RSVP Below
Clark-Fox Forum, Hillman Hall | Washington University Danforth Campus

AFAS SENIOR SHOWCASE: Humanizing the Black Experience

Time in Literary Studies

Workshop with Sanja Bahun, Executive Dean of Arts and Humanities and Professor in the Department of Literature Film and Theatre Studies, University of Essex
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Modernism and Home, with Notes on Method

Lecture with Sanja Bahun, Executive Dean of Arts and Humanities and Professor in the Department of Literature Film and Theatre Studies, University of Essex
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Classics Student Research Colloquium

Umrath 140

Experiential Ethnography Studio Open Studio Hours

Open to anyone (faculty, graduate students, undergrads) interested in learning about or incorporating multimodal, sensory, creative, and collaborative methods into their research projects.
McMillan Hall | Room 348

Retina Burn 2026

The Performing Arts Department invites you to join the students of the Lighting Technology class as they put on a full concert in the Edison Theatre.
Edison Theatre

Disability Anthropology x The Engaged City Showcase

Love St. Louis? Want to celebrate and explore the accessibility of its cultural assets? 
McMillan Hall, 150, 101 and Courtyard | McMillan 150 can be accessed via the stairs or ramp adjacent to McMillan Courtyard.  

Global Postdoc Pathways

Virtual - Register for link

Spring 2026 Final Showings

The end of the semester means opportunities for our students to put into practice what they have been learning in class.

Screening: Black Box Diaries (2024)

Seigle 109

PROTECTION, POWER & PREVENTION: Community Conversations about Sexual Health

4510 Manchester Ave, St. Louis, MO Food provided.

Distinguished Visiting Scholar: Dr. David Tumusiime - "Protected Areas and People in Uganda: Moving Towards Win-Win?"

Anthropology Colloquium Series Spring 2026 This event is free and open to all! A light reception will follow.
McMillan Hall, G052

St. Louis Reads Dante - Inferno 8

Ginkgo Room; Olin Library

RHINO 50th Anniversary Reading

English Department graduate students, alumni, and friends celebrate 50 years of poetry
Bel Air Social | 4630 Lindell Blvd St. Louis, MO 63108

2026 STL Undergraduate Philosophy Conference

Wilson 214

Philosophy Art Expo: Cattywampus

Alivia Li & Delanie Osborne
Wilson Hall

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Who's Afraid of Imprecise Sexes?

Weidenbaum Center seminar room (Seigle Hall, Suite 170, Room 152)

Introducing: Affect Theory

“Introducing: Affect Theory” is part of a series of workshops meant to help faculty, graduate students and postdocs explore ideas and approaches.
Seigle Hall, Room 210

Spring 2026 Undergraduate Research Symposium

Join us!
Frick Forum (1st Floor of Bauer/Knight Halls)

Medical Humanities Film Screening: Nino

Presented by Dr. Kat Haklin & students in French 3760 Cinema & Society: Screening Health (film in French with English subtitles)
Busch 100 | Busch Hall

FMS Colloquium Lecture Series: Alice Lovejoy "Tales of Militant Chemistry: The Film Factory in a Century of War”

(co-sponsorship with Environmental Studies)
Seigle Room 106

Department of Music Lecture: Brian Wright, Associate Professor of Music History at University of North Texas

Brian Wright, Associate Professor of Music History at University of North Texas
Music Classroom Building, Room 102

Translating Malagasy Literature: Book Launch and Conversation with author Raharimanana and translator Allison Charette

Hillman Hall 300

Merle Kling Undergraduate Honors Fellow Senior Symposium

This year’s graduating cohort of Kling fellows will give presentations of the projects they’ve been developing over two years in the Merle Kling Undergraduate Honors Fellowship program. All campus community members are welcome to come, hear from the fellows, and celebrate their accomplishments! RSVPs are not required but do help us in our planning.
Seigle Hall, Room 103

The Incubator Unbound: Storytelling

Every person, every place, and every moment has a story. These stories may change over time, but their telling influences our understanding of things, moments, processes, and people. Join us for a deep dive into the art and act of storytelling, and how it creates meanings of the past, in the present, and for the future.
Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum

The Struggle of Visibility: Black Activism and Citizenship in Current Italy

Join us for a discussion on Black visibility and identity in Italy featuring prominent Black Italian Activist, Kwanza Musi Dos Santos
Ridgley 122 & Zoom

Department of Music Lecture: Steve Lamos, Associate Professor in the Program for Writing and Rhetoric and English Department at UC Boulder

Co-sponsored event with Emo Con 2026
Music Classroom Building, Room 102

Zine Your Research - Part 2

A two-part workshop for humanities graduate students
Olin Library, Julian Edison Department of Special Collections, Mendle Classroom (main floor)

Experiential Ethnography Studio Open Studio Hours

Open to anyone (faculty, graduate students, undergrads) interested in learning about or incorporating multimodal, sensory, creative, and collaborative methods into their research projects.
McMillan Hall | Room 348

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Black Feminist Prosecutions: Linguistic Violence and Grammatical Justice

Weidenbaum Center seminar room (Seigle Hall, Suite 170, Room 152)

Research Presentation Workshop

All undergraduate researchers welcome!
Rudolph 102

Performing Community: A Roundtable on the Transformational Potential of Theatre

Join the Department of Anthropology's Experiential Ethnography Studio (EES) and the Performing Arts Department for a roundtable discussion on performance in community with a dynamic panel of scholars! Light refreshments to follow.
McMillan Hall Cafe

FMS Colloquium Lecture Series: Lea Jacobs "Ford at Work: Making Young Mr. Lincoln"

Seigle Room 106

Harvey Scholars Information Session

Are you an AMCS rising senior interested in receiving funding for independent research? Do you want to make academic scholarship accessible and approachable beyond the university?
McMillan 140

Loud Enough - Surviving Justice Screening

Tagore’s Concept of World Literature: A Comparatist Genealogy

Workshop with Bhavya Tiwari, Associate Professor, Modern and Classical Languages, University of Houston
Duncker Hall, Hurst Lounge

Christina Carney - Disreputable Women: Black Sex Economies and the Making of San Diego

The Task of a Comparatist

Lecture by Bhavya Tiwari, Associate Professor, Modern and Classical Languages, University of Houston
Duncker Hall, Hurst Lounge

National Public Health Week 2026

Celebrate National Public Health Week with the Public Health & Society Student Ambassadors!
locations vary

Zine Your Research - Part 1

A two-part workshop for humanities graduate students
Olin Library, Julian Edison Department of Special Collections, Mendle Classroom (main floor)

The Changing Hats of Teaching: How AI Can Support a Very Complicated Job

The Ginger Marcus Foreign Language Learning Speaker Series at WUSTL presents
Eads 103

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Legislative Vetoes as Political Theater in Late Roman Republican Lawmaking

Seigle Hall 103

Ocean Vuong

Roundtable: Queering Reproductive Justice

McMillan Hall, McMillan Café

Workshop on Grant Writing Essentials for Humanities Graduate Students

Join us for an interactive workshop with Betty Lai, author of “The Grant Writing Guide,” and learn how to find the right funders and craft compelling, competitive grant proposals that effectively pitch your research.
Danforth University Center, Room 233

From Gaza to Haiti: A Psychologist on the Frontlines with Médecins Sans Frontières

Doctors without Borders (Médecins sans Frontières) coming to WashU! Nicholas Tessier is a clinical and forensic psychologist who has spent over seven years on the frontlines of the world's most severe humanitarian crises with Médecins Sans Frontières
Seigle Hall 109 | Seigle Hall

Colloquium Series: Writing a Counter Narrative for Modern Korea: Borders, Borderlands, and Diasporas

Alyssa Park is a historian of modern Korea. Her research interests include borderlands, transnational migration, and empire in East Asia, including Russia.
Hurst Lounge (located within Duncker Hall)

The Transatlantic Forum Presents: Workshop - "Realist Vision: Drawing as Ethnographic Method"

Join the Transatlantic Forum and Edward Lowe for this engaging workshop at Kemper Art Museum! Please RSVP through link in event description.
Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum | Barbizon Artists Room

Global Pathways: A&S Grad International Alumni Panel

Via Zoom

"Sade’s legacies in the 20th century: The Marquis, feminism, and comics"

Whitaker Hall 218

Annual Stanley Spector Lecture: Democratizing Railroads and the Cultivation of a New Postwar Japan

Jessamyn R. Abel, Professor of Asian Studies and History, Pennsylvania State University
Busch Hall room 100

Health as Performance: Hygienic Theater in Interwar Germany

Featuring Corinna Treitel: William Eliot Smith Professor and Chair of the Department of History at Washington University in St. Louis.
Umrath 140

Transduction Workshop: From Graphics to Poetry

McMillan Hall | Room 150

A Fireside Chat with Mary Bruce, AB '05, Chief White House Correspondent for ABC News

A Fireside Chat with Mary Bruce, AB '05 Chief White House Correspondent for ABC News (moderated by Peter Kastor, Samuel K. Eddy Distinguished Professor and Associate Vice Dean of Research)
Clark-Fox Forum, Hillman Hall

Experiential Ethnography Studio Open Studio Hours

Open to anyone (faculty, graduate students, undergrads) interested in learning about or incorporating multimodal, sensory, creative, and collaborative methods into their research projects.
McMillan Hall | Room 348

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: On Vegetables and Vermin: The Politics of Insect-Plant Encounters from the Early Modern to the Anthropocene

Weidenbaum Center seminar room (Seigle Hall, Suite 170, Room 152)

2026 African Film Festival

Join us for the 20th Annual African Film Festival at Washington University, a weekend celebrating powerful storytelling and contemporary cinema from across the African continent. All screenings are free and open to the public.
Brown Hall, 100 | Washington University Danforth Campus

Symposium Poster Design Workshop

Simon 017

Fanny and Adolfo Rizzo Endowed Lecture Series

EADS 216

Lecture: Understanding Greek and Roman Manumission

Elizabeth Meyer, T. Cary Johnson, Jr. Professor of History, University of Virginia
Holmes Lounge | Between Eads and Ridgley Halls on the Danforth Campus. The main entrance to the lobby overlooks Brookings Quadrangle.

Who's Afraid of Imprecise Sexes?

Marina DiMarco, WashU
Zoom

Seminar: Reconstructing Monuments with the Help of Inscriptions

Elizabeth Meyer, T. Cary Johnson, Jr. Professor of History, University of Virginia
Danforth University Center (DUC) 276

WashU & Slavery Edit-a-Thon!

The St. Louis Integrated Database of Enslavement (SLIDE) team is developing an interactive map of slavery in greater St. Louis. You can help by participating in our edit-a-thon event. No experience required, free pizza and snacks for participants!
Olin Library, Instruction Rm. 2 (Level A)

Herodotus and the ‘Clash of Civilizations’ in the Nineteenth Century

Colloquium with Suzanne Marchand
Busch 18 (Lower level of Busch Hall)

Ancient Worlds: A Conversation with Leading Historians

Roger Bagnall, WashU Suzanne Marchand, Louisiana State University Elizabeth Meyer, University of Virginia and the 2026 Biggs Family Resident in Classics Jonathan Price, Tel Aviv University Michael Scott, University of Warwick
Goldberg Formal Lounge | 2nd floor of the Danforth University Center

Ancient Historian Panel

Roger Bagnall, WashU Suzanne Marchand, Louisiana State University Elizabeth Meyer, University of Virginia Jonathan Price, Tel Aviv University Michael Scott, University of Warwick
Goldberg Formal Lounge | 2nd floor of the Danforth University

‘Sweet Willie Rollbar’s Orientation’ Screening and Talk with Brent Hayes Edwards

Brent Hayes Edwards is the Peng Family Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University.
Duncker Hall, Hurst Lounge

Colloquium: Manumission in Hellenistic Greece

Elizabeth Meyer, T. Cary Johnson, Jr. Professor of History, University of Virginia
Umrath Lounge

2026 Biggs Family Residency in Classics

Elizabeth Meyer, T. Cary Johnson, Jr. Professor of History, University of Virginia
Check each event for location.

Department of Music Lecture: Naomi André, Professor of Music at UNC Chapel Hill

Co-sponsor: CRE2 
Music Classroom Building, Room 102

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Domination and Dehumanization

Weidenbaum Center seminar room (Seigle Hall, Suite 170, Room 152)

Sin Fronteras: Mapping and Writing on Labor, Immigration, and Revolution in Southern California

Global Studies Speaker Series Presents Dr. Kevan Aguilar
Seigle 109

CCHP: Assessing the War in Iran

Krister Knapp presents a lecture on Iran: Assessing the War in Iran
Busch 100 | Busch Hall

Book Talk with Karma Frierson: Local Color and Blackness in Veracruz, Mexico

Join the African & African American Studies Department for a book talk with Dr. Karma Frierson exploring Blackness, cultural expression, and Afro-Caribbean heritage in Veracruz, Mexico.
McMillan Cafe

McKenzie Wark - The Cis Gaze and Its Others

Baldwin-Buckley Debate at Cambridge Union, 1965

This event is sponsored/ cosponsored by the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity, the James Baldwin Review, the Department of African and African American Studies, the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics, the Center for the Humanities, and the WashU School of Law. Belonging in Opera is presented by the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity, Opera Theatre of Saint Louis, and Washington University’s Department of Music.
Seigle Hall, Room 208 | Washington University, Danforth Campus

Safe Harbor: Black Women and the Art of Friendship

St. Louis Reads Dante - Inferno 7

Ginkgo Room; Olin Library

Medicine & Society Keynote Address: Dr. Tanya Luhrmann

Anthropology Colloquium Series Spring 2026 This event is free and open to all! A light reception will follow.
McMillan Hall, G052

Empire of Madness: Reimagining Western Mental Healthcare for Everyone

Seigle Hall L003

Humanities Career Spotlight on Grant Writing and Research Development

Virtual - Register for link

International Humanities Prize nomination deadline

Colonial Incarceration and its Legacies in the Philippines

Join us for a fascinating lecture by Prof. Aurélie Vialette (Yale U) on the disciplinary function of the Spanish Empire's colonial gaze.
Hurst Lounge

Colloquium - Audience Participation as Archetype

Featuring E. B. (Elizabeth) Hunter: Assistant Professor in Drama, Director of the Fabula(b) Theatre + New Media Lab, and co-lead of the Immersive Technology Collective at Washington University in St. Louis.
Umrath 140

St. Louis Ancient Philosophy Workshop

Vivian Feldblyum (Auburn University)
McDonnell 212

Experiential Ethnography Studio Open Studio Hours

Open to anyone (faculty, graduate students, undergrads) interested in learning about or incorporating multimodal, sensory, creative, and collaborative methods into their research projects.
McMillan Hall | Room 348

FMS Colloquium Lecture Series: Mark Minett "Origins/Stories/Conventions: Towards a Poetics of the ‘Golden Age’ of the Superhero Genre”

(co-sponsorship with Department of English)
Seigle Room 106

The 1776–1789 Connection: Transatlantic Revolutions and the Birth of Human Rights

Prof. Iver Bernstein, along with several other esteemed scholars, will host an exceptional afternoon of programming in the presence of His Excellency Laurent Bili, Ambassador of France to the U.S. & a delegation from the Consolat de France in Chicago.
Sumers Welcome Center (reception will be in Clark-Fox Forum)

The 1776–1789 Connection: Transatlantic Revolutions and the Birth of Human Rights

Lecture at 4:00 PM, Reception to Follow at 5:30 PM
Clark-Fox Forum, Hillman Hall

Building Bridges Speakers' Series - Tenimbè Ouattara

Ampersand’s Safe Asylum Politics and Pathways Program (SAPP) Building Bridges Speakers' Series invites you to a Talk by Tenimbè Ouattara, "Coach T"
Simon 20 (Basement)

A Difficult Language: Aymara Media, Linguistic Labor, and Urban Indigeneity in Bolivia

Anthropology Colloquium Series Spring 2026 This event is free and open to all! A light reception will follow.
McMillan Hall, G052

Stories of Third-Trimester Abortion Care

The Reproductive Justice Graduate Student Working Group hosts a panel discussion about third-trimester abortion, the national landscape for abortion care, and local abortion advocacy.

Book Talk with Gabriela Wiener: Reading Beyond Desire and Revolution

Join the Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary Latin American Literature Reading Group in an open discussion of "Atusparia" (2024), Gabriela Wiener's most recent novel, with the author herself.
Umrath 201 | Zoom | R.S.V.P for Zoom link

Tyson History Project Roundtable

Environmental Research and Creativity Week, Center for the Environment
Danforth University Center Room 276

Pelagie X

Join us for a screening of PELAGIE X, a new short film by two-time Academy Award winning Breakwater Studios
Umrath Lounge

Department of Music Lecture: Varun Chandrasekhar & Bryce Noe

Music Classroom Building, Room 102

Spring internal grants deadline

Deadline for the spring funding cycle

ICUR abstract planning

Virtual - https://wustl.zoom.us/j/3729357007

2026 Grigsby Lecture Series Presents: Turks, Ottomans, and World Conquest in the Medieval French Imagination

Markus Cruse Professor, School of International Letters and Cultures Arizona State University
Umrath Lounge

St. Louis Reads Dante - Inferno 6

Ginkgo Room; Olin Library

Critical Perspectives on Minneapolis and the Current Moment

Join the African & African American Studies and American Culture Studies departments for Critical Perspectives on Minneapolis and the Current Moment, a timely conversation featuring WashU scholars and community voices exploring race, justice, and the social conditions shaping our present. Food will be provided.
Wilson Hall, Room 214 | Washington University Danforth Campus

2026 Rava Lecture Series Presents: Patrick Bringley

February 16th, 2026 Umrath Lounge Reception 4:00 PM - 4:30 PM Lecture 4:30 PM - 6:00 PM
Umrath Lounge; Umrath Hall

Department of Music Lecture: Mvstermind, Damon Davis, and Blvck Spvde

Mvstermind, Damon Davis, and Blvck Spvde - St Louis-based hip hop artists
Music Classroom Building, Room 102

Crafting Your Humanities Resume

Virtual

The Transatlantic Forum Presents: Dr. Perig Pitrou

Danforth University Center (DUC) | Room 276

Kling Undergraduate Honors Fellowship information session

Calling all sophomores interested in pursuing a humanities research project! You might be a great fit for the Kling Undergraduate Research Fellowship. Drop in at this information session and chat with current Kling Fellows and faculty to learn more about this opportunity.
Seigle Hall, Room 103

The Transatlantic Forum Presents: Roundtable on the Book "A Matter of Detail": Anthropology, Philosophy, and Aesthetics

McMillan Hall, G052

Department of Music Lecture: Walter Parks, guitarist, composer, storyteller based in St Louis

Music Classroom Building, Room 102

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Revisiting Enclaves of Resistance

Weidenbaum Center seminar room (Seigle Hall, Suite 170, Room 152)

The Black Rep Show: The Black Feminist Guide to the Human Body

Stay after the show for a post-performance conversation with playwright Lisa B. Thompson and WashU Law Professor Adrienne Davis as they reflect on The Black Feminist Guide to the Human Body, a vibrant and affirming work that celebrates Black women, community, and survival. Purchase Tickets Below!
A.E Hotchner Studio Theatre, Washington University

Panel Discussion: The Political Economy of Translation

A panel discussion with acclaimed translators Ena Selimović, AJ Javaheri, and Mona Kareem.
Hurst Lounge

A Counter-Imaginary to Authoritarian Power: Gender, Passion and other Psychosocial Formations

Featuring keynote speaker philosopher and gender studies scholar Judith Butler, Distinguished Professor in the Graduate School at the University of California, Berkeley and author, “Who’s Afraid of Gender?” - Faculty Book Celebration
Hillman Hall, Clark-Fox Forum

Livestream Gathering: Judith Butler Lecture

Women's Building Formal Lounge

Humanities Undergrad Mixer

Looking for your people? Whether you're into languages, literature, history, music, art, film, philosophy or just figuring out why humans are the way we are — this is your chance to find community with fellow humanities students.
DUC Fun Room

2026 Morrell Lecture in Asian Religions: Conflict over the Identity and Future of Korean Buddhism: The Buddhist Purification Movement, 1954–1970

Richard D. McBride II Brigham Young University
Umrath Lounge

Artist Talk: Ballaké Sissoko, kora

in conversation with Patrick Burke and El Hadji Samba Amadou Diallo
Pillsbury Theatre, 560 Music Center

Judith Butler Reading Group

One-time discussion of “Who’s Afraid of Gender?” by Faculty Book Celebration keynote speaker Judith Butler
Danforth University Center, Room 234

ONLINE ONLY- The Resilience & Recovery of Former Child Soldiers

NOTE: Due to inclement weather, this event will be ONLY ONLINE. This event explores the long-term impact of war on child development, the ethics of cross-cultural trauma research, and how evidence-based interventions can support recovery in the most challenging circumstances.
Virtual

CCHP: Trump, Venezuela, and the Return of the Monroe Doctrine

Krister Knapp presents a lecture on Trump and Venezuela: Trump, Venezuela, and the Return of the Monroe Doctrine
Hurst Lounge (Located on the second floor of Duncker Hall) | Danforth Campus

FMS Colloquium Lecture Series: Patrick Keating “Postwar Cinematography and the Idea of Italian Neorealism”

Seigle Room 306

Refusing Sustainability - Race, Health, and Environmentalism

A conversation with Dr. Elana Resnick (UC Santa Barbara) about her new book Refusing Sustainability, the connection between racialized labor and waste in Eastern Europe, and the future of environmentalism and health.
McMillan Hall, Room G052

Refusing Sustainability - Race, Health, and Environmentalism

Anthropology Colloquium Series - Spring 2026 This event is free and open to all! A light reception will follow.
McMillan Hall, G052

Graduate Writing Commons

This weekly group offers community and accountability for graduate students working on writing projects.
The Graduate Center (Lower level of the Women's Building)

Roundtable on Tyson’s Military History

Research from the Tyson Environmental Humanities Undergraduate Research Fellowship
Umrath Hall, Room 201

Faculty works in progress survey

Fill out the interest survey by Monday, January 5 to join

Stop, Drop (In), and Write Fall Mini-Conference

This event is accessible to Arts & Sciences Graduate Students only.
DUC 276 | Danforth University Center

mosAIcs & brAIns : the computational aesthetics of mosaic art

The Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures at Washington University in St. Louis invites you to join an exciting lineup of leaders in the field to address the synergy between art, aesthetics, and AI when applied to contemporary mosaic art. The symposium's objective is to encourage the fusion of (i) contemporary mosaic art, (ii) established computational aesthetics paradigms, and (iii) novel opportunities arising from computational creativity. We invite participants to envision links between their present research and one or more of the three listed scholarly directions.
Holmes Lounge

Graduate Writing Commons

This weekly group offers community and accountability for graduate students working on writing projects.
The Graduate Center (Lower level of the Women's Building)

Resistance at the Crossroads: Heracles in German Postwar Literature

André Fischer, WashU
Seigle 301

St. Louis Reads Dante - Inferno 4

Ginkgo Room; Olin Library

Restricted Reading: What Book Bans Mean for Health and Justice

Research from the Banned Books Undergraduate Research Fellowship
Danforth University Center, Room 239

AFAS 5500: Global Black Studies: Approaches, Theories, and Methods - A Student Symposium

CRE2 Conference Room/ Seigle 302

Middle East / North Africa Film Series - Session Two: Captain Abu Raed

Facilitated by Dr. Younasse Tarbouni
Busch Hall, Room 100

From Variable Stars to Dark Matter – The Expanding Legacy of Henrietta Leavitt

The WashU Departments of Physics & Performing Arts have partnered for a colloquium celebrating the life and contributions of Henrietta Leavitt in honor of the upcoming PAD production of 'Silent Sky' - a play focused on Leavitt's life and discoveries.
Seigle 206

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Eliminating the Engines of Gender

Ophelia Vedder (Political Science, WashU)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Entitled to write: Identity and Poetic Authority in the Titles of Early Roman Epic

Emilia Barbiero, New York University
Seigle 301

International Writers Series: Dabin Jeong and Safa Khatib in Conversation

Peer Research Writing Group (4 of 4)

Eads 203

People1st: Civil Society Call to Release Civilian Prisoners Related to the War in Ukraine

Global Studies Speaker Series
Women's Building Formal Lounge

The Fire of Life: Energy, Ecology, and Evolution in Humans and Other Animals

Anthropology Colloquium Series Fall 2025
McMillan Hall, G052

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: The Erotic Interest in Privacy

Brenda Dvoskin (Law, WashU)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Graduate Writing Commons

This weekly group offers community and accountability for graduate students working on writing projects.
The Graduate Center (Lower level of the Women's Building)

Imaginative Fieldnotes: A Strictly No-Writing-Allowed Workshop

St. Louis ArtWorks

Visiting Hurst Professor Rosa Alcalá Reading

Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

The James Baldwin Lecture - Achieving Our Country: Baldwin and U.S. Politics Today

Save the Date!
Emerson Auditorium | Washington University

FMS Colloquium Lecture Series: Annie Sullivan "Broadcasting Resistance: A History of Black Media Activism and Civic Life in 1960s Detroit”

(co-sponsorship with Department of Sociology)
Seigle Room 106

Peer Research Writing Group (3 of 4)

Eads 203

St. Louis Reads Dante - Inferno 3

Ginkgo Room; Olin Library

Autogestion in Motion: University Insurgents, Anarchist Ethics, and Mexico City Punk

Anthropology Colloquium Series Fall 2025
McMillan Hall, G052

Engaged City Community Fellows Introduction

Meet the Engaged City Fellows!
Olin Library, Room 142

‘Unimaginable Atrocities’: The Neglected Catastrophe in Sudan and the History of Genocide in the Region

Scott Straus, Professor and Chair, Charles and Louise Travers Department of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley — Holocaust Memorial Lecture
Umrath Lounge

POSTPONED: Humanities Career Spotlight: Panel on High School and Intermediate Teaching

Featuring three WashU alumni from Anthropology, History and Romance Languages & Literatures/Comparative Literature
Virtual - Register for link

A House Divided: Translation, National Identity, and the Rise of Pluricentric Korean

Daniel Pieper, Korea Foundation Lecturer in Korean Studies and Director of Korean Studies in the School of Languages, Literatures, Cultures and Linguistics at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia
Seigle 106

Visiting Hurst Professor Rosa Alcalá Craft Lecture

Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Measuring Belief Polarization

Esther Ng (Philosophy, WashU)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Fall 2025 Undergraduate Research Symposium

Explore 300+ faculty-mentored undergraduate research projects
Frick Forum (1st floor) and other locations in Bauer/Knight Halls

Graduate Writing Commons

This weekly group offers community and accountability for graduate students working on writing projects.
The Graduate Center (Lower level of the Women's Building)

Civil Society Brunch: Sex, Gender, and Sports

Zack Bowersox (Political Science), Marina DiMarco (Philosophy), Ophelia Vedder (Political Science), and Lucy Vollbrecht (Philosophy)
Knight Center Room 220

Censoring Education and Policing Minds – A Global Trend

Eve Darian-Smith is Distinguished Professor and Chair, Department of Global and International Studies; and affiliated faculty in the Law School, Department of Anthropology and Department of Criminology, Law & Society at the University of California, Irvine and author of “Policing Higher Education: The Antidemocratic Attack on Scholars and Why It Matters.” — James E. McLeod Memorial Lecture on Higher Education
Women's Building Formal Lounge

A&S Grad Fall Research Roundtable

This event is accessible to Arts & Sciences Graduate Students only.
McLeod Conference Room | Cupples II Room 102

A Conversation on Religion and the Environment: Academia, Community, Activism

The planetary ecological crisis impacts every dimension of human life, not least the religious and spiritual. This event will feature flash-talks and panel discussion from six speakers whose academic research, environmental activism, and faith-based community building are informed in distinct ways by concern for life on our planet. Their backgrounds span the humanities and STEM, and blend community leadership inside and outside academia. This event seeks to speak across disciplines, and to build bridges between the university community and the broader public. All are welcome; food and drinks provided! 
Ann W. Olin Women's Building Formal Lounge  | Standing reception to follow

Peer Research Writing Group (2 of 4)

Lopata House 21

Middle East / North Africa Film Series - Session One: Wadjda

Facilitated by Dr. Younasse Tarbouni
Busch Hall, Room 100

Weaving “Brocades”: Rules, Textuality, and Games of Reading

The Global Studies Colloquium presents Jiayi Chen
McMillan 259

Critical Race Theory at the Bottom of the Well: Derrick Bell’s ‘Grandchildren’ Reflect on the Future of CRT

Join us for a roundtable with Adrienne Davis, Robert Chang, and Anthony Farley as they reflect on Derrick Bell’s legacy and the future of Critical Race Theory.
Bryan Cave Moot Courtroom (A-B Hall, Room 310)

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Detention and the Limits of Vision in David Taylor’s COMPLEX

Ila Sheren (Art History and Archaeology, WashU)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Graduate Writing Commons

This weekly group offers community and accountability for graduate students working on writing projects.
The Graduate Center (Lower level of the Women's Building)

Peer Research Writing Group (1 of 4)

Eads 203

WashU Sociology's Fall 2025 Colloquium Series: Youngjoo Cha

The WashU Sociology Colloquium Series invites visiting scholars to share their work, while contributing to the general intellectual culture of the WashU Sociology Department.
Seigle Hall, Room 304

Workshop - Serious on All Sides: Working on a Creative-Critical Continuum

The English Department is hosting visiting Hurst Professor Rosamond S. King the week of October 27-31. Her schedule includes two public events, which all are welcome to attend. Please feel free to publicize or circulate this information as widely as you wish.
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Anti-Haitianism, Statelessness, and Religious Practice in The Bahamas

Join the African and African American Studies and Anthropology departments for a talk led by Dr. Bertin M. Louis, Professor of Anthropology and African and African American Studies at the University of Kentucky. A light reception will follow the event.
McMillan Hall G052

The Stern Family Lecture - Songs for the Brokenhearted: A Reading and Conversation with Award-Winning Israeli Author, Ayelet Tsabari

Ayelet Tsabari was born in Israel to a family of Yemeni descent and has lived and worked extensively abroad. She is the author of The Best Place on Earth (winner of the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature and the Edward Lewis Wallant Award) and The Art of Leaving (winner of the Canadian Jewish Literary Award for Memoir). Her writing has appeared internationally and has been translated into multiple languages.
Umrath Lounge

Hurst Lecture - Good Uses for ‘Bad’ Literature: Genre and Criticism in Context

The English Department is hosting visiting Hurst Professor Rosamond S. King the week of October 27-31. Her schedule includes two public events, which all are welcome to attend.
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

CANCELLED- Visiting Writer Mary Ruefle Reading from Essays and Poetry

Due to unforeseen circumstances the event had to be canceled.
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: The Ethics of Political Representation

Alex Guerrero (Philosophy, Rutgers)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Civil Society Brunch: Democracy without Elections?

Alex Guerrero (Rutgers University)
Knight Center Room 200

Fall internal grants deadline

Deadline for the fall funding cycle

CANCELLED-Visiting Writer Mary Ruefle Recitation of Letters

Due to unforeseen circumstances the event had to be canceled.
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Juana María Rodríguez: Representing Puta Life

McMillan Hall, McMillan Cafe

Humanities Career Spotlight: Dr. Kenly Brown, Spencer Foundation

Zoom - register for link

A Conversation with Ta-Nehisi Coates

Elizabeth Hinton (Yale University) will host a reading and discussion with #1 New York Times bestselling author of “Between the World and Me” and “The Message,” Ta-Nehisi Coates.
Graham Chapel

Philip Leventhal Event: Publishing with a University Press

Philip Leventhal is executive editor at Columbia University Press. He acquires books in film and media studies, literary studies, and journalism studies.
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Book Talk with Elizabeth Hinton

Douglas Flowe (WashU History) discusses the recent book America on Fire with the author.
Umrath Lounge

Book Launch - Edward McPherson - "Look Out: The Delight and Danger of Taking the Long View"

Tuesday, October 21, 2025 - 6:00pm Edward McPherson - Look Out: The Delight and Danger of Taking the Long View Presented by Left Bank Books & the Left Bank Books Foundation Join us to help celebrate St. Louis author Edward McPherson for the launch of his newest highly celebrated book Look Out: The Delight and Danger of Taking the Long View. Blending history, reporting, personal experience, and accounts of activists, programmers, spies, astronauts, artists, inventors, and dreamers, Edward McPherson reveals that to see is to control--and the stakes are high for everyone.
Left Bank Books, 399 N Euclid Ave, St Louis, MO 63108

Reparation for Survivors of Conflict Related Sexual Violence: Is it possible? How? Experiences working in Ukraine, Colombia, and Syria

A Conversation with Cristian Correa
Seigle 204

Zine Workshop

Join the Department of Anthropology's Experiential Ethnography Studio (EES) for a Zine Workshop. All are welcome!
McMillan Cafe

Arts & Public Life - Engagement as a Form of Knowledge - Urban Humanities (Un)Conference

Adrienne Brown, Associate Professor, Departments of English and Race, Diaspora and Indigeneity, University of Chicago; Director, Arts + Public Life
Hillman Hall, Clark-Fox Forum

Poster Gallery & Exhibition Talk - Urban Humanities (Un)Conference

Steinberg Hall Gallery

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Frederick Douglass and Ida B. Wells on the Deformation of American Conscience

Amy Gais (Political Science, Comparative Literature and Thought, WashU)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Graduate Writing Commons

This weekly group offers community and accountability for graduate students working on writing projects.
The Graduate Center (Lower level of the Women's Building)

Global Black Studies Graduate Certificate Launch

Join us in celebrating the launch of the Global Black Studies Graduate Certificate, an exciting new interdisciplinary program that highlights critical inquiries into the global dimensions of Black experiences, politics, and cultural expressions.
Washington University Danforth Campus | Seigle Hall, Room 109

Should Everyone Be Religious? A Discussion with Ross Douthat and Philip Zuckerman

Mark Oppenheimer will moderate a discussion between Douthat and Zuckerman on the ideas in Douthat’s latest book, “Believe.”
Knight Hall, Emerson Auditorium

Visiting Hurst Professor Kim Fu Reading

Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Lightning Talks - Urban Humanities (Un)Conference

Lightning-fast talks about innovative projects in the urban humanities
.ZACK, 3224 Locust St., St. Louis, MO 63103

FMS Colloquium Lecture Series: Lisa Mumme “‘Art Thou a Witch or a Woman?’: Gender, Queerness, Sound, and Music in Witch Films "

(co-sponsorship with Department of Music)
Seigle Room 106

Street Foods of India

Heena Chopra is head chef and owner of Maaji's Street Kitchen
Hurst Lounge | Duncker Hall

Divided City Graduate Summer Research Fellows Colloquium

Danforth University Center, Room 234

Visiting Hurst Professor Kim Fu Craft Lecture

Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

The Environmental Archaeology of Water: Reconstructing Early Human Occupation of Coastal Landscapes

Anthropology Colloquium Series Fall 2025
McMillan Hall, G052

St. Louis Reads Dante - Inferno 2

Ginkgo Room; Olin Library

Fall 2025 Major-Minor Fair

Each fall, the College holds a Major-Minor Fair, where students can talk to faculty members and get more information on many majors and minors at one time and in one place.
WashU Athletic Complex

George E. Mylonas Lecture in Greek Archaeology : Pilgrimage, Prayers, and Picnics at a Greek Mountaintop Shrine: Art and Mysteries at the Birthplace of Zeus

Mary Voyatzis, University of Arizona
St. Louis Art Museum Auditorium

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: The Black Feminist Origins of Modern Medicine in the Americas

Sophia Monegro (Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity, and Equity, WashU)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Visiting Writer Aaron Coleman Reading

Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Environmental Studies Knight Distinguished Lecture

Karen C. Seto Frederick C. Hixon Professor of Geography and Urbanization Faculty Director, Hixon Center for Urban Sustainability, Co-Director, Yale Center for Geospatial Solutions, Affiliated faculty, Yale School of Architecture, Yale School of the Environment U.S. National Academy of Sciences, Council on Foreign Relations
Umrath Lounge | Danforth Campus

Colloquium with Suman Seth

Mortality and Measurement: Race-Medicine, Statistics, and Empire
Hurst Lounge (located within Duncker Hall)

WashU Sociology's Fall 2025 Colloquium Series: Marisa Omori

The WashU Sociology Colloquium Series invites visiting scholars to share their work, while contributing to the general intellectual culture of the WashU Sociology Department.
Seigle Hall, Room 304

Anna Kornbluh - Good Enough Art: A Few Theses on Middling Mediations

Anna Kornbluh is Professor and Associate Head of English at the University of Illinois, Chicago
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

Americanist Dinner Forum "Doc Du Jour" with Brooke Eastman

"Document Du Jour" Dinner Forum is an opportunity for an AMCS graduate student to present an intriguing or puzzling document or artifact from their dissertation research - one that will be of wide interest to Americanists across disciplinary lines - and to puzzle through it with colleagues.
DUC-234

Chryseis, Philoctetes, and the Making of the Homeric Iliad

Gregorgy Nagy, Harvard University
Seigle 301 or Zoom

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Collective Distraction

Ege Yumuşak (Philosophy, University of Pennsylvania)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Humanities Faculty Happy Hour

For humanities faculty and postdocs
Orchid Room + Courtyard, Danforth University Center

Demystifying the Academic Cover Letter

Victoria Reyes, Associate Professor, Department of Gender & Sexuality Studies, University of California, Riverside
Virtual

Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society: Zoning and Segregation in St. Louis

Kiara Wyndham (Sociology, WashU)
Weidenbaum Center Room 152 (Seigle Hall suite 170)

Introducing: Hannah Arendt

“Introducing: Hannah Arendt” is part of a new series of workshops meant to help graduate students, postdocs and faculty explore ideas and approaches.
Seigle Hall, Room 205

WashU Sociology's Fall 2025 Colloquium Series: Colin Gordon

The WashU Sociology Colloquium Series invites visiting scholars to share their work, while contributing to the general intellectual culture of the WashU Sociology Department. 
Seigle Hall, Room 109

Sophomore Series: Engaging in Undergraduate Research at WashU

The College of Arts & Sciences announces the return of its workshop series geared for sophomore students.
Louderman 458

Sports & Society Reading Group: Courtney Cox talks "Double Crossover"!

ZOOM

Katherine Fama - Craft as Research Method: Critical-Creative Practice in the Workshop and Classroom

Katherine Fama is a faculty member in English, Drama, Film and Creative Writing at University College Dublin.
Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall

The First Amendment Today: Challenges and Opportunities

Anheuser-Busch Hall, Bryan Cave Moot Courtroom, Room 310

FMS Colloquium Lecture Series: Alfred Martin “Ease on Down the Road?: Engaging the Serious Study of The Wiz as a Scholar and a Fan”

(co-sponsorship with Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity, Department of African & African American Studies, and American Culture Studies)
Seigle Room 106

Assembly Series: Fireside Chat with the Honorable Sonia Sotomayor, Justice, Supreme Court of the United States

WashU Athletic Complex, Field House

St. Louis Reads Dante

Olin Library

St. Louis Reads Dante

Ginkgo Room; Olin Library

Broadening Horizons: The Value of Grey Literature and Open Access Resources

Zoom

Reproductive Justice in 2025: Beyond Rights, Beyond Roe

Bryan Cave Moot Courtroom

ACLS Fellowship proposal external review deadline

ACLS Fellowship proposal external review for faculty in the humanities and humanistic social sciences

Markus Werning of Bochum

The problem of mnemic justification: How can episodic memories provide genuine (internalist) epistemic justification for factual beliefs?
Wilson 104

Graduate Student Summer Writing Retreat 2025

WashU Graduate Students in the humanities and humanistic social sciences are invited to join together in the Center for the Humanities for a 2-week writing retreat.
Center for the Humanities, 2nd floor, Umrath Hall

Adult Summer Reading Keynote Presentation: The Odyssey

University City Public Library Auditorium

Scholarly Writing Retreat 2025

WashU scholars in the humanities and humanistic social sciences are invited to jump-start their summer writing at the Center for the Humanities.
Center for the Humanities, 2nd Floor, Umrath Hall

University-Wide Commencement Ceremony

Francis Olympic Field

Grant-Writing Information Session

Learn more about humanities grants and look ahead to ACLS, NHC, foundation LOIs and other opportunities
Zoom - RSVP

MANGLE: A Study of the Caribbean Diaspora’s Migration and the Destruction of the Caribbean Mangroves Through the Lens of Embodied Research

Global Studies Colloquium
McMillan 259

Humanities Graduate Student Writing Commons

Center for the Humanities conference room, Umrath Hall, Room 201